Mike Shedlock's article:
So disinflation (Ka) has turned into deflation. This wasn't going to happen according to Ka-Poom theory, but anyway it doesn't matter that much as far has the high inflation (Poom) phase actually happens in the future.
Mish's article Fiat World Mathematical Model:
This seems right to me. I don't see how all the trillions are going to cause high inflation (Poom) at any time. If banks don't lend it won't happen. I'm even unsure about the possibility of biflation.
Maybe I just don't completely get Ka-Poom theory. Am I missing anything? Thanks.
Japan wholesale prices log fastest drop since 2002
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German wholesale prices see record decline in 22 years
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Chinese CPI, PPI Negative
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US CPI In First Year-Over-Year Decline Since 1955
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US Produce Price Index (PPI) Biggest Drop In 59 Years
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This expansion of money to bailout banks is not going to cause hyperinflation or even strong inflation
(...)
German wholesale prices see record decline in 22 years
(...)
Chinese CPI, PPI Negative
(...)
US CPI In First Year-Over-Year Decline Since 1955
(...)
US Produce Price Index (PPI) Biggest Drop In 59 Years
(...)
This expansion of money to bailout banks is not going to cause hyperinflation or even strong inflation
Mish's article Fiat World Mathematical Model:
Assume for a moment you invent a magical printing press. Your machine can print hundred dollar bills so good that the US Treasury cannot distinguish them them from the real thing. The bills are perfect in every way. Now assume you print $5 trillion worth of those bills and bury them in your back yard. Is this inflation? Surely not. Would it be inflation if $5 trillion in bills were spent and entered the economy? You bet. The key then is not how much the Fed prints, the key is how much of that money makes its way into the economy.
Please consider this audio with Austrian Economist Frank Shostak on Mises on September 30, 2008 discussing recent actions by the Fed.
Please consider this audio with Austrian Economist Frank Shostak on Mises on September 30, 2008 discussing recent actions by the Fed.
Will this printing create [price] inflation? This is dependent very much on what money will do next. If banks will not lend and banks sit on that cash forever and ever like the great depression because the risk is too high and the banks do not know if the lending will end up in good assets or bad assets, and because banks are in so many bad assets now they probably will not lend at all.
That is the observation that Murray Rothbard made, that during the Great Depression that banks have chosen not to lend because the risk of accumulating bad assets was far to high. So they were sitting on massive reserves. That is what is developing right now.
That is the observation that Murray Rothbard made, that during the Great Depression that banks have chosen not to lend because the risk of accumulating bad assets was far to high. So they were sitting on massive reserves. That is what is developing right now.
Maybe I just don't completely get Ka-Poom theory. Am I missing anything? Thanks.
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