The Price of Inflation
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Bono
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« on: March 11, 2006, 02:14:19 PM »

www.thenation.com/doc/20060320/vonhoffman

The Price of Inflation

Nicholas von Hoffman

It is not a zoo story nor a jungle story nor a circus story, but you would not know it from the way the media deals with the monthly inflation rate numbers. Inflation is presented as a tigerish beast to be handled with a whip and chair.

Maybe because they think the subject is innately boring or maybe because they are prone to spiking their drinks, business journalists routinely use force-of-nature or invading-enemy expressions when they speak of inflation. It's "inflation was held at bay this month" or "inflation was checked this month" or "new figures show inflation was contained again last month" or "inflation receded or surged this month."

Inflation is not a wild animal out there, wherever out there is, looking to pounce. Nor is it a meteorological phenomenon like Hurricane Katrina. Like money itself, inflation is man-made. It does not wax or wane month to month according to the phases of the moon.

Month-to-month inflation numbers don't mean too much anyway. Minute by minute, day by day and week by week prices go up and prices go down, and as they do, the inflation number jiggles along with them. A month is too short a time to tell whether inflation, defined as the general level of all prices, is trending upwards or if it's just another jiggle. Quarterly or annual inflation numbers are another thing. They tell us what is happening.

At the moment what is happening is not good. Compared to what things cost last year, the general price level has gone up. To use one of those wild nature similes, inflation may not be rising as fast as a bat out of hell, but it is gaining altitude fast enough to wreak havoc with your nest egg.

   
From 2005 to 2006 the dollar in your purse lost 4 percent of its purchasing power. So unless you got a 4 percent raise to compensate, you are working for less than you were a year ago.

A 4 percent rate may not sound like much, but thanks to the "miracle of compound interest," it can postpone your retirement or keep you on the job till you drop dead. It makes the difference between going to a four-year college or a two-year community institution or even no college at all. It can play hob with your health savings account. In ten years a 4 percent inflation rate will wipe out almost half the value of your savings.

There is a big plus side to inflation if you are in debt. Suppose that you overpaid for your house: In ten years, the value of your mortgage will have been cut in half. What holds for private debt holds for public debt, too. Should inflation stay at the present rate or go higher, the gigantic deficits incurred by George Bush will not, after all, have to be paid off by our grandchildren as they keep warning us will happen. The deficits will disappear in a flood tide of cheap money.

The reason is that a dollar borrowed now, if paid back after fifteen years, will be worth about 40 cents. Because employers understand how compound interest shrinks the buying power of a dollar so quickly, you have to hold a gun to their heads to get them to agree to cost-of-living increases. The same knowledge prompts Republicans to do all in their power to decouple Social Security payments from their annual cost of living adjustment.

From time immemorial, inflation is how governments have wiggled out of repaying what they owe. Back in the days when all money was copper, silver or gold, its purchasing power was lessened by minting coins with less precious metal in them. Next came printing more dollar bills. Nowadays debasing the currency is accomplished by a few computer keystrokes.

Economists and finance big shots will sometimes talk about "an acceptable level of inflation." They do not discuss who decides what that level might be. Since inflation, depending on how bad it is, always attacks savings, frustrates financial and personal planning, causes sky-high interest rates, lowered investment, unemployment, recession and, if it's bad enough and goes on long enough, chaos, panic, despair and social disintegration, how can it ever be acceptable?

It was as predictable as spring following winter that the Bush deficits would be followed by the Bush inflation to pay for them. It's his appointees on the Federal Reserve Board and the Treasury Department you may blame. No beasts, no storms, no earthquakes or any other act of nature. When you see your money evaporating in front of your eyes, don't call the weather bureau. Call the politicians.

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True Federalist (진정한 연방 주의자)
Ernest
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« Reply #1 on: March 11, 2006, 02:45:43 PM »

Which means that if you want to avoid the effects of inflation, hold assets other than cash and bonds.  The complaints of people who think that money should be a riskless investment always strike me as amusing and naive.  There is no such thing as a riskless investment, only investments with different degrees and types of risk.
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David S
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« Reply #2 on: March 12, 2006, 08:10:12 PM »

Inflation acts like a tax on savings and future earnings.
Government creates money it doesn't have and then spends it which causes inflation. The 100 bucks you have in the bank this year will purchase only 96 dollars worth of stuff next near so in effect you have been taxed out of 4% of your savings. You might invest in CDs which currently pay just a bit over 4% interest and are quite secure, but the interest will be taxed so you probably don't break even with inflation.

You can invest in stocks or commodities or real estate to get a higher return but the risk is higher too.
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phk
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« Reply #3 on: March 12, 2006, 08:32:34 PM »

Inflation acts like a tax on savings and future earnings.
Government creates money it doesn't have and then spends it which causes inflation. The 100 bucks you have in the bank this year will purchase only 96 dollars worth of stuff next near so in effect you have been taxed out of 4% of your savings. You might invest in CDs which currently pay just a bit over 4% interest and are quite secure, but the interest will be taxed so you probably don't break even with inflation.

You can invest in stocks or commodities or real estate to get a higher return but the risk is higher too.

Cash in on real estate before the market goes belly-up.
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jokerman
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« Reply #4 on: March 13, 2006, 05:39:22 PM »

Moderate inflation also breaks the power of the wealthy class and improves the standing of working people.  Indeed, inflation can act as a wealth tax.
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Bono
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« Reply #5 on: March 13, 2006, 05:45:25 PM »

Moderate inflation also breaks the power of the wealthy class and improves the standing of working people.  Indeed, inflation can act as a wealth tax.

How?
It attacks all people's wealth at the same time?
The only people it benefits are debtors, and the sellers of the first products to experience inflation, or experiencing them at a higher rate.
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dazzleman
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« Reply #6 on: March 14, 2006, 09:03:01 PM »

Moderate inflation also breaks the power of the wealthy class and improves the standing of working people.  Indeed, inflation can act as a wealth tax.

It does favor debtors over people who rely on savings.

This is not necessarily a good thing.  Many retirees rely on savings for a decent lifestyle.  You can't let your class-conscious mentality blind you to the fact that the best solution to the gap between classes is not to create more poor people.  It is ironic that many people who claim to hate poverty, and want to fight poverty, have such resentment toward people who aren't poor.  If everybody were poor, would you then be happy?
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angus
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« Reply #7 on: March 14, 2006, 09:53:49 PM »



This tracks pretty well with inflation.  Puts me in mind of the Carter Administration.

And, yeah, David makes a good point.  Youze guys gotta quit calling the Bushies "conservative:



But hey, at least we can still buy booze and new cars!



I figure 3 pics are worth 3000 words, so I'll forego the 3000 word rant.  Wink
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Erc
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« Reply #8 on: March 15, 2006, 01:16:25 AM »

If inflation goes up, interest rates generally go up commensurately (barring a rather high level of inflation)--so the net effect to my savings is (roughly) nil.

If we start getting 6 or more points of inflation a year, I'll get worried.
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jfern
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« Reply #9 on: March 15, 2006, 02:26:13 AM »



Yep, it used to be that if you were in New York, and made a 3 minute call to Chicago, that cost almost as much as your 5 star hotel.
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