Stagflation in the economy is a persistent high inflation combined with high unemployment and stagnant demand.
Inflation destroys consumer purchasing power. The creation of money and credit does not create prosperity. It's a form of taxation on the consumer. "Stimulus spending typically creates the short-term illusion of prosperity at the long-term price distortion, ruining the economy and debase the currency."
"Stagflation is the type of inflation typically caused by an expansion of the money supply and bank credit ahead of gains from productivity and asset growth. More money and credit chasing fewer goods and services typically means higher prices over the long run." This is the kind of inflation that we have been subjected to first by Greenspan and now by Bernanke of the Fed followed by all other Central Banks of the world.
Inflation destroys consumer purchasing power. The creation of money and credit does not create prosperity. It's a form of taxation on the consumer. "Stimulus spending typically creates the short-term illusion of prosperity at the long-term price distortion, ruining the economy and debase the currency."
"Stagflation is the type of inflation typically caused by an expansion of the money supply and bank credit ahead of gains from productivity and asset growth. More money and credit chasing fewer goods and services typically means higher prices over the long run." This is the kind of inflation that we have been subjected to first by Greenspan and now by Bernanke of the Fed followed by all other Central Banks of the world.
"Price inflation may also remain initially muted because excess liquidity can first find its way into stock, real estate, or bond asset bubbles. It may encounter a prolonged delay in running up commodity and consumer prices."
This excess liquidity has already found its way into stock, real estate and bond prices, and now it's finding its way into commodity prices, too, although our leaders are supposed to be looking at this kind of problem they all are asleep, or lying, or both.
Easy credit killed the consumer and can be seen as the main cause of today’s crisis. When Central Banks started to flood the market with money to whoever wanted to have it, the global spree of mainly workers themselves started to consume beyond their means, by buying things they didn’t need with money that wasn’t theirs. The FED and associates wanted to flood the market with money to keep the economy growing and running whether a recession could have been avoided! The philosophy was to put money in everyone’s pocket to have that spent on anything as they did, to let economy grow to the detriment of consumers.
This unparalleled ocean of artificial liquidity will surely lessen the effects of the recession, however the unplanned consequences do cause INFLATION to be followed by STAGFLATION that will wipe out the savings of millions of people. It will become the “Bailout Bombshell” without solving the economic crisis that more and more is becoming a depression.
Nevertheless this applied approach, is making a bad crisis even worse. In the end it are the taxpayers that pay the bill. As a result meanwhile commodity prices are rising, economists differ as to how much the rising oil prices affect GDP, but almost all of them agree that rising oil prices do cause a decline in GDP at least to some extent.
An upcoming oil crisis –Iran- would force families to stretch their already overburdened budgets even farther. The average price of gasoline is rapidly climbing up. Everyone believes it is going to be significantly higher. High oil prices are going to influence the cost of just about everything to go up, and high oil prices are also going to cause the economy to slow down thus making the unemployment numbers even worse.
If families have to spend €10 or €20 more each time they visit a gas station, that means that they are going to have less discretionary income. They won't be able to spend as much at the stores. Not only that, but since the price of oil affects the price of almost anything else, people will find that their dollars/euro’s have reduced purchasing power.
Nonetheless our leaders believe they still can print up more paper money, which is as good as the real stuff, in order to resolve this severe recession that causes INFLATION, and thereafter STAGFLATION followed by HYPERINFLATION.
But realize this recession is not a recession, because there is no buying opportunity. It’s already a depression that could take a long, long time to recover.
The difference between a recession and a depression is best explained as follow: A recession is a pause in an otherwise healthy, growing economy. A depression is when the economy drops dead. And when it drops dead, the assets that people owned as stocks, bonds, houses, derivatives, and even debt are all called into question. No one knows what these are worth, now the economy that created those, no longer does exist.
That’s the present biggest uncertainty. The majority of businesses that were set up to provide products and services to the consumer binge economy will not survive, all the debts and obligations that the consumer economy produced are no longer viable.
But eventually, unless the Central Banks stop the process of money printing, which they won’t, things will sort themselves out. Businesses go broke. Homeowners are distressed. Automobiles go back to the dealers or are reposed and auctioned off. Prices sink to a level where people are able to buy. And the whole process starts over again. This can take a long, long time, particularly when government is trying to stop it with injecting more money into the market.
What is needed is above described period that Schumpeter called creative destruction. It will take time before a new economic model takes shape. Then, the markets tell us what are valuable assets and what those are worth.
There is still more to follow. Meanwhile the best you could do: spread these messages and wisdom to your friends for a better understanding about the state of affairs of today’s crisis where we are in. It certainly will help to speed up the recovery process!
This excess liquidity has already found its way into stock, real estate and bond prices, and now it's finding its way into commodity prices, too, although our leaders are supposed to be looking at this kind of problem they all are asleep, or lying, or both.
Easy credit killed the consumer and can be seen as the main cause of today’s crisis. When Central Banks started to flood the market with money to whoever wanted to have it, the global spree of mainly workers themselves started to consume beyond their means, by buying things they didn’t need with money that wasn’t theirs. The FED and associates wanted to flood the market with money to keep the economy growing and running whether a recession could have been avoided! The philosophy was to put money in everyone’s pocket to have that spent on anything as they did, to let economy grow to the detriment of consumers.
This unparalleled ocean of artificial liquidity will surely lessen the effects of the recession, however the unplanned consequences do cause INFLATION to be followed by STAGFLATION that will wipe out the savings of millions of people. It will become the “Bailout Bombshell” without solving the economic crisis that more and more is becoming a depression.
Nevertheless this applied approach, is making a bad crisis even worse. In the end it are the taxpayers that pay the bill. As a result meanwhile commodity prices are rising, economists differ as to how much the rising oil prices affect GDP, but almost all of them agree that rising oil prices do cause a decline in GDP at least to some extent.
An upcoming oil crisis –Iran- would force families to stretch their already overburdened budgets even farther. The average price of gasoline is rapidly climbing up. Everyone believes it is going to be significantly higher. High oil prices are going to influence the cost of just about everything to go up, and high oil prices are also going to cause the economy to slow down thus making the unemployment numbers even worse.
If families have to spend €10 or €20 more each time they visit a gas station, that means that they are going to have less discretionary income. They won't be able to spend as much at the stores. Not only that, but since the price of oil affects the price of almost anything else, people will find that their dollars/euro’s have reduced purchasing power.
Nonetheless our leaders believe they still can print up more paper money, which is as good as the real stuff, in order to resolve this severe recession that causes INFLATION, and thereafter STAGFLATION followed by HYPERINFLATION.
But realize this recession is not a recession, because there is no buying opportunity. It’s already a depression that could take a long, long time to recover.
The difference between a recession and a depression is best explained as follow: A recession is a pause in an otherwise healthy, growing economy. A depression is when the economy drops dead. And when it drops dead, the assets that people owned as stocks, bonds, houses, derivatives, and even debt are all called into question. No one knows what these are worth, now the economy that created those, no longer does exist.
That’s the present biggest uncertainty. The majority of businesses that were set up to provide products and services to the consumer binge economy will not survive, all the debts and obligations that the consumer economy produced are no longer viable.
But eventually, unless the Central Banks stop the process of money printing, which they won’t, things will sort themselves out. Businesses go broke. Homeowners are distressed. Automobiles go back to the dealers or are reposed and auctioned off. Prices sink to a level where people are able to buy. And the whole process starts over again. This can take a long, long time, particularly when government is trying to stop it with injecting more money into the market.
What is needed is above described period that Schumpeter called creative destruction. It will take time before a new economic model takes shape. Then, the markets tell us what are valuable assets and what those are worth.
There is still more to follow. Meanwhile the best you could do: spread these messages and wisdom to your friends for a better understanding about the state of affairs of today’s crisis where we are in. It certainly will help to speed up the recovery process!




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