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Strategies & Market Trends : The Epic American Credit and Bond Bubble Laboratory

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To: bart13 who wrote (75471)12/13/2006 10:55:06 AM
From: GST  Read Replies (2) of 110194
 
The relative contributions will change depending on circumstances. Money and credit supply are important, but they are now both increasingly complex and global. For the US the dollar is the major factor. The forces driving the dollar in turn are complex, but trade and financial flows are dominant -- with financial flows from government and current account deficits being primary factors. The dollar peaked a few years ago and there is little if anything to support it over the medium to long term. This sets the stage for inflation -- the only issue being how bad it will get. Monetary policy can make inflation worse, or it can help to contain inflation. At this stage you will be hard pressed to come up with any scenario in which the dollar will appreciate and there are no good policy options for the Fed. The US will suffer the fate of all economies that become too unbalanced. Japan's economy was too unbalanced -- and they tilted into deflation due to their imbalances. Our situation is the mirror opposite of Japan -- and so we are tilted towards inflation. If the earth is struck by an asteroid or some other similar event then of course who knows, but as things stand today we should be braced for a slowing economy coupled with a falling dollar and persistent inflation.

What you will see from many on this thread is zero understanding of the implications of a global economy -- none at all. Instead you will see a handful of people who 'believe' that inflation is money supply because they believe that inflation can have no other cause than money supply so they see it as one and the same thing. As price levels decouple from money supply due to other factors, they dismiss price levels and say that we must keep our eye on money supply and money supply alone -- it is not economics, it is a religious cult.
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