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What's the Ideal Ending to the Housing Bubble?


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2006 Apr 8, 6:52am   24,838 views  196 comments

by SQT15   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

You write the script. If you could imagine an ending to the housing bubble that would meet all your expectations, what would it be?

You can be creative or not-- your choice.

Also-- what would happen to salaries in the ideal bubble burst? Would the salaries rise to meet the cost of housing, or would housing crash so hard that it wouldn't matter?

#housing

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191   frank649   2006 Apr 10, 1:13pm  

Randy,

From Merriam-Webster Online

inflation (noun): an increase in the volume of money and credit relative to available goods and services resulting in a continuing rise in the general price level .

From Webster Online

inflation (noun): A general and progressive increase in prices.

If dictionaries can't agree on a definition of inflation, I can't expect we will. The first definition is the classical definition of inflation and simply means that the money supply is growing. This is what many people refer to as "monetary inflation" to distinguish it from "price inflation". Let's not dwindle on the definition of "inflation" and instead refer to "monetary inflation" and "price inflation" to describe these two obviously different phenomenon.

Once we're past the semantics, there are some unanswered questions I posed to you that I’d like to get back to.

192   Zephyr   2006 Apr 10, 1:47pm  

All inflation is monetary.

193   Peter P   2006 Apr 10, 4:04pm  

I would tell you an even better source of free food, but that would totally give away my identity.

Join Google, another source of free-food. Wait, I mean you will not need free food. :)

194   astrid   2006 Apr 10, 4:06pm  

Well, I'll put it in terms HARM might understand. :) I made a mean cheese tray when I was in college.

195   Randy H   2006 Apr 10, 4:26pm  

Zephyr,

That was my stance, but frank has pointed out (correctly) that this is semantic in our debate (on fiat money), so we can move past it. You and I obviously subscribe to neoclassical economic theory, at least insofar as the quantity theory of money.

Frank,

We can continue the fiat money debate if you wish, or we can pick it up when a more econ-focused thread comes up sometime soon. If none are posted by other authors I'll probably start one myself within a week.

196   frank649   2006 Apr 11, 10:17am  

"I’ll probably start one myself within a week."

Cool. thx.

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