01Steady State
A well-run 2020s economyMainstream settings: an independent central bank targeting 2 percent inflation, moderate taxes, insured deposits, open trade. The reference point every other scenario is measured against.
Watch for: Gentle cycles around 2 percent inflation and full employment. This is what success looks like: nothing happening.
Load this scenario02Hyperinflation
Germany, 1921-1923The government spends heavily, collects little, and orders the central bank to print the difference. Expectations unanchor, and prices stop meaning anything.
Watch for: Inflation compounding on itself once expectations unanchor, the currency collapsing, and happiness cratering even while nominal numbers soar.
Load this scenario03Sovereign Debt Crisis
Greece, 2010-2015Debt starts at 150 percent of GDP, tax collection is weak, and the currency is pegged, so devaluing or printing your way out is off the table. Bond markets are watching closely.
Watch for: Yields spiking as debt grows, austerity arithmetic failing, and the default event: a bond haircut that wounds the banks holding the debt.
Load this scenario04Stock Market Crash
United States, 1929Maximum speculation and margin leverage, banks with no deposit insurance and no bailouts coming, money pinned to gold. The bubble is not a risk here; it is the plan.
Watch for: The index detaching from fair value, the crash, then the second disaster: uninsured bank runs and a credit collapse that turns a correction into a depression.
Load this scenario05Stagflation
United States, 1973-1980Oil quadruples, unions index wages to prices, productivity stalls, and the central bank keeps rates too low because it fears unemployment more than inflation.
Watch for: The textbook impossibility: inflation and unemployment rising together. Then try flipping the Taylor rule on with high aggressiveness and price the Volcker cure.
Load this scenario06Housing Bubble
United States, 2003-2009Rates held near the floor, mortgages above 100 percent of home value, thin bank capital, and heavy property speculation. Bailouts are on, which is its own lesson.
Watch for: House prices outrunning rents and wages, the foreclosure crash landing on bank balance sheets, the bailout, and the moral hazard meter it leaves behind.
Load this scenario07Trade War
Smoot-Hawley, 1930Tariffs near 45 percent, trading partners mirroring every one of them back. Protection for a few industries, higher prices for everyone else.
Watch for: Exports and imports both shrinking, tariff revenue never covering the lost trade, and inflation ticking up while growth sags.
Load this scenario08Gold Standard Deflation
The Long Depression, 1873-1896A growing economy chained to a fixed money supply with a high gold cover. Every year of real growth must be paid for with lower prices, and debts get heavier in real terms.
Watch for: Persistent deflation, real debt burdens climbing, and why William Jennings Bryan gave a speech about a cross of gold.
Load this scenario09Helicopter Season
The MMT stress testA maximal fiscal program: universal coverage, a thick safety net, heavy education spending, and 80 percent of the deficit financed by money creation. The theory says idle capacity will absorb it.
Watch for: Happiness and coverage jumping first. Then watch whether inflation stays polite once the output gap closes. The model has an opinion.
Load this scenario10Night Watchman State
The libertarian stress testTaxes near 8 percent, spending near 6, no safety net, no minimum wage, no deposit insurance, no bailouts, banks lightly regulated and eager. Growth is real; so is the fragility.
Watch for: Strong average growth punctuated by uninsured bank runs, plus what happens to homelessness, coverage, and mobility when the floor is removed.
Load this scenario11High-Trust Model
The Nordic settingsTaxes near 45 percent buying universal health coverage, heavy education investment, strong unions, a generous safety net, and low discrimination. The question is what it costs in dynamism.
Watch for: High happiness, mobility, and coverage. Compare growth and unemployment against Steady State and decide if the trade is worth it. There is no free answer.
Load this scenario12The Exclusion Economy
Jim Crow economicsLabor market discrimination at 0.85: a large share of the population walled off from jobs, credit, and schools, with a threadbare safety net behind them.
Watch for: The permanent unemployment gap, mobility collapsing, and the part textbooks underline: total output is lower for everyone, not just the excluded.
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