The Need For Benign Inflation, Thursday 26th June
Richard Douthwaite
need_for_inflation_plus_comments_245.pdf
Richard Douthwaite
An inflation is needed for two reasons. One is that, as energy prices rise in relation to labour, the cost of everything needs to change by differing amounts, and the only pleasant way this can happen is if all prices move up. The other reason is that the burden of debt being carried in Ireland has got out of step with incomes. Asset values are also out of line. An inflation would correct both relatively painlessly. But who would create the money which allowed the inflation to happen?
[MEDIA]http://www.feasta-multimedia.org/2008/seminars/Richard_Douthwaite.mov[/MEDIA]
The ideas I expressed in my Feasta seminar last week on "The Need for a Benign Inflation" have been called "wicked and stupid" by Professor Martin Wolf, the well-respected economic commentator on The Financial Times. He was reacting not to the seminar itself but to an article I wrote on the need for an inflation in Ireland while preparing my talk. The article was subsequently printed in the Sunday Business Post.
The attachment to this message contains the article itself and the ding-dong exchange of e-mails which followed, mostly between Wolf and Brian Davey, although I and Professor Willem Buiter of the LSE, a former member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee, joined in.
The attachment to this message contains the article itself and the ding-dong exchange of e-mails which followed, mostly between Wolf and Brian Davey, although I and Professor Willem Buiter of the LSE, a former member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee, joined in.
Comment