Re: Roubini: No Poom
Roubini gave four reasons in support of his thesis that inflation is not in our future.
1. [T]he recent trillions injected into the financial system have not been inflationary because the central banks will mop up excess liquidity after panic has receded.
This claim hinges on the efficacy of the mopping up mechanism. How is this to function, and how quickly? If the mechanism is unreliable, or the process is too lengthy, we may seen high inflation despite these efforts.
2. Inflation will not result from the big bailouts because the bailouts will have been financed with public debt, rather than by printing new currency. The public debt will be funded by increased taxes, reduced government spending, or both.
The question of financing the bailouts is not wholly economic. Politicians will make the ultimate decision, and they will be loath to increase taxes or reduce government spending. US public debt is now over 5 trillion dollars, but this is by no means a limit.
3. Bernanke and other central bankers won't monetize the bailouts because it would cause high inflation; this would result in a tight money policy; this would cause a severe recession; and this would corrode the banksters' "low inflation credibility" (evidently something that must be avoided at all costs).
Given the current debacle, the credibility of central bankers is falling to the floor ((recall Sir Greenspan's humiliating testimony last week). It is silly to propose that concern about their low inflation credibility is an important factor.
4. If inflation was to occur, lenders would quickly adapt by only agreeing to loans with built-in inflation hedges.
I doubt that this is simple as Roubini makes it seem.
Furthermore, all arguments for low or no inflation lead to conditions for deflation, possibly a deflationary depression. This would be a very dangerous, self-reinforcing downward spiral. The high real interest rates seen during deflationary periods hamper investment and reduce demand. The rate of employment drops. Wealth is transferred from those in debt to lenders. The lack of available credit reduces investment and demand. Unemployment increases.
Caught between the Scylla of runaway inflation and the Charybdis of a deflationary spiral, central banks will, like Odysseus, choose the lesser of the two evils -- and opt for inflation.
___________________________
See Fear of a Quagmire, by Krugman in the May 24, 2003, edition of the New York Times.
Roubini gave four reasons in support of his thesis that inflation is not in our future.
1. [T]he recent trillions injected into the financial system have not been inflationary because the central banks will mop up excess liquidity after panic has receded.
This claim hinges on the efficacy of the mopping up mechanism. How is this to function, and how quickly? If the mechanism is unreliable, or the process is too lengthy, we may seen high inflation despite these efforts.
2. Inflation will not result from the big bailouts because the bailouts will have been financed with public debt, rather than by printing new currency. The public debt will be funded by increased taxes, reduced government spending, or both.
The question of financing the bailouts is not wholly economic. Politicians will make the ultimate decision, and they will be loath to increase taxes or reduce government spending. US public debt is now over 5 trillion dollars, but this is by no means a limit.
3. Bernanke and other central bankers won't monetize the bailouts because it would cause high inflation; this would result in a tight money policy; this would cause a severe recession; and this would corrode the banksters' "low inflation credibility" (evidently something that must be avoided at all costs).
Given the current debacle, the credibility of central bankers is falling to the floor ((recall Sir Greenspan's humiliating testimony last week). It is silly to propose that concern about their low inflation credibility is an important factor.
4. If inflation was to occur, lenders would quickly adapt by only agreeing to loans with built-in inflation hedges.
I doubt that this is simple as Roubini makes it seem.
Furthermore, all arguments for low or no inflation lead to conditions for deflation, possibly a deflationary depression. This would be a very dangerous, self-reinforcing downward spiral. The high real interest rates seen during deflationary periods hamper investment and reduce demand. The rate of employment drops. Wealth is transferred from those in debt to lenders. The lack of available credit reduces investment and demand. Unemployment increases.
Caught between the Scylla of runaway inflation and the Charybdis of a deflationary spiral, central banks will, like Odysseus, choose the lesser of the two evils -- and opt for inflation.
___________________________
See Fear of a Quagmire, by Krugman in the May 24, 2003, edition of the New York Times.
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