The Inflation Tax: You're Still Paying for That Covid Stimulus

April 15th was Tax Day. It’s a source of misery for many of us as we write a big check to the IRS. But did you know the IRS isn’t the source of your biggest tax bill? In fact, you don’t even get a bill. You just pay the tax every time you buy something.

No, I’m not talking about the sales tax. I’m referring to the inflation tax.

Yes, ladies and gentlemen. Inflation is a tax.

When the government spends far more than it takes in, it has to borrow money. To support the borrowing, the Federal Reserve runs quantitative easing operations, buying Treasuries with money created out of thin air. This creates artificial demand for U.S. debt, suppressing interest rates and allowing the government to borrow more than it otherwise could.

You get goodies, and the government avoids raising taxes.

It’s a win-win, right?

Except you're still paying taxes, you just don’t see it as clearly.

When the Fed creates money out of thin air and injects it into the economy, it drives price inflation.