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Vol. I Β· No. 167 Β· 808 Reports Wednesday, June 17, 2026
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Peter Schiff Claims Fed Cannot Defeat Inflation Amid Rising Debt Costs

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Topics in This Edition

InflationFederal ReserveUS DebtInterest Rates

Summary

The segment features economist Peter Schiff analyzing recent hot US inflation readings. He argues these signal the Fed has permanently lost control over inflation due to massive federal debt, as higher rates would explode interest costs and deficits.

Editorial Assessment

The broadcast accurately notes May 2026 CPI at 4.2% and the feedback loop between rates and interest expense, supported by CBO projections. However, it presents an unsubstantiated $1.6T annual interest cost (current FY2026 projections are ~$1T) and frames the situation as an inescapable trap without discussing Fed tools like quantitative tightening, fiscal policy responses, or historical precedents. Viewers miss context on core inflation trends, energy shock drivers from the Iran conflict, and debates over whether moderate rate hikes remain viable. The piece functions as opinion commentary rather than balanced analysis.

Key Moments

missing context

Recent hot inflation numbers show the Fed has lost the fight against inflation

May 2026 CPI rose to 4.2% YoY per BLS, highest since 2023 and driven largely by energy; core inflation at 2.9% shows more moderate underlying trend.

unsupported

US spending $1.6 trillion and rising annually on interest

CBO projects net interest outlays at ~$1.0 trillion for FY2026, rising from $970B in 2025; $1.6T exceeds current estimates.

verified

Raising rates increases government interest expense, worsening deficits and boxing in the Fed

Documented mechanism in CBO reports: higher rates raise debt service costs on new and variable-rate debt, contributing to projected deficit growth.

disputed

The Fed cannot raise rates enough to rein in inflation due to debt constraints

Opinion; Fed currently holding at 3.5-3.75% amid inflation spike, with markets pricing possible hikes later in 2026 per Reuters and CME data.

Notable Concerns

  • Overstated annual net interest payments relative to official projections
  • Interpretive claim of 'lost fight' presented without counterarguments on policy flexibility

Sources Consulted

  1. Peter Schiff warns inflation could 'skyrocket' without major Fed rate hikes β€” how to protect your savings
  2. The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2026 to 2036
  3. Interest on the Debt to Grow Past $1 Trillion Next Year
  4. Trillion-Dollar Interest Payments Are the New Norm
  5. Interest Costs on the National Debt
  6. The Interest Burden of the Federal Debt
  7. Inflation Nowcasting
  8. United States Inflation Rate
  9. Fed to hold rates this year, cut calls fade as war inflation persists: economists say
  10. SF FedViews: Uncertainty Clouds the Outlook on Inflation
  11. Peter Schiff: Inflation Is Going to Double Digits
  12. Interest Expense and Interest Rates