The Fed and Wealth Inequality

Curious to hear different opinions on this.

I would argue that the greatest impetus for wealth inequality over the past decade has been the Fed. The top 10% of Americans by wealth own 90% of the financial assets. Unelected officials printing trillions of dollars years after the financial crisis and using that money to buy financial assets (QE) effectively taxed everyone and lined the pockets of asset holders. And it was all the more clandestine because financial assets don’t show up in CPI.

Now we’re mired in a dangerous bout of inflation rendering the Fed essentially powerless to combat an impending recession. What was Yellen thinking in ‘14? And Powell in ‘19? I thought their justification seemed idiotic at the time (“inflation is only 1.2% as opposed to our 2% target”). Lots of things can precipitate low inflation (age demographics, technology, globalization) which are not all inherently bad. A surplus of aging Baby-Boomer savers relative to borrowers was likely one factor keeping inflation down — that’s merely the natural equilibria of supply and demand and in my opinion not a symptom of economic peril (and surely 1.2% inflation should not have been viable justification to flood our economy and markets with trillions of dollars of stimulus).

Inflation is an incredibly regressive tax, and I can’t help but blame the myopia of the Fed. Paul Volcker is turning in his grave.

3 Comments

Career Advancement Opportunities

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Evercore 01 99.4%
  • Moelis & Company 01 98.8%
  • JPMorgan 01 98.2%
  • Guggenheim Partners 01 97.7%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Moelis & Company No 99.4%
  • Morgan Stanley 01 98.8%
  • Evercore 01 98.2%
  • BMO Capital Markets 12 97.6%
  • Banco Santander 01 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Moelis & Company No 99.4%
  • Evercore No 98.8%
  • Morgan Stanley 05 98.2%
  • JPMorgan No 97.7%
  • BMO Capital Markets 12 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

June 2026 Investment Banking

  • Vice President (14) $434
  • Associates (43) $259
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (8) $210
  • 2nd Year Analyst (22) $179
  • Intern/Summer Associate (13) $156
  • 1st Year Analyst (75) $151
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (67) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

1
redever's picture
redever
99.2
2
BankonBanking's picture
BankonBanking
99.0
3
kanon's picture
kanon
99.0
4
Secyh62's picture
Secyh62
99.0
5
CompBanker's picture
CompBanker
98.9
6
DrApeman's picture
DrApeman
98.9
7
GameTheory's picture
GameTheory
98.9
8
Betsy Massar's picture
Betsy Massar
98.9
9
dosk17's picture
dosk17
98.9
10
Jamoldo's picture
Jamoldo
98.8
success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”