In the world of finance (besides guessing where the stock market will end up this year), a topic that dominates front page news is the issue of inflation or deflation. The financial world is divided over this issue with the deflationist dominating the debate.
The Deflation Argument The deflationists cite the historical levels of debt overhanging the economy and the enormous asset bubbles in stocks, bonds, mortgages and real estate. In a levered economy and financial market any increase in interest rates would cause the whole debt bubble to implode. This would lead to a deflationary spiral as debts are liquidated contracting the supply of money.
In an economy and financial world, this leveraged rise in interest rates would devastate the financial markets and the economy leading us back into a recession. Rising interest rates would also usher in the next leg of the secular bear market which has yet to begin. Collapsing asset prices, debt defaults, and bankruptcies would surely contract the money supply and this would be deflationary.
Another argument made on the deflationary side of the debate is the world is awash in excess capacity. Global competition is keeping a lid on prices, so therefore we live in an environment whereby prices continue to decline. Here again the same mistake regarding prices as a symptom rather than a root cause obscures the deflation debate as it does the debate over inflation.
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