The
Federal Reserve Bank policy under Alan Greenspan after the turn of the
21st Century, and under Ben Bernanke today, has always shown some fear
of deflation, the kind that engulfed Japan for over the past twenty-odd
years. So the Fed always has had an inflation bias.
But
why was deflation acceptable in the second half of the 19th Century
when the U. S. operated and expanded under the gold standard? Prices
trended down for decades. The financial panics the U. S. experienced
were relatively short.
And
why must we have 2% or 3% inflation as a norm? That can hurt middle
class savings over time? To make it worse, an International Monetary
Fund economist has suggested a target inflationary rate of 4%, to make
it easier to fight recessions by adjusting interest rates. He deems
today’s rates too low to be used as a recession-fighting tool.
But even 2% inflation is a cruel tax. (See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinessNewshole at Twitter.)
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