I want to respectfully disagree with the idea that the Fed wants a the market to crash to close wealth disparity. Here's why...
Wealth disparity is a talking point of the liberal left.
Communists believe that all wealth disparity is bad. But like many things in the universe, some types are good, and some types are bad.
Good wealth disparity is a result of a free market. People who make stuff people want get paid more than people who don't. It is a productive motivation and leads to better quality of life on average over a whole society.
Bad wealth disparity is a result of a government gifting huge amounts of free money to favored classes of people. That enriches some groups at the expense of others, based solely on their relationship to the government. That contributes to instability.
Keep in mind that the Fed was created to avoid another market crash similar to the one in 1929.
The Fed was created in 1913. The Fed didn't avoid the 1929 crash, or the resulting Great Depression. And market volatility has been higher post Fed than pre Fed.
How can that be? It's because economists cannot predict the market. So if they are part of a control system on the market, they can be adding volatility, not reducing it. It doesn't even require ill intent. They can have the best intentions for the long-term future of the US economy and still mess it all up.
It has given us this sequence of events:
-- Currency crisis of the 1990's
-- Fed pumps in liquidity
-- Money goes into new hot thing -> dot-com bubble
-- Fed realizes the bubble is out of control -> starts to remove liquidity
-- Dot-com crash
-- Fed pumps in liquidity
-- Money goes into new hot thing -> mortgage backed securities/real-estate bubble
-- Fed realizes the bubble is out of control -> starts to remove liquidity
-- 2008 crash
-- Fed pumps in liquidity. Also, Covid fubar crisis. Fed pumps in gigantically more liquidity.
-- Money is so huge that it goes into everything (stocks, bonds, and real estate) -> everything bubble
-- Fed realizes the bubble is out of control -> starts to remove liquidity
<------ We are here right nowAs for the U.S. paying its debts, it can't and never will.
I'm talking about the US paying the interest on its debt, not repaying all its debt down to zero debt. The US will never have zero debt, as you say. But it has to pay the interest on that debt, or it is a default.
[on motivations of the Fed]
In addition to the above dynamic, I'm sure the Fed knows that it cannot keep interest rates high for too long, or the government won't be able to pay interest on debt. Yet the Fed has a window to try to correct the bubble and battle inflation. After the bubble is reduced and inflation is reduced, then they can reduce interest rates. If they are lucky, it goes like this: Bubble fixed. Inflation fixed. Bad sort of wealth disparity reduced. Then interest rates can go down. Government can pay its interest. GDP goes back to growing in real terms. Nation grows its way out of debt problem. (I'm skeptical that this Goldilocks path will play out completely, though.)
Or, one can believe that the Fed has dark motivations. Creating a money pump to transfer money and control away from the plebeians and concentrate it into the hands of the plutocrats. Your cronies get into the market. You pump it. Your cronies get out of the market (maybe even go short). You crash it. Repeat.
Both interpretations -- (1) good intent but blindness to the folly and (2) dark designs (or even a mixture of both) -- give the same result. So it is hard to know which it is based only on action and results.
to flood the market with money, there are other ways to do it than by trying to influence the Fed.
Not when it's increasing the money supply from $1.4 trillion to $18 trillion. That requires a country's central bank (the organization in a country that determines money supply). The Fed is our version of a central bank.
Anyway, nothing I'm talking about here is different from one party to the other. It's just history and economic reality.