Re: Inflation? What inflation?
IMHO, there still is not enough press given to the collapse of economies in the face of onerous obligations as the real cause of hyperinflation.
Zimbabwean unemployment is 85%. German unemployment in the Weimar Republic was ~30-50% I believe. Traditional economists would tell you hyperinflation with such a huge "output gap" is thoroughly impossible...yet it happened.
My point is that when these economies hit a "sudden stop" - where debt deflation causes the economy to take a massive & sudden step down, leaving the gov't with the choice to either allow the total collapse of the economy & political system, or print money & risk hyperinflation.
These to me seems like the key crux of EJ's Ka-poom theory - and if you look at ocean container volumes, rail volumes, truck volumes, US state personal income tax receipts (down 26% nationally), etc. - there is an overwhelming quantity of evidence to support that the US is going thru a sudden stop right now.
So if that's the case, & I think it is, then it becomes not an economics question but a politics question, as EJ has noted before:
Do you think the US gov't will allow deflation which will, if it persists long enough, bring about a "Mad Max" scenario (eventual collapse of financials & therefore possibly the gov't), or do you think they will at least give printing money a try? I mean if we have hyperinflation, we'll all own our houses free & clear (we won't be able to afford to heat them w/nat gas, but we'll own them!! )
Clearly, some are hedging their bets against the former - US private citizens reportedly bought 1.5B rounds of small arms ammo in Dec-08; this compares to 2.5B rounds fired by US troops during the average YEAR during WW2.
IMHO, there is virtually zero chance the US will just allow the economy to collapse without at least giving wholesale money printing a chance. As I believe EJ has said, they can either inflate the debt away or default on it.
For an interesting real time read, try "The Bubble That Broke The World", written in 1932 by Garrett Garet. Key takeaway: NO ONE thought there was ever any chance that Germany could default on their obligations post WW1.
IMHO, there still is not enough press given to the collapse of economies in the face of onerous obligations as the real cause of hyperinflation.
Zimbabwean unemployment is 85%. German unemployment in the Weimar Republic was ~30-50% I believe. Traditional economists would tell you hyperinflation with such a huge "output gap" is thoroughly impossible...yet it happened.
My point is that when these economies hit a "sudden stop" - where debt deflation causes the economy to take a massive & sudden step down, leaving the gov't with the choice to either allow the total collapse of the economy & political system, or print money & risk hyperinflation.
These to me seems like the key crux of EJ's Ka-poom theory - and if you look at ocean container volumes, rail volumes, truck volumes, US state personal income tax receipts (down 26% nationally), etc. - there is an overwhelming quantity of evidence to support that the US is going thru a sudden stop right now.
So if that's the case, & I think it is, then it becomes not an economics question but a politics question, as EJ has noted before:
Do you think the US gov't will allow deflation which will, if it persists long enough, bring about a "Mad Max" scenario (eventual collapse of financials & therefore possibly the gov't), or do you think they will at least give printing money a try? I mean if we have hyperinflation, we'll all own our houses free & clear (we won't be able to afford to heat them w/nat gas, but we'll own them!! )
Clearly, some are hedging their bets against the former - US private citizens reportedly bought 1.5B rounds of small arms ammo in Dec-08; this compares to 2.5B rounds fired by US troops during the average YEAR during WW2.
IMHO, there is virtually zero chance the US will just allow the economy to collapse without at least giving wholesale money printing a chance. As I believe EJ has said, they can either inflate the debt away or default on it.
For an interesting real time read, try "The Bubble That Broke The World", written in 1932 by Garrett Garet. Key takeaway: NO ONE thought there was ever any chance that Germany could default on their obligations post WW1.
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