Does inflation matter? If you ask this question to the Fed, it
appears like it doesn’t. The Fed is doing everything it can to stoke
the fires of inflation. Instead, what it is doing is causing further asset bubbles
and misallocation of capital in markets. For most people the cost of
living is becoming more expensive. Tuition costs are soaring,
healthcare is extremely expensive, energy costs have reached a new
level, and incomes are stalled. It is hard to see how inflation is a
good thing when incomes get stuck but it is also part of the plan. The
psychology of inflation is excellent for a consumer driven economy. If
you think prices are going to go up tomorrow, you are more likely to
spend today. Falling prices cause consumers to hoard. So the Fed is
trying to manufacture more spending but this only works if underlying
household incomes move up as well. Inflation for most, does matter.
Inflation back in business
The overall rate of inflation is picking up:
Of course when incomes are stalled, even a modest bit of inflation is
going to cause pain. Think of all the items that you pay for in your
life. Things have certainly gone up in price yet some people may not
notice it because the financing has simply made it longer. How so? For
example, you can pay $100,000 in student debt over many decades. Yet the price tag is still $100,000 and many times higher once you factor in the cost of interest.
The Fed continues to offer near zero percent rates to member banks
and speculation is now prevalent throughout the financial system again.
Fed balance sheet will hit $4 trillion
The Fed’s balance sheet continues to expand:
The Fed balance sheet is now over $3.3 trillion. At the current
rate, it will get very close to $4 trillion within a year. A big
driving force is the $85 billion a month of mortgage backed securities
it is purchasing to keep the housing market afloat:
Back in 2008, the Fed did not have any Agency MBS on its books.
Today it has well over $1 trillion. The Fed also recently discussed the
challenges of winding down this massive trade in the market. The Fed
is driving the housing market by keeping rates low but also, assuming
MBS onto its balance sheet. This is creating severe distortions in the
housing market once again.
Japan is a demonstration of what happens when quantitative easing is
taken to the next level. Recently, Japan has jumped into the financial
markets to boosts its ailing economy. It is hard to see how this adds
any benefit to the real economy aside from short-term bursts.
Rising healthcare
Many baby boomers are now facing growing healthcare bills while having very little saved:
You can see how quickly inflation is hitting some areas like nursing
home care. Ultimately, many items that many Americans need to access
have far outpaced any real wage growth.
The end result is the standard of living for most Americans continues
to diminish. Does inflation matter? Only if you live in the real
economy and only if you care about the shrinking middle class.
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