Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on July 13, 2013

Bookmark and Share

Inflation Is Too Low? Are You Kidding Us Bernanke?

Inflation Is Too Low? Are You Kidding Us Bernanke? thumbnail

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said this week that inflation in the United States needs to be higher.  Yes, he actually came right out and said that.  It almost seems as if Bernanke is trying to purposely hurt the middle class.  On Wednesday, Bernanke told the press that “both sides of our mandate are saying we need to be more accommodative“.  Of course he was referring to the Fed’s dual mandate to keep unemployment and inflation low, but Bernanke has a very unique interpretation of that mandate.  According to Bernanke, inflation in the U.S. is now “too low“.  The official inflation rate is currently sitting at about 1 percent, and Bernanke insists that such a low rate of inflation is not good for the economy.  He would prefer that the rate of inflation be up around 2 percent, and he is hoping that more “monetary accommodation” will help push inflation up and the unemployment rate down.

But what Bernanke will never admit is that the official inflation rate is a total sham.  The way that inflation is calculated has changed more than 20 times since 1978, and each time it has been changed the goal has been to make it appear to be lower than it actually is.

If the rate of inflation was still calculated the way that it was back in 1980, it would be about 8 percent right now and everyone would be screaming about the fact that inflation is way too high.

But instead, Bernanke can get away with claiming that inflation is “too low” because the official government numbers back him up.

Of course many of us already know that inflation is out of control without even looking at any numbers.  We are spending a lot more on the things that we buy on a regular basis than we used to.

For example, when Barack Obama first entered the White House, the average price of a gallon of gasoline was $1.84.  Today, the average price of a gallon of gasoline has nearly doubled.  It is currently sitting at $3.49, but when I filled up my vehicle yesterday I paid nearly $4.00 a gallon.

And of course the price of gasoline influences the price of almost every product in the entire country, since almost everything that we buy has to be transported in some manner.

But that is just one example.

Our monthly bills also seem to keep growing at a very brisk pace.

Electricity bills in the United States have risen faster than the overall rate of inflation for five years in a row, and according to USA Today water bills have actually tripled over the past 12 years in some areas of the country.

No inflation there, eh?

Well, what about health insurance?

Yup, that has been going up rapidly as well.  Since 2010, employee health insurance premiums have been rising an average of between 8 and 9 percent a year.

So where is this low inflation that everyone has been talking about?

It certainly cannot be found in college tuition costs.  Since 1986, the cost of college tuition in the United States has risen by 498 percent.

What about at the supermarket?

We all have to buy food.  It sure would be nice if inflation was low there.

Unfortunately, anyone that shops for groceries on a regular basis knows exactly how painful food prices are becoming.

And over time, those increases really add up.  An article by Benny Johnson details how the prices of many of the things that we buy on a regular basis absolutely soared between 2002 and 2012.  Just check out these price increases…

Eggs: 73%

Coffee: 90%

Peanut Butter: 40%

Milk: 26%

A Loaf Of White Bread: 39%

Spaghetti And Macaroni: 44%

Orange Juice: 46%

Red Delicious Apples: 43%

Beer: 25%

Wine: 60%

Electricity: 42%

Margarine: 143%

Tomatoes: 22%

Turkey: 56%

Ground Beef: 61%

Chocolate Chip Cookies: 39%

So how in the world can Bernanke possibly come to the conclusion that inflation is too low?

Is he insane?

If you want to see a really good example of the impact that inflation has had on our economy in recent years, just check out this amazing chart which shows what Bernanke’s reckless policies have done to the prices of commodities during his tenure.

Meanwhile, paychecks are not rising at the same pace that inflation is.  In fact, median household income in the United States has fallen for four years in a row.  Overall, it has declined by over $4000 during that time span.

So the cost of living just keeps rising, but the middle class is making less money than before.

That certainly is not good news.

Of course a big reason for this is because the quality of jobs in America continues to steadily decline.  Only 47 percent of adults have a full-time job at this point, and 53 percent of all American workers make less than $30,000 a year.

Most families are just barely scraping by from month to month, and Bernanke has the gall to say that he needs to try to get prices to rise even faster.

Is Bernanke also going to increase all of our paychecks in order to make up for the “inflation tax” that is being imposed on all of us?

Of course not.

And sadly, it appears that the number of Americans that are losing their jobs is starting to move upward again.  We just learned that initial claims for unemployment benefits rose to 360,000 last week.

That is getting dangerously close to the 400,000 number that I keep talking about.

The middle class in the United States is shrinking with each passing day, and Bernanke seems absolutely clueless.

His answer to every economic problem always seems to involve printing more money.  Thankfully, about 1.8 trillion dollars of that money is being stashed away at the Fed and has not gotten out into the real economy yet.

But someday that money will be unleashed on the real economy, and it will create crippling inflation.

Unfortunately, Bernanke doesn’t seem to really be too concerned about the mountains of cash that the big banks have parked at the Fed.  He is just happy that his reckless money printing has pumped up the stock market to new all-time highs.

He should enjoy this little period of euphoria while he can, because this bubble will burst like all false financial bubbles eventually do.

And when this bubble bursts, the foolishness of Bernanke and the Federal Reserve will be glaringly apparent to everyone.

The Economic Collapse blog



5 Comments on "Inflation Is Too Low? Are You Kidding Us Bernanke?"

  1. BillT on Sat, 13th Jul 2013 1:57 pm 

    The 1% don’t notice grocery prices, their housekeeper takes care of that and gas has no meaning as the chauffeur takes care of that and housing? Which one? The one in Paris or New York City or the little 10,000 sq.ft. one in the Bahamas? They are cash purchases or inherited. And the price of tailor-made clothes is always high so who notices? It all goes on the card and the accountants take care of that. When your net worth passes $10M you are not aware of the real world.

  2. DC on Sat, 13th Jul 2013 4:30 pm 

    Like the article says, the USgovs ‘inflation’ numbers are cooked just like everything else in the US of Fraud. The only place where price deflation or very low inflation is occurring, is in the discretionary drive-shop-consume part of the economy. This helps explain why caribbean cruises, General Motors mobile garbage bins, and plastic salad shooters are ‘cheap’, because no one needs them. The things people DO need , energy, food, taxes etc, are all going up steadily. So when that bernake character says inflation is ‘too low’, hes not really saying its too low, hes really saying negative interest rates are not inducing people to finance mountains of plastic crud they dont even need, thus hes going to have to dream up some way of forcing them to. His ZIRP has already forced savers into the risky stock market casino and house flipping scams. What else is left? Play ‘derivatives’?!

    What makes that even more amusing is even this permanent depression, amerikans still consume way too much crap. Imagine what the US ‘economy’ would look like if amerikans only bought what they needed. Of course, since north americans largely only buy the things they need from large monopolistic cartels, whether they are discretionary or not, if they are not happy, they complain to Ben and that makes him not happy.

    Imagine for example, how much lower food inflation would be if people grew there own, or if local co-ops and locally grown food markets were the norm and not the exception, and people were not 100% dependent on corporate factory farms?

  3. Gilbert Godfrey on Sat, 13th Jul 2013 4:46 pm 

    There are so many disingenuous ways the Govt. reports important economic data it’s disheartening. For example, mentioned above is the change to inflation by the govt. 20 times since 1978 – that’s criminal, but no one holds them to account for it. The way they report employment, GDP, is also deceiving.

    Even median wage is so high you’d think most people were doing great, until you realize that includes the Walton’s and all the other kazillionaire’s that really shouldn’t be included with regular wage earners.

    I suppose when shtf again like 2008 we’ll all wonder how that could be with such rosy Govt. data.

    Personally it seems obvious Helicopter Ben wants to end QE but is too afraid to follow through while he’s at the helm, so he will continue the drip until he passes it off and let the next sucker that takes that unenviable job take the heat for ending QE, knowing when that 85 billion crutch is gone all hell is going to break loose.

  4. rollin on Sat, 13th Jul 2013 7:02 pm 

    Add the increased taxes on wages which can remove $100 a week from earners, then you have a disgruntled population.

  5. Dmyers on Sun, 14th Jul 2013 1:27 am 

    Inflation has been the evil protagonist in our economy for a long time, ever since it reared its head in the late seventies. First it was high interest rates and then Wal*Mart that beat down the inflation dragon last time round, after Gerald Ford’s Whip Inflation Now campaign failed. In the meantime, the PTB seem to have designed a system where they can keep inflation low (both by fraudulent statistics and by actual intervention).

    Snyder is correct about the real level of inflation as felt by the man or woman on the street. Bernanke is probably correct as well in advocating for more inflation.

    Higher inflation will boost economic numbers, when factored into phoney, manipulated economic reports. Inflation will permit payment of past dollar denominated debts with cheap and plentiful new inflated dollars. Inflation will tend to raise the prices of assets, such as real estate (which the banks own a lot of).

    So, you can see Bernanke’s point in straying from the beaten path. He has a lot to gain, and as far as we know, he doesn’t have a better idea. The question is whether inflation, once unleashed, will be more of a Pandora’s Box than a scientifically administered one percent solution.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *