According to the latest Gallup survey, Americans are losing faith in Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, President Joe Biden and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. Only 36% of respondents have confidence in Powell on the economy; just 35% have a “great deal” or “fair amount” of confidence in Joe's ability to handle the nation's economic affairs; and 37% believe that Yellen could save the day. Gallup warned that if the economy "falls into a recession later this year, confidence in political leaders may erode further."


Why Does the US Suffer Less Than Europeans?
One might ask why the American economy appears to be in a better shape than that of its peers."The strengthening of the dollar against all other currencies played in favor of reducing inflation in America and for a very simple reason," Alexander Losev, financial expert and CEO of Sputnik Assets Management, JSC, told Sputnik. "80% of US GDP is in the service sector. Americans produce very little other than food. And even food is partially imported. The fall of the currencies of the US trading partners against the dollar has reduced the cost of imports for the US from these countries. That is, Chinese, Japanese, Korean and European goods have become cheaper for Americans. This is precisely what explains why inflation in the United States turned out to be lower than in the European Union in many countries, or in Japan, or in Latin America, and so on."


Russian Economy Stays Healthy Against All Odds
For comparison’s sake, in Russia, the inflation indicator for March was 3.5%, with a forecast of 2.5% inflation based on the results of April, much lower than American and European figures."The fact is that [Russia] has been fighting inflation for a long time," explained Nikolai Solabuto. "In the Russian Federation, [the interest] rate has always been above 4% and even significantly above 4%. Therefore, we are very far from any crisis situations, namely the crisis of non-payments, loan defaults. And in principle, any crisis situations related to inflation are very far from Russia."
“Nevertheless, we have inflation, partly imported, as we have goods and services that we buy abroad, which were produced in countries with fairly high inflation. And within the framework of imported inflation, this external inflation affects us. Nothing can be said here. “What is the tool for the treatment of this disease? To completely abandon foreign-made goods and services, produce everything in the territory of the country and provide services also on the territory of the country. And thus, we will exclude imported inflation. And in this case, any external inflationary impact of the world economy on our economy will be reduced to zero,” the financial market expert continued.Earlier, Russian economists drew attention to the fact that the collective West's effort to financially "decouple" from Russia eventually played into Moscow's hands, shielding it from the perfect economic storm engulfing the West.
"The undoubted key factor here is precisely the quality of the monetary policy of the [Russian] Central Bank, which is focused on minimizing inflation," Professor Yaroslav Lissovolik, founder of "BRICS+ Analytics" and member of the Russian International Affairs Council, told Sputnik. "This is an integral key indicator of the quality of economic development, along with, of course, economic growth and a number of other parameters. But inflation is a macroeconomic indicator that has a particularly negative impact on the poorest segments of the population. And if inflation continues to decline in our country, this may help maintain the dynamics of real incomes of the population and help reduce the level of poverty. If these lower levels of inflation can be kept at low levels in the long run."

How to Stop Inflation and Prevent Recession?
The only way to curb inflation in the West is to stop irresponsible money-printing and to start withdrawing fiat money from the system, Alexander Losev believes.”They are doing this but in a very strange way,” the financial expert noted. “They just deflate asset bubbles, because the money went not into real goods, but into assets in the stock market, Bitcoins, real estate, and so on. And they hope that by withdrawing this money and preventing them from getting into the real sector, they would contain this inflation.”In addition, Western countries are raising interest rates, believing that it would work just like it worked in the times of Paul Volcker, the Fed chief under Presidents Carter and Reagan, who helped tame inflation with staggering 20% interest rates. However, when it comes to the US, there is a significant difference between the two situations, according to Losev.”Since the days of Paul Volcker and Reagan, the US national debt rose from about $1 trillion to over $30 trillion,” said Losev. “And now, [the Fed’s] tough monetary policy could trigger a huge number of other problems, next to which inflation would seem a piece of cake.”
"The more they support Ukraine, the more problems they have," Losev said. "More precisely, support for Ukraine comes in both direct assistance and in [anti-Russian] sanctions – ten packages of sanctions – and now they are considering the eleventh package. All these exacerbate the problems of the European Union. First, Europe has lost a huge market – not only in Russia, but also in Belarus, Ukraine and part of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), because exports are blocked. Europe has lost its energy resources."
“Accordingly, it is forced to issue subsidies, which increases the public debt and requires more money emission, and thus, further inflation. They also see rising food prices because there are no fertilizers, which Europe does not receive, and [cheap] energy. Agriculture is an energy-consuming industry, and the food industry is much more energy-consuming than agriculture, because the harvest must be preserved, processed. And if this is a perishable product, then they need refrigerators, and so on. That is, the cost of energy affects everything at once, including the consumer basket,” the financial expert stressed.As a result, the US and its allies have found themselves in a vicious cycle caused by their own monetary and geopolitical strategies, Sputnik’s interlocutors said, adding that those who suffer the most are ordinary Americans and Europeans.