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Hidden Forces

How Demographics Will Break the Bond Market | Manoj Pradhan

Hidden Forces

Demetri Kofinas

Business, Government

4.8 • 1.6K Ratings

🗓️ 25 May 2026

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In Episode 481 of Hidden Forces, Demetri Kofinas speaks with economist and Talking Heads Macroeconomics founder Manoj Pradhan about his and Charles Goodhart's new book, The Unanchored Central Banker, which argues that structural forces—aging demographics chief among them—are driving real interest rates persistently higher, deteriorating fiscal positions across the developed world, and ultimately forcing central banks to choose between monetary stability and accommodating the political demands of indebted governments.

The first hour lays out the foundations of Manoj and Charles's thesis. They discuss why an aging population and a shrinking workforce put structural upward pressure on real interest rates through two primary channels: (1) rising public debt issuance to cover unfunded liabilities like healthcare and Social Security, and (2) persistent demand for new housing construction that competes for the same limited pool of savings as the elderly delay vacating their homes. They examine how other spending pressures—from defense and climate to digital infrastructure and data center buildouts—compound the fiscal problem, why Manoj expects this to eventually produce a regime of financial repression, and the role China has played and continues to play in this broader macroeconomic story. They also discuss why the bond market appears to be partially pricing in this thesis while equity and credit markets remain comparatively unresponsive, and what recent episodes of bond market stress in the UK, France, and Japan tell us about the proximity of the regime change Manoj and Charles have been forecasting for the better part of a decade.

The second hour digs deeper into the housing market and the political economy of intergenerational wealth transfers. They explore Manoj's contrarian view on AI and inequality—drawing on the work of labor economist David Autor and Manoj's own experience implementing AI tools in his research—and why he believes the diffuse nature of this general-purpose technology's impact on white-collar work makes it qualitatively different from prior technological revolutions. They then turn to the two distinct channels through which central banks lose their independence: fiscal dominance and what Manoj and Charles call financial dominance. They discuss the political pressure currently being exerted on the Federal Reserve, the implementation of credit rationing as described by Russell Napier, and what all of this means for investors thinking about asset allocation in a world where the platform of global interest rates is structurally higher—where, in Manoj's words, equity markets will have to earn their earnings rather than be lifted by a tide of cheap capital.

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Episode Recorded on 05/20/2026

Transcript

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0:00.0

What's up, everybody? My name is Demetri Kaffinus, and you're listening to Hidden Forces,

0:06.1

a podcast that inspires investors, entrepreneurs, and everyday citizens to challenge consensus

0:12.4

narratives and learn how to think critically about the systems of power shaping our world.

0:18.0

My guest in this episode of Hidden Forces is Manoge Pradon, the founder of

0:22.3

Talking Heads macroeconomics and co-author, along with Charles Goodhart, of both the great

0:27.7

demographic reversal and their recently released sequel, The Unanchored Central Banker, in which they

0:32.8

argue that rising real interest rates driven by a number of structural factors, in particular age and

0:38.6

demographics, will create a persistent and still underappreciated deterioration in the fiscal position

0:44.5

of governments across the developed world, ultimately forcing their central banks to choose

0:49.8

between maintaining monetary stability and economic growth and employment.

0:54.8

Menoz and I spent the first hour of this conversation laying out the foundations of his and

0:59.1

Charles' thesis. We discuss why an aging population and a shrinking workforce put structural

1:04.5

upward pressure on real interest rates and the two primary channels through which this

1:09.1

occurs, rising public debt issuance to cover

1:11.8

unfunded liabilities such as health care and social security, and persistent demand for new

1:17.0

housing construction and investment that will compete over the very same limited pool of savings

1:21.9

as the elderly delay vacating their homes, making them otherwise unavailable to younger families

1:27.3

at just the time that they will most need them.

1:30.3

We also examine how other spending pressures, from defense and climate to digital infrastructure,

1:35.3

and the build out of new data centers, compound the fiscal problem, and why Minogue expects this to eventually produce a regime of financial repression,

1:43.3

in which governments pressure central

1:45.0

banks to keep bond yields artificially low. From there, we turn to the role China has and continues

...

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