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The Re-Engineering Of Creditism

Open book labeled “Creditism” overlaid with blueprint diagrams symbolizing the re-engineering of the modern credit-based economic system

The Re-Engineering of Creditism Has Begun

When growth slowed, they eased monetary policy.

When markets wobbled, they reflated asset prices.

When inflation threatened, they leaned on globalization to suppress wages and goods prices.

That approach worked—until it didn’t.

From Stabilization to Re-Engineering

Since the Global Financial Crisis, Creditism—the credit-driven economic system that replaced gold-standard Capitalism—has been kept alive through expanding debt, central-bank balance-sheet growth, and asset-price support. But over time, new constraints emerged:

  • Political consent began to erode
  • National security concerns became binding
  • Credibility—monetary, fiscal, and institutional—came under strain

Why 2016 Was a Turning Point

The election of Donald Trump marked a break—not because he offered a coherent economic theory, but because his policies stress-tested the system’s operating assumptions.

Trade, fiscal policy, globalization, and central-bank independence were no longer treated as neutral or untouchable. Economic efficiency ceased to be the highest objective. Policy became openly political.

What This Means for the Future

Today, the US government is no longer acting merely as a market backstop. Increasingly, it is behaving as a strategic investor, treating its ability to borrow, spend, and mobilize capital as a core asset.

Trade has become a fault line.

Tariffs are now structural policy.

Capital flows are being redirected.

And monetary authority itself is moving into open political conflict.

In this video, I walk through:

  • Why stabilization failed
  • How political backlash reshaped economic policy
  • What Trump 1.0 changed—and why it mattered
  • How Biden institutionalized the shift
  • Why Trump 2.0 represents an acceleration, not a reversal
  • And what all of this means for the survival of Creditism itself

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This is the 13th video in the Creditism 101 series.  To see a list of all the videos in this series, CLICK HERE and scroll down a bit.  You will find them all there.

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