Inflation Is Uncontainable But Not Inevitable
Even if there are price increases, they’re unlikely to be steep.
Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg
Otherwise intelligent people can be surprisingly wrong about economics. The latest example is the claim that current inflationary pressures are somehow being “captured” or “locked up” in asset prices, and that those pressures may someday inflate the prices for goods and services.
On one hand, you can see why this view might seem plausible. The U.S. Federal Reserve engaged in an unprecedented monetary expansion in 2008 and 2009, increasing the total of bank reserves held at the Fed by trillions. More recently, on a year-to-year basis the broader measure of money supply, which also reflects private credit creation, increased by about 26%. Meanwhile, the major stock price indices rose to new heights during a disastrous pandemic, bond prices have remained high, and the total value of cryptocurrency topped $1 trillion, if only temporarily.
