This IMF report says there were $400 trillion in notational value of outstanding interest rate derivatives at the end of 2007, which boiled down to a net value of about $7 trillion. It’s not clear how much of that $400 trillion is just swaps, but probably most:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2008/wp08258.pdfSo let's assume that all derivatives become worthless and the world financial system losses $7 trillion more. For simplicity, let's assume that the world has already lost $2 trillion from the US housing collapse.
So far the US has spent about $2 trillion to bail out the financial industry and financed about $1 trillion with fiat money, and another $1 trillion with borrowings. About half of that borrowing is from foreign central banks trying to peg their currency to the US dollar.
If there is additional $7 trillion in losses, I expect the US to pick up that loss too. Most likely a majority of that would be financed with Fed fiat money. Since the US is replacing all credit losses
and issuing more money, total money - whether it goes into traditional money supply measures or not - increases.
Who said we need a wage-price spiral for inflation? I never did.
To have deflation at this time basically you would have to have all governments say we are just going to sit back, do nothing, and watch the whole financial system collapse - and by the way - have a nice day! That's not going to happen.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')ARC FABER: HYPERINFLATION IS COMING
19 June 2009
http://pragcap.com/marc-faber-hyperinflation-is-coming