If you’ve followed the financial press or have seen Ron Paul talk in the last few years, you’ve heard all about the supposed runaway inflation we’re about to experience any day now because of all the money the Fed is printing.
We’ve had four years of warnings and yet inflation has remained extremely low because of a seriously depressed economy. If the printing presses hadn’t been humming in the last few years, a deflationary spiral wasn’t out of the question.
Now Ben Bernanke has finally embarked on a third round of quantitative easing, and, crucially, has committed to a medium-term policy of loose money in a bid to help an economy that can’t quite get into second gear. That has raised investors’ expectations of future inflation and caused at least a few papers to trot out the inflation-fears story.
The Financial Times on Monday headlined a story, “US inflation fears rise after QE3.”
A Guardian headline on Tuesday said, “High inflation leaves UK in doldrums.”
And a SmartMoney.com headline said, “Is Inflation Back From the Dead? The Fed’s latest moves have revived fears among bond investors.”
It can only be a matter of days before The Wall Street Journal editorial page trots out the “bond vigilantes,” which it told us in May 2009 were “back” because of Obama’s stimulus spending and the Fed’s money printing.
So should you start hoarding precious metals and heading to True Value to buy a wheelbarrow for a future purse?
Hardly.
It’s worth remembering that the same day of that WSJ editorial, the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds was at 3.71 percent. Yesterday, three and a half years and trillions of dollars in government spending and money creation later, 10-year T-bonds yielded 1.77 percent. Oops.
The FT’s story talks about “inflation fears,” but the measure—the difference between regular T-bonds and inflation-protected ones—implies a decade of 2.73 percent annual inflation. That would put it at roughly the average from 1990 to 2010, and far below that of the 1980s.
Paul Krugman, whose views and predictions on this topic have been validated throughout the entire bust, flags the FT’s story, noting that higher inflation expectations are what Bernanke intended when he announced easy money through 2015:
On the contrary, it’s the whole point of the exercise. For almost fifteen years, some of us have argued that central banks can gain traction even in a liquidity trap if they can create expectations that money will remain loose after the economy recovers, generating modestly higher inflation. And that’s what the Fed’s new tack is supposed to achieve.
The right headline on that FT article should have been “QE3 working so far”.
SmartMoney, at least, points out that this is not the first time the inflation bugaboo has popped up in this recession, and it writes that “For the past few years, the Keynesians have had the better of the data. Make of that what you will.”
The Guardian, though, writes that the UK’s 2.5 percent rate is “High inflation (that) has been a crucial factor in pushing the UK economy into a double-dip recession over the past year.”
But 2.5 percent is not high at all, and the UK’s latest recession was caused by austerity policies foisted on an already weak economy, not inflation.
So beware the inflation scare stories. We’ve seen them before.
Back in the U.S., the economy is still very weak, there’s a massive overhang of debt that low inflation makes harder to pay off, and the Fed is finally trying to shift a bit toward the jobs side of its dual mandate.
— Further Reading:
The Turkey-Inflation Goblin. Supply and demand is lost on the WSJ editorial page.
SmartMoney is confused on wages, inflation. When prices matter and when they don’t
You're not quite getting the point across. Tell us how journalists should really feel about economics and fiscal policy. *smh*
E.g., can the Central Planners keep interest rates at near zero, forever? Is that your claim when you deny the inevitable and inequitable price inflation that results from monetary and credit inflation?
And those awesome charts and graphs and CPI, all cleverly compiled by the feds, for the feds, accounting for everything except food and fuel, eh? Everything except what impacts everyone except those with 8-digit nest eggs, security details, and hideouts. Are you paying the same price for foods and fuels that you paid in 2007, or have the prices gone up 50–100% on most items? Do you live in the United States, or on Planet Earth?
It's time to face the truth: Keynesian economics always has been the economics of totalitarian warfare-states and electioneering politicians. Period.
Btw, the reality-inverting image of an omniscient Krugman is a laugh-riot. Cringe-inducing to the point of nausea, but hilarious nonetheless.
#1 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Thu 20 Sep 2012 at 09:13 PM
The first effect of creating money out of thin air is not even razing prices but abundance of malinvestment and absence of sustainable entrepreneurship. "Stimulus" discourages savings and encourages reckless and irresponsible borrowers. Sound money discourage reckless borrowing and encourage savings. People with savings do invest more carefully and slower but much smarter at that. They build enterprises lasting for decades and centuries. That's why any positive effect of "stimulus" is quick but short-termed and its negative effect (eradication of smart businesspeople who could create businesses lasting many decades) is also immediate and long-termed. Good business leaves for countries with sound money or gets destroyed by unpredictably growing resource and job prices and unjust indirect confiscation of value by the government (via taxation on mere value preservation). The reckless, dumb and irresponsible borrowing "business" that stays is not going to create "good" let alone long-lasting jobs. Once busted, a reckless borrowing "businessman" is not going to receive a loan again (hopefully). Thus, the balance of job-seekers to job-creators is gradually but constantly being skewed towards job seekers with the help of stimuli.
#2 Posted by pel, CJR on Thu 20 Sep 2012 at 10:06 PM
Ha... I was gonna add my 2 cents, but the other 2 comments already did.
What a joke of an article/analysis. Could have been a press release from Bernanke.
"Btw, the reality-inverting image of an omniscient Krugman is a laugh-riot. Cringe-inducing to the point of nausea, but hilarious nonetheless."
LULZ!.... hit that right on the head!
#3 Posted by Syph da Magnificient, CJR on Thu 20 Sep 2012 at 10:30 PM
Ahem. Apparently this author doesn't realize that there is a depression going on. The official monopoly currency unit (dollar) is currently worth about 2 or 3 cents at most. Sorry I had to rain on your parade. Carry on.
#4 Posted by Instead of Politics, CJR on Fri 21 Sep 2012 at 09:52 AM
What mythical island does Chitum live on? Have you paid a college tuition bill lately? Have you bought a NYTimes (up 50 cents to $2.50)? Have you been to the dentist? Have you bought cottage cheese at the Food Emporium or Gristede's? The government lies to us about inflation but our wallets don't. Meanwhile Bernanke and his predecessor Greenspan bury the savers and the thrifty with their zero interest rate nonsense. Ryan Chitum, you are so full of horse manure on real economics that when you die you will be given an enema and be buried in a match box.
#5 Posted by Mike Robbins, CJR on Fri 21 Sep 2012 at 02:46 PM
As always, the inflationistas see money coming out of the fed and conclude, via supply and demand model, that money is going to lose value.
Problem is, the supply of money has to, you know, make it out of the gate (or the gated community, if you prefer) before everybody concludes money isn't worth what it used to be.
and any money that does trickle down to the public, goes towards paying debts on depressed assets, so yeah, this money does not circulate.
Therefore, investors do not have less risky alternatives to park their money.
Therefore bond interest rates stay low.
That's not to say that it does nothing, but what it does is very small with very small after effects.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/sep/20/quantitative-easing-not-magic-central-banks
Unfortunately, very small is the limit of the possible right now. Everybody who's anybody wants to help the banks and if a person gets some unintentional help buying a house, well that's the price you pay (sort of like how 500 bucks of lower income tax cuts are required to pass 50,000 buck upper income tax giveaways). But really making the economy work again? No one wants to take the steps necessary to get us out of the mud pit. Somebody important might get dirty.
#6 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Fri 21 Sep 2012 at 02:50 PM
The bad and nearly impossible to reverse effects of deflation are so bad that a prudent central banker will want to build in a little extra inflation to be on the safe side.
Commenters who do not know what a liquidity trap does need to abandon faith-based economics and study reality.
Silver is down around 10% since spring.
#7 Posted by Harry Eagar, CJR on Fri 21 Sep 2012 at 03:16 PM
The "mythical world" where Chittum lives is one were the average price for a gallon of regular gas, at $4.12 a few months before the economic crash, now stands at $3.87.
And where the average cost of a buying a home has plummeted oh, say, 25 or 30 percent over that span.
Where a dozen eggs cost about what they did in 2008.
Where a gallon of milk costs 40 cents less than it did in 2008.
And where, yes, the New York Times has made conscious decision to raise its cover price as a way of requiring readers -- in a new environment where that thing called the internet, perhaps you've heard of it, has upended the old economics of the newspaper business -- to pay for what they perceive as a high-quality product.
The truth about truthiness: Believing in your heart that inflation is at unprecedented level doesn't make it so.
#8 Posted by wmh, CJR on Sat 22 Sep 2012 at 07:14 PM
Uh huh. Maybe a gallon of milk costs .40 less today at a suburban Buffalo CVS than it cost at a Manhattan CVS in 2008. Maybe. But my grocery bill has gone up more than half since 2007, and I've been shopping at the same suburban stores in the same town. And you might find gasoline for less than it was at some point in 2008. But the average price of gasoline would be less than $1.00/gallon today if not for massive govt interventions, namely the Keynesian monetary policies since Greenspan and the Wilsonian foreign policy since Clinton.
#9 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Sun 23 Sep 2012 at 05:32 PM
"Uh huh. Maybe a gallon of milk costs .40 less today at a suburban Buffalo CVS than it cost at a Manhattan CVS in 2008. Maybe. But my grocery bill has gone up more than half since 2007, and I've been shopping at the same suburban stores in the same town."
Could there be a connection?
http://money.cnn.com/2012/08/09/news/economy/food-prices-index/index.htm
Yes, I think there could!
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2182110/America-drought-Price-corn-surges-20-cent-July-drought-continues-afflict-Midwest.html
"But the average price of gasoline would be less than $1.00/gallon today if not for massive govt interventions, namely the Keynesian monetary policies since Greenspan and the Wilsonian foreign policy since Clinton."
Oh do tell. Please tell us how Keynesian Greenspan and Wilsonian Clinton are responsible for the high price of gas and a cup of tea.
Don't skimp on the details, I love a good yarn.
#10 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Sun 23 Sep 2012 at 10:50 PM
"my grocery bill has gone up more than half since 2007, and I've been shopping at the same suburban stores in the same town."
So food prices in your hometown has increased more than 50% in five years? Amazing! Incredible! Astounding! Food prices going up more than 10% a year? That could only be hidden by a determined, far reaching government cover up!
Thank god the Cottage Cheese Inflation Truthers are out there, fighting the good fight.
THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE. IN AISLE 7 OF THE PATHMARK!
SOYLENT GREEN IS PEOPLE! AND THE PRICE OF PEOPLE IS RISING 10% A YEAR AMID AN ECONOMIC RECESSION!
#11 Posted by whm, CJR on Mon 24 Sep 2012 at 09:50 AM
Home prices are still 30 percent below their peak in June 2006, according to Case-Shiller. http://implode-explode.com/viewnews/2012-09-25_HomepricesroseinJulyin20majorUScities.html
#12 Posted by hp, CJR on Tue 25 Sep 2012 at 12:28 PM
"Could there be a connection? ... Yes, I think there could!"
Droughts play a small part, but an intermittent one. But govt interventions (e.g., agricultural subsidies) are constants.
"Oh do tell. Please tell us how Keynesian Greenspan and Wilsonian Clinton are responsible for the high price of gas and a cup of tea."
Is it merely a case of your partisan-political goggles fogging your comprehension, or are you being disingenuous? Here's what I actually wrote, followed by a brief elaboration: "massive govt interventions, namely the Keynesian monetary policies since Greenspan and the Wilsonian foreign policy since Clinton." SINCE Greenspan: monetary and credit inflation to form dot-com, NASDAQ, and real estate bubbles; which resulted in price inflation in areas such as gasoline. SINCE Clinton: U.S.-led embargo, no-fly zone, bombing of refineries and other civilian infrastructure, sanctions, etc., on Iraq; which resulted in greater scarcity of oil and higher gas prices (not to mention the deaths of 100s of 1000s of innocent Iraqis, mostly children). That, and his other "humanitarian" aggression in Africa, the Balkans and who-knows-where-else, comprised his attempt at "making the world safe for democracy." ("Since" does not mean, nor imply, Greenspan or Clinton "alone." Since Greenspan and Clinton, Bernanke and Bush and Obama have kicked up the policies a notch or three. And "namely" does not mean "only" Greenspan and Clinton. It means "prime examples being ...") I can hardly wait for the next brilliant reply from your establishment-owned mind.
#13 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Thu 27 Sep 2012 at 03:09 AM
"Thank god the Cottage Cheese Inflation Truthers are out there, fighting the good fight. THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE. IN AISLE 7 OF THE PATHMARK! SOYLENT GREEN IS PEOPLE! AND THE PRICE OF PEOPLE IS RISING 10% A YEAR AMID AN ECONOMIC RECESSION!"
Drop the crack pipe and go find a leg to stand on. Then, if possible, you can limp on back and attempt to make a coherent and pertinent argument.
#14 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Thu 27 Sep 2012 at 03:14 AM
Dude, you wait until the post is going to fall off the "Recent Comments" roll to respond? Lame.
"Droughts play a small part, but an intermittent one. But govt interventions (e.g., agricultural subsidies) are constants."
Don't debate you about the distorting quality of agri-subsidizes but there is one ish when it comes to connecting agri-subs to inflation - they lower the price of American goods.
They transfer the price you'd be paying at the market and turn it into a price you pay to the IRS. That lowers the price. That is why the third world gets so pissed off about subsidizes because their products cannot compete in American ones and American products get dumped in their ones. Stop mainlining mises and learn how the world works. You're going to come up with better critiques if you know what you're talking about.
"namely the Keynesian monetary policies since Greenspan and the Wilsonian foreign policy since Clinton." SINCE Greenspan: monetary and credit inflation to form dot-com, NASDAQ, and real estate bubbles; which resulted in price inflation in areas such as gasoline. "
Greenspan WAS NOT KEYNESIAN. Yes he inflated bubbles and yes he came up with the Greenspan put, but when it came to recessions (under Bush II) he pushed tax cuts and not expansionary fiscal policy. When it came to recessions (under Clinton) he pushed government austerity and not expansionary fiscal policy. His term was marked by near full employment, high productivity, and low inflation because wages were repressed for everybody but the top percentiles - and this he considered a good thing!
Read this: http://www.thomaspalley.com/docs/articles/selected/Legacy%20of%20Greenspan.pdf
Know what you're talking about. Greenspan was a randian monetarist, not a Keynesian.
A Keynesian doesn't say "I got mine, my stocks are fine, FU!" just as unemployment is swirling up to 10%.
That should be a goddamn hint.
#15 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Thu 27 Sep 2012 at 01:20 PM
"SINCE Clinton: U.S.-led embargo, no-fly zone, bombing of refineries and other civilian infrastructure, sanctions, etc., on Iraq; which resulted in greater scarcity of oil and higher gas prices (not to mention the deaths of 100s of 1000s of innocent Iraqis, mostly children). That, and his other "humanitarian" aggression in Africa, the Balkans and who-knows-where-else, comprised his attempt at "making the world safe for democracy.""
Except, again, we have the figures.
http://www.wired.com/beyond_the_beyond/2008/05/oil-price-chart/
Oil stuck constant through Clinton's term at 15-20 bucks a barrel. If you want to blame Clinton for escalating the price of oil, you could make an argument that by not getting involved in Venezuela in 1998 and allowing Chavez to reconstitute OPEC into a force again allowed the consortium to push up the price above 20, but that would be an argument for more force an intervention to secure cheaper resources and I'm not a big fan of that and I assume you're not either.
Stop mainlining Glen Beck and learn how the world worked. Honestly, you're going to come up with better critiques if you know what you're talking about.
#16 Posted by Thimbles, CJR on Thu 27 Sep 2012 at 01:39 PM
You "feel" that inflation has climbed to unprecedented levels. You "feel" that the data -- which shows inflation at relatively modest levels -- is the spawn of some shadowly government conspiracy.
You "feel" this to be so, and therefore you have created an alternate universe where what you "feel" is completely absolutely totally factually true.
#17 Posted by whm, CJR on Thu 27 Sep 2012 at 04:15 PM
Thimbles, are you just trying to save face? Surely your comprehension is better than that. I didn't call Greenspan a Keynesian. I referred to his bubble-forming actions as such. (Of course Greenspan was Chicago/monetarist, in name! But he was whatever his D.C. bosses wanted him to be, in action.) Also, I wrote "greater scarcity of oil and higher gas prices," not the "escalating ... price of oil." (They could open the flows of domestic reserves, e.g., but they couldn't so easily temper the price of refined oil products, namely gasoline.) Shadow-box all you want at the edges, but the core facts remain untouched: govt intervention is at the root of economic calamity, and Keynesian economics is the boon of totalitarian warfare-states and electioneering politicians.
Whm, who beside you is using the word feel, or contriving a self-fulfilling reality? Exactly: nobody. You're a petty liar and a vicious hypocrite. I wonder whose sock-puppet you are. *smh*
#18 Posted by Dan A., CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 12:06 AM
You know you're losing an argument -- or perhaps constitutionally unprepared to engage in fact-based debate-- when you start calling the folks on the other side names. "Socket puppet" is a bit of a "show me the birth certificate" kind of argument. Not -- I disagree with what you're saying and here's why. But rather -- you disagree with me so therefore you have no standing (citizenship if you will) to say what you say.
In discussing the truthiness "feeling" of some who believe inflation is rampantly out of control I wasn't talking about your passionately expressed feelings about Keynesian economics -- that's a matter of opinion, not fact. I was talking about those who feel/argue inflation is rampantly out of control despite strong evidence to the contrary. For example, those who say things like:
"What mythical island does Chitum live on? Have you paid a college tuition bill lately? Have you bought a NYTimes (up 50 cents to $2.50)? Have you been to the dentist? Have you bought cottage cheese at the Food Emporium or Gristede's? The government lies to us about inflation but our wallets don't."
That's not about whether Keynesian economics are a scam or whatever, it's about facts: Is inflation high by historic standards or not? But there's not a single fact backing up the proposition that is it except for the rather nonsensical citation of the rise in the NYT's cover price. To which one can only say: What does that have to do the price of eggs? Or milk? Or heating oil? Or gas? Or any of the basic necessities of life whose cost have stayed relatively low in the past few years?
#19 Posted by whm, CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 01:55 PM
Or folks who claim:
"my grocery bill has gone up more than half since 2007, and I've been shopping at the same suburban stores in the same town."
There is a "factual" claim there, but it's either an outlier in the context of the whole nation, or, well, rather than a feeling, let's just say it's "an unscientific sample of what's inside someone's head."
In the 12 months ending August 2012, the NATIONAL AVERAGE rise in the price of "food at home" -- that is, stuff you but at the grocery and eat at home -- has been a whopping 1.5 percent. Yes, some particular foodstuffs have risen at a much higher rate, though most economists would argue that this is due to drought conditions more so than any Keynesian economic interventions.
Want to see figures for inflation truly out of control? Here's the overall CPI for some of the worst years in recent memory:
1979: 13.3
1980: 12.5
1990: 6.1
Want to see the figures for the last decade or so (calendar year except as otherwise specified)?
2000: 3.4
2001: 1.6
2002: 2.4
2003: 1.9
2004: 3.3
2005: 3.4
2006: 2.5
2007: 4.0
2008: 0.1
2009: 2.7
2010: 1.5
2011: 3.0
12 months ending August 2012: 1.7
CPI is an imperfect measure and there can be arguments about sampling and what items get counted. But it is a useful apples-to-apples national average, not perfect but reasonably accurate.
Does it tell us anything when see that iinflation was at 2.5 percent in 2006 and 2.7 percent in 2009? Probably not too much. But does it tell us something that inflation was at 4 percent in 2007 and now is running at 1.7 percent annual rate? Does it tell us something that inflation was at 4 percent in 2007 and 3 percent in 2011, the most inflationary post-crash year? Even economists who are critical of how the CPI is measured would probably say that, yes, that tells us something, directionally, apples to apples, about how inflation compares from then to now.
Yes, yes, you can argue that CPI isn't a true measure of inflation and that other things should be measured in other ways. Maybe doing it differently would show a higher rate now -- say 2.7 percent rather than 1.7 percent for the 12 months ending in August -- but it's also likely that such a change in measurement would ALSO nudge up the 2007 pre-crash rate about 4 percent rate for that year.
In other words, any way you slice or measure it, an apples-to-apples comparison would likely show that inflation has been relatively modest post-crash compared to the pre-crash years -- a little bit less probably, perhaps roughly the same, but certainly not dramatically worse.
#20 Posted by whm, CJR on Sun 30 Sep 2012 at 02:10 PM