Everyone who has taken a basic econ class has heard about Inflation and how the government must "control it" keep it at some arbitrary level as a sound economic policy.But nobody ever brings up its alternative.The talking heads yammer about the dangers of hyperinflation and conjure up images of taking a wheelbarrow load of money to the store to get a loaf of bread
and establishment toadies like Krugman grunt out steaming piles like this
Total bullshyt..Nobody spends LESS when their cash buys MORE..its actually what stores count on when they have sales like on Black friday..the prices are slashed in half and people spend more..even when you travel to countries with weak currency people buy tons of jewelry and luxury products they couldnt afford at home.http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/02/why-is-deflation-bad/?_r=0
A number of readers have asked me to explain why deflation is a bad thing; and the truth is that while I’ve alluded to the issue a number of times, I’m not sure if I’ve ever laid out the whole case. So here goes.
There are actually three different reasons to worry about deflation, two on the demand side and one on the supply side.
So first of all: when people expect falling prices, they become less willing to spend, and in particular less willing to borrow. After all, when prices are falling, just sitting on cash becomes an investment with a positive real yield – Japanese bank deposits are a really good deal compared with those in America — and anyone considering borrowing, even for a productive investment, has to take account of the fact that the loan will have to repaid in dollars that are worth more than the dollars you borrowed. If the economy is doing well, all this can be offset by just keeping interest rates low; but if the economy isn’t doing well, even a zero rate may not be low enough to achieve full employment.
And when that happens, the economy may stay depressed because people expect deflation, and deflation may continue because the economy remains depressed. That’s the deflationary trap we keep worrying about.
As an example when cellphones first came out they cost $4000 ..only millonaires and big companies bought them...now you can buy a disposable one for $20 and everyone has one and people are still buying them.
More nonsense because the debtor also benefits from lower prices..basically in simple terms he is saying that buying a $24 k new car is bad for someone who will be making payments and the same car will sell for 23k next year..assuming the debtors income stayed the same they will be fine because theyre spending less on buying food and paying bills.A second effect: even aside from expectations of future deflation, falling prices worsen the position of debtors, by increasing the real burden of their debts. Now, you might think this is a zero-sum affair, since creditors experience a corresponding gain. But as Irving Fisher pointed out long ago (pdf), debtors are likely to be forced to cut their spending when their debt burden rises, while creditors aren’t likely to increase their spending by the same amount. So deflation exerts a depressing effect on spending by raising debt burdens – which, as Fisher also points out, can lead to another kind of vicious circle, in which depressed spending because of rising real debt leads to further deflation.
Of course the real danger is that the debtor may abandon this liability meaning the Bank will be stuck with reselling it but they can always peg the payments to inflation
Finally, in a deflationary economy, wages as well as prices often have to fall – and it’s a fact of life that it’s very hard to cut nominal wages — there’s downward nominal wage rigidity. What this means is that in general economies don’t manage to have falling wages unless they also have mass unemployment, so that workers are desperate enough to accept those wage declines. See Estonia and Latvia, cases of.
Now, alert readers will have noticed that none of these arguments abruptly kicks in when the inflation rate goes from +0.1% to -0.1%. Even with low but positive inflation the zero lower bound may be binding; inflation that comes in lower than borrowers expected leaves them with a worse debt burden than they were counting on, even if the inflation is positive; and since relative wages are shifting around all the time, some nominal wages will have to fall even if the overall rate of inflation is a bit above zero. So the argument that deflation is a bad thing is also an argument saying that some economic problems get worse as inflation falls, and that too low an inflation rate may actually be economically damaging. That’s why the fact that inflation, while still positive, is below the Fed’s target is bad news; and it’s why respectable people like Olivier Blanchard(pdf) have suggested that a higher target, something like 4 percent inflation, might make sense.
And no, 4 percent inflation wouldn’t turn us into Zimbabwe. I remember when we had stable inflation of around 4 percent – and it was morning in America.
This one is just stupid...if the deflation is severe enough to require wage cuts most people would willingly renegotiate but thats never happenedThe bottom line is Inflation is good for the people who print the money(the Fed),the people who get the new money FIRST after its printed(the banks) and the people who are first in line to spend that new money (Govt and big corporations)..it called money velocity
Its good for governments because they can sell bonds to people and create debt since they become more attractive than just saving cash.
Its good for lenders because they now have to charge interest and the terms will be long.
Its bad for people who save money and people at the bottom of the money supply chain.
Its bad for pensions and retirement funds because they MUST put that money into the stock market to beat inflation otherwise they wont be able to pay people who paid into them
What does HL think
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Yup i cant disagree with that...people take alot of shyt for granted and they have swallowed the myth of a benevolent state that feeds you when your hungry,gives you shelter when you need it and funds your retirement when you get old and pays your heaithcare
Think big picture nikka..I wasnt specifically asking about price deflation due to destruction of demand in an economic downturn...like in your great depression example prices had to drop because a)there had been previous inflation and b)The customer base had been obliterated so most people didnt have the money and c)monetary contraction by the fed was the driving force .
Thank you for your answer i see your point and i appreciate the courteous response