And if people think inflation will make you rich because you own assets like houses, you better think twice. It's a naive thinking.
Just on this comment (seeing as it seems to have become somewhat controversial!) - I personally don't say that owning assets like property make you "rich" in a high inflation environment, but I do say they stop you from getting any poorer..... Ie it's a great inflation hedge due to the fundamental value of property/land in the scheme of things, regardless of the actual number of $ in circulation.
Cheers,
Beej
I would have thought that, in a high inflation environement, housing is a poor choice, unless it's 'value' is appreciating faster than the rate of inflation
Then that would depend on what is inflation? The official figure is not inflation but the effects of inflation - that's the big difference. The estimated growth in money supply has been north of 10% in Aus for a while, so unless your returns, from any investment, are greater than that then you are going backwards?No - only if your aim is get "richer". To simply not get any poorer, you only need your property to appreciate at a rate equal to the prevailing rate of inflation. That is the nature of a "hedge".
PS: Properly selected property should outpace inflation by a margin in a high or low inflation environment anyway, plus the use of debt to gear into property can really make you a relative winner from high inflation, but that is another discussion
Cheers,
Beej
Then that would depend on what is inflation? The official figure is not inflation but the effects of inflation - that's the big difference. The estimated growth in money supply has been north of 10% in Aus for a while, so unless your returns, from any investment, are greater than that then you are going backwards?
Remember, in order for you to increase your stake of the worlds limited resources, that means somone else is decreasing their stake. So if someone becomes rich, someone becomes poor.
I don't take a hard position on this either way, and don't claim to be an expert, but there is an argument floating around that because of the destruction of value brought about in the US economy by the sub-prime/credit crisis, their "printing of money" will not be inflationary as it is replacing that lost value, and therefore just kind of "canceling out" the real and potential deflation. It would only create inflation if it got out of hand.... which of course it might.
Cheers,
Beej
Increase in money supply does not automatically equal rate of inflation, as growth in GDP (due to increasing economic capacity from both productivity improvements and increasing working population etc) is reflected in (non inflationary) increased money supply. If real inflation had been running at 10% plus for the last few years it would absolutely be reflected in headline CPI, underlying CPI, PPI and other related inflation tracking index!
Cheers,
Beej
The US and GBR are printing money.
Not that big a deal as money supply has been increasing for years.
If..if...they get it right and don't print too much, they may stop deflation without getting hyperinflation. As inflation increases they can tighten money supply and if they are the "smartest guys in the room" in reality, it just might work.
Sure they're replacing lost value but that 'value' was over inflated and in a massive bubble so to prop up prices that couldn't be sustained in the first place will only lead to destruction of currency.
You don't fight debt by creating more debt and most of the homes (US and here) are 80%++ debt.
I do not normally wade into the 'tit for tat'...not when online and you are communicating with an unknown audience...but I do take offence when another suggests one might be..or is..naive to think a certain way....
my answer is 'you may also be very naive....to think another way'
....you have no idea of the depth of knowledge I , or other posters /bloggers hold on a certain subject.....so hurling insults around will not get any friends...and on some forums you would be suspended...or put on the ignore list...
one needs to have good manners...and decorum...if you wish to be taken seriously
explod said:Can you explain why this is so?
hello,
great work, who cares about inflation, deflation, hyperinflation its all irrelevant
if twisties drop to $0.50/packet can i get more today?
look at the doctor just recently who had council revalue from 1mil up to 6mil, wouldnt be too concerned about any of that
spot on Beej, add value at the moment is the way to go
thankyou
robots
So now we're using some doctor who done a council revalue as the benchmark and everything else is irrelevant. Keep up the good work robots
The causes of inflation during the boom and subsequent deflation are little to do with printing money par se. It is to do with fraudulent credit creation by the banks.
In order for a bank to lend money, it only needs to hold a fraction of the loan amount, not the entire amount. When a loan is made, the bank has created money that was not there before, which is effectively the same as printing money.
Credit creation without the GDP means to back it up is inflationary. During the credit boom, there was a lot of money (credit) available which caused high inflation. No stop was put to the increasing of leverage and the intentional mis pricing of high risk loans.
But, we now find that the credit were bad loans. The defaults start happening. No more credit is issued because everyone is overcapacity in debt and there is not enough reserve to support any more loans. Now have deflation.
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