Deflation Might Just Be a Good Thing

December 18, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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By Bonnie Erbe, Thomas Jefferson Street blog

Why is the whole economic world dreading deflation? Just today, Reuters reported:

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard Fisher said on Thursday that the U.S. central bank's duty now was to do everything it could to prevent deflation and it could worry about inflation later.

"Price pressures now are in the other direction," he said in response to a question at a World Affairs Council of Dallas/Fort Worth luncheon about potential future inflation. "We have to do everything we can to lift the economy up and prevent deflation from taking (hold)."

The conventional media take explains deflation fear as follows:

What makes deflation such a dreaded condition is that, once it takes hold, it motivates consumers to hold back on spending in the expectation that they will be able to buy things at a cheaper price later. This causes further drop in demand today, leading to more cutbacks in production and even slower economic activity, which feeds into more price declines—a highly destabilizing dynamic.

But all these explanations and fears fail to take into account that the economy has just endured spiraling inflation, most of which the government's rigged economic figures (see prior blog entry) have failed to recognize. Real estate, in some areas, doubled and tripled in price, while gas prices doubled within a year. Food is up, rents are up, although gas is back down again, of course. But salaries never did rise quickly enough to catch up with other inflated costs. So, from where I stand, a bit of deflation is a good thing for the economy. It is not to be feared; it is to be welcomed.

Tags:
recession,
inflation,
economy

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Deflation can lead to a drop in wages. When this happens, your long-term debt, like your mortgage, will become more expensive.

vince of WA 2:31PM February 17, 2009

The philosophical issue Obama mentioned is that people with savings will have their savings completely destroyed by the amount of inflation caused by such actions. It's a less obvious way of going into everyone's savings account, forcibly removing the money, and giving it to everyone else.

Terrence Kwasha of GA 8:04AM February 13, 2009

Welcoming "a bit of deflation" is like welcoming "a bit of hurricane": there's no way to control it once it's unleashed, and there's no way to know how much damage it's capable of doing. Anyone looking forward to deflation as a time of great bargains and lower prices needs to talk to their grandparents to find out the real story of the Great Depression.

Basically, the pain everyone is now feeling watching the value of your houses stagnate and fall will be replicated ten times over if this foolish author gets the "bit of deflation" she's thoughtlessly cheering for.

RB of VA 2:15AM January 01, 2009

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe

Bonnie Erbe is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report and hosts PBS's weekly news analysis program, To the Contrary with Bonnie Erbe. She also writes a weekly syndicated newspaper column for Scripps Howard News Service.

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