VikramS wrote:Inflation is a monetary phenomenon. Right now the velocity of money is low. There is an AEP article talking about falling M2 globally. As long as those deflationary trends stay in place inflation will not go up. Once things start returning to normal, it will then be unleashed.
I think I get the gist of the above; however, when the TARP emergency release of funds was made, the refrain from Wall St. and D.C. was that without banks lending to the small businesses, individual consumers etc., most or all economic activity would freeze/stop.The unsaid implication was that the banks had to keep lending for the day-to-day economic activty to take place, meaning money has to flow from banks to businsses to people to industry etc. It was made out to be an emergency situation.
But now, 4 years later, the unprecedented amount of TARP money injected into the banks has not inflated the prices much. How come? Could the reason(s) be that either the money mostly stayed in the banks and was never lent out, OR, if indeed it was lent out to small businesses, consumers etc., the amounts were not large enough to inflate (since this category of money, IMHO, should come into circulation fairly quickly and start to inflate prices).
>There is an AEP article talking about falling M2 globally.
If I understand the point you are making, the increase in circulating currency from TARP was offset by a drop in currency supply due to some other causes? I quickly scanned this article but could not determine what caused any drop in money/currency supply post-2008.
On a related note, a comment I had heard about the relative lack of inflation is that much of the US economy (3/4ths?) is based on consumer spending, and the consumer has been very skittish about spending anything for a while. In addition, a lot of consumers are now unemployed. This would definitely decrease circulation of currency in the economy and keep inflation under control.