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Macroeconomics: How Money Actually Works

MV = PQ: The Master Equation

M = Money Supply (total dollars in circulation)
V = Velocity (how fast money changes hands)
P = Price Level (average cost of goods)
Q = Quantity of Goods (real output/GDP)

What It Means

If M (money supply) doubles but Q (production) stays the same, P (prices) must double. That’s inflation.

Example: Fed prints $4 trillion β†’ M increases β†’ P increases β†’ your dollar buys less

Why You Should Care

  • Money printing dilutes your savings: Every new dollar created makes your existing dollars worth less
  • Assets vs. cash: Stocks and real estate keep up with inflation; cash does not
  • Wage earners lose: Your salary is negotiated in nominal dollars, inflation eats purchasing power
  • Asset owners win: They own things that appreciate with inflation (Cantillon Effect)

Quantitative Easing (Money Printing)

What it is: Central bank creates new money to buy government bonds and assets

How it works:

  1. Fed creates money digitally (literally out of thin air)
  2. Uses it to buy Treasury bonds, mortgage-backed securities
  3. Money enters financial system
  4. Banks have more reserves, can lend more
  5. Asset prices inflate (stocks, real estate)

Who benefits first:

  1. Banks and financial institutions (they get the new money first)
  2. Asset owners (stocks, real estate rise)
  3. Large corporations (can borrow cheaply)

Who benefits last:

  1. Workers (wages rise slowly, if at all)
  2. Savers (cash loses value)
  3. Retirees on fixed income

This is the Cantillon Effect - those closest to the money printer benefit most.

Real Inflation vs. Official Inflation

Official CPI: ~3% per year

  • Cherry-picked basket of goods
  • Excludes asset prices (stocks, homes)
  • Uses β€œhedonic adjustments” (quality improvements)
  • Understates true cost of living

Real Inflation: ~7-10% per year

  • Healthcare: +5-8% annually
  • College tuition: +6% annually
  • Housing (real): +7-10% in major cities
  • Food: +5-8% (despite CPI saying 2-3%)

What This Means for You

If official inflation is 3% but your personal inflation is 7%, you need:

  • 7% salary increase just to stay even
  • 10%+ returns on investments to actually grow wealth
  • Assets that appreciate faster than inflation

Strategy: Own assets (stocks, real estate, Bitcoin), minimize cash holdings

Who Really Has Power?

Not the President. Not Congress. The real power is in:

  1. Central Banks (Federal Reserve, ECB, Bank of Japan)

    • Control money supply
    • Set interest rates
    • Can create unlimited money
    • Unelected, minimal oversight
  2. Large Banks (JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, etc.)

    • Get newly created money first
    • Can borrow at lower rates
    • β€œToo big to fail” = taxpayer bailouts
  3. Asset Owners (billionaires, corporations, institutional investors)

    • Benefit from asset inflation
    • Can borrow against assets
    • Compound wealth faster than wage growth

Why this matters: Understanding the system helps you position yourself correctly (own assets, not cash; invest early; understand macro trends).

Books

  • β€œThe Bitcoin Standard” by Saifedean Ammous - Understanding sound money
  • β€œThe Price of Tomorrow” by Jeff Booth - Deflation vs. inflation
  • β€œPrinciples for Dealing with the Changing World Order” by Ray Dalio - Macro cycles

YouTube Channels

  • Lyn Alden - Macro analysis, inflation, monetary policy
  • Raoul Pal - Real Vision, macro trends, crypto
  • Jeff Snider - Eurodollar system, how money actually works

Podcasts

  • The Investor’s Podcast - Macro interviews
  • What Bitcoin Did - Bitcoin, macro, sound money
  • Hidden Forces - Deep dives on economic systems

Tools

  • FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) - All the data
  • TradingView - Charts for everything
  • Lyn Alden’s Newsletter - Best macro analysis

Next Steps

  • Understand the system β†’ Position yourself accordingly
  • Own assets β†’ Don’t hold too much cash
  • Invest in scarce things β†’ Bitcoin, real estate, equities
  • Track macro trends β†’ Know when to be aggressive or defensive
  • Teach others β†’ Share this knowledge

This content is designed for YouTube deep-dives, Twitter threads, and educational content. It’s both at-a-glance (cheat sheet) and in-depth (explanations).