by BigTex » Mon 29 Sep 2008, 13:54:06
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Iaato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'I')t's important to remember that hyperinflation is mostly a psychological phenomenon that employers have to buy into as well.
Hyperinflation is only as psychological as that "mental recession" that Phil Gramm accused us of having six months ago. Tex, you're basing your guess about our economic direction based on employer responses to political mandates. It is the political mandates from Congress that will drive things, and employers will only be able to react. As money gets pumped into the system, employers will have the choice of layoffs or increasing salaries. They will do both, but mostly the former.
We're saying the same thing.
Hyperinflation only works if you have rising wages, otherwise no one has any money to spend and you see demand destruction.
There can't be rising wages unless employers BELIEVE that there are increases in future profits that justify paying employees more today. That's what I mean by a "psychological phenomenon."
In a world where virtually all money is in the form of credit, creating inflation is not as simple as it sounds.
Japan has 0% interest rates and they have not been able to create inflation no matter how hard they tried.
Inflationary policies adopted in the face of massive credit contraction may only dampen deflationary pressures, while people pile into perceived safe havens like gold while the rest of the commodity sector collapses, as we are seeing right now.
It would be impossible for the U.S. government to create inflation if it wanted to right now (short of sending out $10,000 checks to every person in the country, and even that might now work), since it will be impossible to increase the level of U.S. debt at the same rate that U.S. dollars are being destroyed in the form of credit contraction.
Nothing like this has ever happened before. This credit bubble is more massive than people realize. At its root, however, is the same old idea we've been knocking around here forever--exponential growth assumptions are simply bumping into reality and reality is not budging.
If the U.S. dollar weren't a reserve currency and the petrodollar arrangement weren't in place, this "fiscal policy overshoot" could not have occurred.
We thought we were bungee jumping when we were really being dropped from the gallows with a REALLY long rope.