Let Them Inflate
by Richard Daughty
Previously
by Richard Daughty: Why
the Government Doesn’t Need Your Gold
I think that
Paul Krugman is one of those absurd guys that has no idea what in
the hell he is talking about and who owes his undeserved prominence
to being a real butt-kissing sucker-upper to Alan Greenspan and
his Federal Reserve, and now hes doing the same thing to the
laughable Ben Bernanke and his disastrous Federal Reserve, although
I will admit that I dont know why anybody listens to this
guy.
I say this
with such obvious disrespect because Mr. Krugman is on record has
having advised the Bank of Japan to purposely cause inflation, as,
The way to make monetary policy effective is for the central
bank to credibly promise to be irresponsible to make a persuasive
case that it will permit inflation to occur, thereby producing the
negative real interest rates the economy needs, although he
never actually says where he is going to find guys stupid enough
to loan money at negative interest rates, or in what bizarre alternate
universe he lives where high inflation in consumer prices, particularly
sustained high inflation, is anything other than a total disaster,
which is why most of economics is concerned with the problem of
preventing inflation while fostering growth!
In fact, he
thinks that a central bank trying to reflate a collapsing economy
should announce a deliberate plan to raise the level of prices (such
as the Consumer Price Index) from current low levels to some dramatically
higher value (a so-called price-level gap) that it would
have theoretically reached if a moderate and constant
amount of inflation in prices had, in fact, occurred! Gaaahhhh!
To make it
more Theater of the Absurd, he then says to keep creating more inflation
in prices! Gaaahhhh! This is insane! This is beyond insane!
This would
be bad enough coming from just another egghead academic dork from
Princeton, but a terrifying quote from Ben Bernanke, chairman of
the Federal Reserve, shows that he agrees with this with nonsense!
In fact, Bernanke
said, A successful effort to eliminate the price-level gap
would proceed, roughly, in two stages. During the first stage, the
inflation rate would exceed the long-term desired inflation rate,
as the price-level gap was eliminated and the effects of previous
deflation undone. Call this the reflationary phase of policy. Second,
once the price-level target was reached, or nearly so, the objective
for policy would become a conventional inflation target or a price-level
target that increases over time at the average desired rate of inflation.
This is so
dangerously preposterous that ones hands shake in fear and
paranoia at the calamity that awaits a nation that takes such ridiculous
advice, and there is nothing to be done except to buy more gold,
silver and oil, as the last 4,500 years of history have proven that
these are the things that have lasting value, unlike the bitter
disappointment and dismay of paper money and true love.
Obviously,
people do not have to be around me very long before they learn that
I am perpetually scared, to one degree or another, of inflation
in prices, such as the other day, for example, when I had saved
up enough money to have dinner alone at a restaurant so that I could
eat one lousy meal without the wife and kids all the time whining
and complaining about how they need more money, and want more money,
and how they want me to give it to them, and how I am a terrible
person for not giving them more money, how I am too stupid to get
a better job to make more money and how I am too lazy to get a second
job with which to earn more money.
So instead
of having to listen to them talk about how much they hate me, I
am enjoying the peaceful qualities of the restaurant when a guy
seated at the next table sees me eating my steak and asks me how
I liked it.
So I told him,
I like it fine, except I wanted lobster! Rich, flakey lobster
to dip into real melted butter so wickedly delicious that you can
actually hear your arteries hardening from just looking at it; but
I cant order lobster because inflation in prices caused by
the Federal Reserve creating so much money and credit all these
years has resulted in the ugly news that they now charge too much
for lobster, and inflation is so bad that some crappy, weak iced
tea is almost two bucks a lousy glassful, most of which is ice!
Out of the
corner of my eye, I can see the other people in the restaurant have
stopped eating and they are all looking at me. Figuring that they
want me to further enlighten them, I go on, So dont
you ask to me about how I like my steak, when you should be asking
me how I like inflation in prices, which I dont! Not one little
bit! And if you werent so stupid, you would realize that inflation
in prices is the worst thing that can happen to us, and which is
exactly what is going to happen to us because the damnable Federal
Reserve is creating unbelievable, staggering amounts of money and
credit so that the federal government can borrow and spend it in
an orgy of deficit-spending that will end badly!
Well,
pretty soon the manager comes over and tries to censor the Heroic
And Brave Mogambo (HABM) by telling me to shut up and sit down,
although he might have been interested in the actual inflation figures,
which are pretty bad!
For instance,
producer price inflation shot up 1.8% in June, and it seems especially
interesting that the Labor Department figures that the Consumer
Price Index rose 0.7% in June, and although 0.7% does not seem like
that much in one month, it adds up to a lot over the course of time;
like for instance, in a year, when this 0.7% per month inflation
compounds to 8.7% per year inflation! Yow!
August
18, 2009
Richard Daughty (Mogambo
Guru) is general partner and COO for Smith Consultant Group, serving
the financial and medical communities, and the writer/publisher
of the Mogambo Guru economic newsletter, an avocational exercise
to better heap disrespect on those who desperately deserve it. The
Mogambo Guru is quoted frequently in Barrons, The
Daily Reckoning, and other fine publications.
Copyright
© 2009 Daily Reckoning
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