Agreed, but a case can be made for the classic:Quote from zdreg:
any gov't that wants to produce inflation can create it. History is not on your side or on the side of deflation.
Quote from syswizard:
See my recent post. We are definitely moving towards deflation. Uncle Benny is trying to stop it however.
Quote from syswizard:
Agreed, but a case can be made for the classic:
"This time it's different".
When is the last time we had record levels of poverty, food stamps, fiscal deficits, public demonstrations, banksters, etc. ?
In addition, there can be no sustainable inflation without commesurate wage gains. That's not happening.
Quote from piezoe:
Your reality is apparently different. For most of us, the reality is that we have "inflation without commensurate wage gains" and it is being sustained. We'll let you know when our perception of reality changes to match yours.
There is not going to be deflation in the overall economy for the foreseeable future -- if you persist in your thinking long enough then you might get to say, "see I was right" post revolution.
(I will grant you that there has been some wage deflation measured in constant dollars, but not nominal dollars, at the lower wage end. There has been deflation in the housing sector, but it hasn't been enough to overcome inflation in other sectors. The Fed and their army of green-visored economists keep track of this sort of thing, and they are very good at not letting the nation slip into deflation. The Fed does not consist of a bunch of bozos running around with their zippers open, as Lyndon Johnson would have put it.)
Of course....the pain will be IMMENSE but (here's the key) it won't last beyond a year or two. In deflation, creditors win, debtors lose. The US dollar will tank, but then our exports will eventually be incredibly attractive. Many companies will go out of business as the price of their goods and services decline. Only the strong will survive and that will be the basis for the next boom.Quote from piezoe:
If you got a healthy dose of your deflation you might find the cure worse than the disease. Raising interest rates on the entirety of existing U.S. debt, public and private, which in effect is what deflation would do, might not result in the happy ending you had hoped for.