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Deflation Rearing its Ugly Head Around the Globe


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2014 Nov 14, 12:55am   48,898 views  155 comments

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According to the latest figures, deflation is now perched on China’s doorstep.

In September, China’s consumer price index was up 1.6%, but its producer price index fell 1.8%. The CPI increase was its lowest since 2010.

Economic growth is also receding. It’s hard to pinpoint the exact figures, because Chinese economic data is notoriously sketchy. But in September, demand for electric power, a “bellwether for China economic activity,” fell 8.4% from the prior month, the second straight monthly decline.

“Deflation is the real risk in China,” stated the chief economist at a Hong Kong bank.

http://www.globaldeflationnews.com/deflation-rearing-its-ugly-head-in-subtle-and-not-so-subtle-ways-around-the-globe/

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101   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 12:37am  

indigenous says

Deflation is nothing to be afraid of unless you are leveraged to the hilt...

... or you need a job to survive.

102   tatupu70   2014 Nov 18, 12:38am  

Heraclitusstudent says

indigenous says

Deflation is nothing to be afraid of unless you are leveraged to the hilt...

... or you need a job to survive.

Which is why the wealthy would love deflation--they don't need a job and they have available cash that can be used to buy assets at fire sale prices.

103   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 12:41am  

Heraclitusstudent says

... or you need a job to survive.

Au contraire, deflation is the natural disposition of the economy, it was the way the US rolled up until 1913.

104   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 12:54am  

indigenous says

Heraclitusstudent says

... or you need a job to survive.

Au contraire, deflation is the natural disposition of the economy, it was the way the US rolled up until 1913.

You are talking of a period with large population and productivity growth. And also probably low leverage.

With the current leverage, deflation, left to itself, means the global financial system collapses. A large part of companies would go bankrupt for purely financial reasons, reasons that have nothing to do with the validity of their businesses.

105   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 1:10am  

Heraclitusstudent says

You are talking of a period with large population and productivity growth. And also probably low leverage.

Why is leverage good?

Heraclitusstudent says

With the current leverage, deflation, left to itself, means the global financial system collapses. A large part of companies would go bankrupt for purely financial reasons, reasons that have nothing to do with the validity of their businesses.

You don't think that is going to happen anyway? cuz it's gunna. It happened severely in 1921 worse than at any other time in US history yet it was over in 18 months, only because Silent Cal and Harding had the good sense to do nothing other than Raise the interest rate and cut the Fed government in half.

This time would be bad but once it was over we could have honest money and a real economy at least theoretically.

Another thing regarding this is the fat tail, the millennials may surprise everyone and see the wisdom I speak of and dump the asinine D v R thing. And say get the spending under control.

106   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 1:13am  

Call it Crazy says

Why is it the most prolific and king of lying on Patnet accuses others of what he does EVERY DAY here?

You see CIC this is text book example of projecting, the cure is to take the red pill, unfortunately the Wogster is addicted to the blue pill

107   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 1:17am  

indigenous says

Why is leverage good?

It's not.
It's a way to mask the fact that the US is not producing as much as it buys.

108   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 1:35am  

indigenous says

You don't think that is going to happen anyway? cuz it's gunna.

I don't see how it could happen as long as it is backed by a printing press.
indigenous says

It happened severely in 1921 worse than at any other time in US history yet it was over in 18 months

Believe me, if it happened now, 1921 or 1929 would look like a walk in the park.
You are talking of the entire financial system worldwide. And the real economy is much more dependent on credit flows now. There would be blood in the streets.

109   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 1:42am  

Heraclitusstudent says

I don't see how it could happen as long as it is backed by a printing press.

Have you heard of Weimar or Zimbabwe?

Heraclitusstudent says

Believe me, if it happened now, 1921 or 1929 would look like a walk in the park.

You are talking of the entire financial system worldwide. And the real economy is much more dependent on credit flows now. There would be blood in the streets.

That is how the story goes and what Paulsen and Co would like you to believe.

110   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 1:44am  

Heraclitusstudent says

What about debts of corporations to buy back stocks?

Very productive.

They is to the CEOs

111   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 1:53am  

indigenous says

Have you heard of Weimar or Zimbabwe?

Yes and these were not deflationary collapses.

A condition for hyperinflation is that your debt is not in your currency, in which case printing can't help you.

It's not the case here.

indigenous says

That is how the story goes and what Paulsen and Co would like you to believe.

No, it's a logical conclusion of this loop:
1 - deflation makes debt harder to pay
2 - debt defaults cause more deflation

Which of these 2 do you believe is incorrect?
Because if you believe these 2 then you can see that a leveraged system is inherently unstable, and that the amount of debt is fuel for a chain reaction that would propagate through the system and destroy it.

112   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 2:03am  

Heraclitusstudent says

It's not the case here.

Tell that to the 70s

Heraclitusstudent says

Because if you believe these 2 then you can see that a leveraged system is inherently unstable, and that the amount of debt is fuel for a chain reaction that would propagate through the system and destroy it.

It would be bad but it is going to happen either way...

113   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 2:08am  

indigenous says

Tell that to the 70s

The 70's got hyperinflation????
You've seen that in that show?

indigenous says

It would be bad but it is going to happen either way...

Explain what is going to prevent the central bank for putting guaranties on everything assets Wall Street touches.

We saw that movie before.

114   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 2:14am  

Heraclitusstudent says

The 70's got hyperinflation????

How about double digit mortgages? The debt was in dollars. Your assertion does
not hold water.

Heraclitusstudent says

Explain what is going to prevent the central bank for putting guaranties on everything assets Wall Street touches.

Inflation

115   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 2:30am  

indigenous says

How about double digit mortgages? The debt was in dollars. Your assertion does

not hold water.

Double digit mortgages is not hyperinflation.

indigenous says

Inflation

You're losing context so fast....
We were talking about how deflation would destroy the financial system, and you were saying that's not true... because of inflation?
Uh... What???

116   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 2:42am  

Heraclitusstudent says

Explain what is going to prevent the central bank for putting guaranties on everything assets Wall Street touches.

The answer is inflation. If the interest rate returns to historic norms, debt service becomes 1/3 to 1/2 of the budget right quick. This means either default of cut the 1 trillion dollar defense budget and entitlements and any superfluousness like what you describe.

117   Done   2014 Nov 18, 3:02am  

Once USD (DXY) closes above 90 real deflation is on it's way and just the beginning of what I would consider a long term deflationary cycle.

My question is @ what "price point" is deflation @ critical mass and the collapse/destruction of the USA or global financial systems taking place? Is it DXY 95, 110, 120?

I have notion that at the brink of destruction what ever that might look like, the USD will lose as stand alone standard currency.

118   Howdy There   2014 Nov 18, 3:03am  

Heraclitusstudent says

What about debts of corporations to buy back stocks?

Very productive.

1. Debt for consumption = mostly stupid, but manageable in moderation. Brings demand forward so eventually the reverse has to hold true when consumer debt stops expanding.

2. Debt for speculation = inflates asset prices, so profitable until it blows up (bubbles....)

3. Debt for real investment (expanding a business) = good idea, unless it proves to be mal investment.

Overall I think deflation is ugly but necessary to clean up the bad debts, especially from category 2.

119   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 3:07am  

Graybox says

I have notion that at the brink of destruction what ever that might look like, the USD will lose as stand alone standard currency.

Most likely, as the BRICS gains momentum. The fat tail...

120   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 3:56am  

indigenous says

Heraclitusstudent says

Explain what is going to prevent the central bank for putting guaranties on everything assets Wall Street touches.

The answer is inflation.\

Again we were talking of deflation. Please try to keep track.

indigenous says

If the interest rate returns to historic norms, debt service becomes 1/3 to 1/2 of the budget right quick. This means either default of cut the 1 trillion dollar defense budget and entitlements and any superfluousness like what you describe.

This won't happen without strong nominal growth in which case the fiscal deficit can easily be closed.

121   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 3:59am  

Heraclitusstudent says

Please try to keep track.

Back at ya

122   tatupu70   2014 Nov 18, 4:36am  

bgamall4 says

I realize that inflation is necessary to compete with some other nations but it is mainly a rip off of the frugal and of the guy on fixed income. It is a rip off of the working people as well. It is a tax. Add to it the commodity tax of cornering the markets in so many ways, and you have a lot of theft from the people

The only correct statement in there is that inflation hurts people on fixed incomes.

Working people are only hurt if their income doesn't keep pace with inflation--and that has nothing to do with inflation, but rather their leverage in the labor market.

123   mell   2014 Nov 18, 6:14am  

bgamall4 says

indigenous says

Heraclitusstudent says

Please try to keep track.

Back at ya

No, we have had massive inflation over the years. This allows wealthy and governments to rack up debt and pay it off. Frugal people are washed out and that is wrong over the long term. I realize that inflation is necessary to compete with some other nations but it is mainly a rip off of the frugal and of the guy on fixed income. It is a rip off of the working people as well. It is a tax. Add to it the commodity tax of cornering the markets in so many ways, and you have a lot of theft from the people.

Inflation is always bad when not naturally occurring as result of an organic boom. In fact countries don't need it to be economic powerhouses and stable, take Germany or even better Switzerland since the 90s with very tame inflation since then, yet their economies rock. There's nothing to fear about deflation as a symptom, only the Fed and the wealthy they protect are fighting it with tooth and nail.

Graybox says

Once USD (DXY) closes above 90 real deflation is on it's way and just the beginning of what I would consider a long term deflationary cycle.

My question is @ what "price point" is deflation @ critical mass and the collapse/destruction of the USA or global financial systems taking place? Is it DXY 95, 110, 120?

I have notion that at the brink of destruction what ever that might look like, the USD will lose as stand alone standard currency.

The USD in relatively strong compare to other shit fiat currencies since the race to global debasement has commenced - so you may have something here though the dollar long train is getting awfully crowded. Wrt to gold though I don't thinl its predicted demise is going to happen, it's putting a reversal in once again and will not reach the gold-doomers predictions imo. The demand for physical has been and is simply too high. There's a reason many countries have been stocking up on gold.

124   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 6:34am  

tatupu70 says

bgamall4 says

I realize that inflation is necessary to compete with some other nations but it is mainly a rip off of the frugal and of the guy on fixed income. It is a rip off of the working people as well. It is a tax. Add to it the commodity tax of cornering the markets in so many ways, and you have a lot of theft from the people

The only correct statement in there is that inflation hurts people on fixed incomes.

Working people are only hurt if their income doesn't keep pace with inflation--and that has nothing to do with inflation, but rather their leverage in the labor market.

- It doesn't hurt people on fixed income since interest rates are higher by the inflation rate.
- frugal people are free to invest their savings in assets that keep up with inflation, so they're not hurt.
- on the other hand inflation IS a tax: since we pay capital gain taxes on increased nominal values rather than real values.
- real incomes going down indeed has little to do with inflation.

125   tatupu70   2014 Nov 18, 6:36am  

Heraclitusstudent says

It doesn't hurt people on fixed income since interest rates are higher by the inflation rate.

- frugal people are free to invest their savings in assets that keep up with inflation, so they're not hurt.

- on the other hand inflation IS a tax: since we pay capital gain taxes on increased nominal values rather than real values.

Good points.

126   mell   2014 Nov 18, 6:45am  

Heraclitusstudent says

- It doesn't hurt people on fixed income since interest rates are higher by the inflation rate.

But they aren't higher wrt artifically created inflation which leads to stagflation as we see now. Inflation due to economic boom raises wages and rates. this QE shit doesn't. It inflates asset prices while keeping wages and interest rates down. Very very bad for the middle-class, very good for the uber-wealthy.

127   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 6:46am  

mell says

countries don't need it to be economic powerhouses and stable, take Germany or even better Switzerland since the 90s with very tame inflation since then, yet their economies rock.

If you don't discourage savers, you get less internal consumption and more investments. This is the secret of running a trade surplus.

If you keep discouraging savers, you consume a lot, produce little, run a perpetual large trade deficit, and you need a large financial sector to make up the difference. Perhaps bubbles will help you maintain the illusion that all is well.

Can you tell which countries are in which category?

128   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 6:55am  

mell says

Inflation due to economic boom raises wages and rates. this QE shit doesn't.

You're exactly right: now they suppress rates so they don't go up as much as the increase in money supply. That's financial repression, punishing savers.

Which is why it matters how money is created and whether it circulates or not. If it is given to rich people to chase assets and push yields down, then indeed it punishes savers.

If it was spent and circulating in the economy, then we would get more growth, more inflation, higher wages and higher rates.

This is why I think all this deflation fear is phony. Governments and central banks can create inflation easily if they choose to.
They just choose not to.

129   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 7:35am  

Heraclitusstudent says

This is why I think all this deflation fear is phony. Governments and central banks can create inflation easily if they choose to.

Not really. Even with the record QE printing of 4 trillion, it is 5% of the money supply if you include the bond market. If they pull a Japan then they might get inflation but then there would be a fine line between runaway and the 2% they are after. If it did take off the only way to reign it in would be higher interest rates which would lead to debt service consuming a huge chunk of the budget. Which would lead to Al Sharpton leading the charge...

130   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 7:50am  

indigenous says

Not really. Even with the record QE printing of 4 trillion, it is 5% of the money supply if you include the bond market.

Instead of printing $4 trillions and putting it in an account where it just sits doing nothing, try giving $10,000 (free of any debt) to every man woman and children in the US and see if there is still no inflation.

131   indigenous   2014 Nov 18, 7:58am  

Heraclitusstudent says

Instead of printing $4 trillions and putting it in an account where it just sits doing nothing, try giving $10,000 (free of any debt) to every man woman and children in the US and see if there is still no inflation.

That is the difference between investment and consumption, but they did not do that...

132   tatupu70   2014 Nov 18, 8:55am  

bgamall4 says

It has never kept pace with inflation, however, now they don't even try. It is a myth to think purchasing power has remained constant.

Of course it has. It's only since the late 1970s that it hasn't.

133   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 10:00am  

Call it Crazy says

I doubt there would be inflation, since that $10K would be spread through many parts of the economy and not focused in one area.

You think Joe 6-pack, who lives pay-check to pay check, would not go out and splurge given the opportunity, buy a vacation, a new car or an iphone?

http://www.youtube.com/embed/UW5RxOjpR8E

134   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 18, 10:03am  

You are talking of people who have been programmed from a young age to BUY BUY BUY

http://www.youtube.com/embed/PRkOBgVx9Dg

135   indigenous   2014 Nov 19, 12:17am  

The point is that they gave the money to the cronies. No inflation because the money never made it to the market place.

136   tatupu70   2014 Nov 19, 12:37am  

New Renter says

The wealthy don't need a job regardless. During inflation they can just have their people invest their cash and live off the dividends, in a deflation just eh wealthy can just bank the cash.

No work required either way.

Obviously. Inflation hurts those that need a job, however.

New Renter says

As I understand it "full employment" simply means employers don't have a problem filling job openings.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_employment

I doubt most employers had any problem filling openings in the great depression.

I don't think you understand correctly. Do a bit more research on full employment.

137   tatupu70   2014 Nov 19, 12:39am  

Call it Crazy says

So, how do you get inflation from that?

You need to actually understand how an economy works. It's called demand/pull inflation.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demand-pull_inflation

138   indigenous   2014 Nov 19, 1:00am  

Call it Crazy says

Demand-pull inflation is a theory that simply does not exist in reality.

Don't tell the Ks that...

139   Heraclitusstudent   2014 Nov 19, 3:19am  

Call it Crazy says

You think Joe 6-pack, who lives pay-check to pay check, would not go out and splurge given the opportunity, buy a vacation, a new car or an iphone?

So, how do you get inflation from that?

Either it can be produced at the same cost and it's real growth or it leads to inflation.
Either way nominal growth.

140   New Renter   2014 Nov 19, 5:19am  

tatupu70 says

Obviously. Inflation hurts those that need a job, however.

So if you are unemployed under inflation your savings buy less and less. Under deflation your chances of getting a job (and the salary it might pay) get less and less.

Which is worse again?

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