02-10-2021, 09:16 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-10-2021, 08:14 AM by BlackCat.
Edit Reason: mistake
)
Occasionally, someone fundamentally changes how you see the world.
These articles by Lyn Alden are about the coming decade of high inflation. None of us have experienced this unless we were working in the 70's. Its a lot, but worth it. I think VB'ers are used to reading stuff longer than tweets. Its all backed up by numbers:
a) Fiscal and Monetary Policy
b) An Inflation Primer
TLDR:
1) We're at the end of a long term multi-decade debt cycle: Debt has built up since 1987, with the fed continually lowering rates (Greenspan put). See the chart "Total Debt % of GDP vs Interest Rates" in a)
2) Now debt is so high and rates so low that monetary policy (lowering interest rates) is useless. Fiscal policy is needed (injecting cash into the economy). MMT. See the chart "A Century of U.S. Monetary and Fiscal Policy" in a)
3) This causes inflation (currency devaluation), which deflates the built-up debts. In effect, interest rates are lower than the inflation rate. Cash loses value. Bond/debt holders get screwed.
4) Every country must devalue. Or their economy becomes uncompeditive.
5) Previous inflationary decades were the 40's and 70's. Our current scenario closest to the 1940's. "Wartime MMT".
6) CPI inflation (from fiscal policy) gives money to workers. Wage inflation is a key part of this. As opposed to monetary policy, which inflates asset prices for the rich. Both the 1940's ad 1970's reduced wealth concentration.
7) Typical inflationary decades have "spikes" of inflation. eg: The inflation *rate* hits 10-20% in one year, then is low the next few years. However the prices themselves don't drop in these few years, they remain high. Your cash has permanently lost value. The inflation *rate* is transitory, inflation is not.
8) The general stock market may or may not do well during inflationary periods. Depends on their starting valuation. Did well in the 40's, not in the 70's.
9) Commodities have always done well in high inflation periods, especially oil. See the chart "CPI vs Oil Price" at the end of b). Can't tell for gold, not enough samples.
10) We won't get hyperinflation like pre-war Germany or modern Venezuela. This is not ZeroHedge.
You really have to read the full thing. And see the graphs.
My thoughts on this later....
These articles by Lyn Alden are about the coming decade of high inflation. None of us have experienced this unless we were working in the 70's. Its a lot, but worth it. I think VB'ers are used to reading stuff longer than tweets. Its all backed up by numbers:
a) Fiscal and Monetary Policy
b) An Inflation Primer
TLDR:
1) We're at the end of a long term multi-decade debt cycle: Debt has built up since 1987, with the fed continually lowering rates (Greenspan put). See the chart "Total Debt % of GDP vs Interest Rates" in a)
2) Now debt is so high and rates so low that monetary policy (lowering interest rates) is useless. Fiscal policy is needed (injecting cash into the economy). MMT. See the chart "A Century of U.S. Monetary and Fiscal Policy" in a)
3) This causes inflation (currency devaluation), which deflates the built-up debts. In effect, interest rates are lower than the inflation rate. Cash loses value. Bond/debt holders get screwed.
4) Every country must devalue. Or their economy becomes uncompeditive.
5) Previous inflationary decades were the 40's and 70's. Our current scenario closest to the 1940's. "Wartime MMT".
6) CPI inflation (from fiscal policy) gives money to workers. Wage inflation is a key part of this. As opposed to monetary policy, which inflates asset prices for the rich. Both the 1940's ad 1970's reduced wealth concentration.
7) Typical inflationary decades have "spikes" of inflation. eg: The inflation *rate* hits 10-20% in one year, then is low the next few years. However the prices themselves don't drop in these few years, they remain high. Your cash has permanently lost value. The inflation *rate* is transitory, inflation is not.
8) The general stock market may or may not do well during inflationary periods. Depends on their starting valuation. Did well in the 40's, not in the 70's.
9) Commodities have always done well in high inflation periods, especially oil. See the chart "CPI vs Oil Price" at the end of b). Can't tell for gold, not enough samples.
10) We won't get hyperinflation like pre-war Germany or modern Venezuela. This is not ZeroHedge.
You really have to read the full thing. And see the graphs.
My thoughts on this later....
I wait until there is money lying in the corner, and all I have to do is go over there and pick it up.
Jim Rogers
Jim Rogers