Sunday, April 19, 2009

deflation as a threat to the U.S. economy on the expectation of continuing unemployment and consumer deleveraging

TO BE NOTED: From dshort.com:

dshort.com Four Bears and Inflation
April 17, 2009

Click to View Earlier this week the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) announced a Consumer Price Index number for March that showed an annualized negative number. It was tiny, a mere -0.38%. But it was the first negative annualized rate since August of 1955. Is it a hint of more to come?

Deflation has been a chronic problem in the Japanese economy since the Nikkei 225 topped out in 1989, and it was a debilitating problem during the Great Depression. There are a few economists who see deflation as a threat to the U.S. economy on the expectation of continuing unemployment and consumer deleveraging.

But the consensus seems to believe that monetary easing by the Federal Reserve is more likely to trigger the reverse problem — higher inflation. Some even foresee a return to the sustained inflation of the seventies and early eighties. This is yet another topic that demonstrates the heightened "Uncertainty Factor" in today's economy and its imperfect reflection in the markets.

And speaking of the markets, most people think only in terms of nominal price values with little consideration of real (inflation-adjusted) performance. But over longer periods inflation and deflation are major factors. The thumbnails to the right offer a quick comparison of our Four Bad Bears chart in nominal, real, and alternate-real formats. In nominal prices, our current bear has begun to pull away from the treacherous slope that led to the Great Depression. That's not the case in real prices, mostly because (ironically) the deflation of the earlier period makes the 1929-32 decline seem less grave. If the ShadowStats Alternate CPI adjustment has any credence, the real comparison is even more bizarre. The ShadowStats claim of understated inflation since 1982 makes the Tech and current declines significantly more severe.

Click on the small charts for a series of larger versions. Use the blue links at the top to navigate among them.

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