Inflation + Weaponized IRS = Off-Grid Investing Boom


Clint Siegner Clint Siegner

Clint Siegner

August 15th, 2022 Comments

The Orwellian-named Inflation Reduction Act passed both houses of Congress and is now on its way to the White House for Joe Biden’s signature.

The politicians responsible for multi-trillion-dollar federal deficits and a Federal Reserve which is completely out of control plan to “reduce” inflation by spending another $700 billion they don’t have.

In other words, they plan to do more of the exact thing which makes every Federal Reserve Note worth less but claim credit for battling the price inflation wreaking havoc on Americans’ budgets.

The measure includes funding for a variety of climate and healthcare initiatives. Supporters of the bill still have the audacity to argue the measures will reduce expenses.

Skeptics aren’t buying it, but the Wall Street Journal reports;

The Biden administration and Democrats have pushed back on those criticisms, arguing the package’s provisions would help lower some important costs for families, such as those for healthcare and prescription drugs.

Maybe there are a few people who believe more government intervention will improve efficiency and control costs. Most know better.

The bill includes nearly $50 billion in funding for the IRS so it can hire 87,000 new bureaucrats. The Agency will more than double in size. IRS officials want at least some of these new people to be armed and ready to use lethal force while enforcing the tax code.

The Journal touches on the only believable argument for the bill’s ability to reduce inflation.

Legislation that reduces the deficit could help cool inflation by reducing aggregate demand in the economy, economists said.

Translated from economist-speak, this means Americans who are demoralized and intimidated by the IRS will pay more taxes while spending and investing less.

The IRS is notorious for its “guilty until proven innocent” posture toward taxpayers.

Under the leadership of Lois Lerner, the Agency had been weaponized against conservatives.

Selected for Audit

Trust in American institutions had already hit an all-time low. Confidence will likely take another leg down.

The move may drive the next wave of investors to have a look at physical bullion.

The political class isn’t planning to spend less to fight inflation. They prefer the most draconian approach of controlling prices – a reduction in aggregate demand. That is bad news for conventional assets, and stocks in particular.

Investors may begin searching for assets that are off the grid and less vulnerable to inflation and financial turmoil as well as snooping by the legions of new IRS enforcers.

The ownership of physical gold and silver products is not tracked in centralized databases.

And in the vast majority of circumstances, dealers are not required to file any IRS forms on customers who buy or sell precious metals. Taxpayers must track their gains and losses and report them accordingly.

About the Author

Clint Siegner

Clint Siegner

Clint Siegner is a Director at Money Metals Exchange, a precious metals dealer recently named "Best in the USA" by an independent global ratings group. A graduate of Linfield College in Oregon, Siegner puts his experience in business management along with his passion for personal liberty, limited government, and honest money into the development of Money Metals' brand and reach. This includes writing extensively on the bullion markets and their intersection with policy and world affairs.