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Inflation vs Deflation : Which Is The Bigger Evil ?

February 25th, 2009

inflation

Traditionally economists and policy makers as well as the man on the street worry about inflation and not so much deflation (which to many just mean cheaper prices) but lately the talk has swung around to deflation being the bigger of the two evils as the world economies shrink and people lose their jobs as a result.

This post looks into which of these two monsters are likely to prevail in the short-medium and long term and also what the experts have to say about each as governments right now ready themselves to fight the deflation monster.

A Reuters article  has this quote on the issue :

“Deflation is as dangerous as inflation, and we will take every step to counteract it,” Richard Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, told reporters after a speech at Bryant University in Smithfield, Rhode Island.

So while deflation seems to be the present evil Mr Fisher is very aware of the fact that soon he could be figthing inflation again :

As companies across the country cut jobs and consumers spend less, many economists are worried about the potential for a sustained decline in prices.

 

The Dallas Fed calculates price pressures based on personal consumption expenditures, or PCE, and in the bank’s December report, the bank found that more than 50 percent of the market basket was going down in price, Fisher said.

 

But Fisher cautioned it was far from certain whether this decline will continue in coming months.

 

“There are price pressures on the downside, but we will make sure that deflation does not take hold,” Fisher said.

 

At the same time, Fisher said U.S. central bankers are keeping a watchful eye on inflation. Some economists have voiced concern about the potential for inflation down the road as the Fed has cut interest rates to near zero and pumped hundreds of billions of dollars into the financial system to unfreeze key credit markets.

Mark Crosby of TheAge.com.au has these comments to make on the subject :

Two questions that arise are what is the purpose of an inflation target, and why adopt an inflation target now, when there is no sign of inflation?

Inflation targeting started in the late 1970s and 1980s, when the Bundesbank in Germany, and the Swiss central bank used targets for inflation to guide their decisions about growth in the money supply.

At this time, many central banks were targeting the money supply, with the view that reducing money growth would reduce inflation from then high levels. But the Bundesbank was much more successful than other central banks in keeping inflation low, and tended to follow the strategy of using an inflation rate of about 2 per cent to guide its money growth targets.

And the article continues to explain :

Since being given inflation targets, and the independence to pursue these targets, central banks have been very successful in maintaining low inflation.

The main purpose of explicit targets is to anchor expectations of businesses and unions: if businesses believe that inflation will stay at around 2 per cent they will tend to increase prices by around that amount. Similarly unions will know that to increase wages significantly above 2 per cent plus a margin for productivity will put jobs at risk. These expectations of businesses and unions will then help sustain the low inflation target.

The reason for targeting inflation above zero is that there is a feeling among economists that a small amount of inflation “greases the wheels” of the economy. Furthermore, deflation can be very damaging to an economy, and so it is best to keep clear of a zero inflation rate or lower.

John Lonski, who is chief economist of of Moody’s Investors Service, is also more worried about the deflationary economy and explains why :

I’m still more worried about price deflation looking ahead than I am about inflation. We still have a ways to go yet as far as forming a top for the unemployment rate. And I wouldn’t be surprised if to an unprecedented extent, many employers both in the public and private sector decided to freeze wages, if not cut wages.

Senior Economist Milton Ezrati  sees the issue somewhat differently :

Well for the short term, for the intermediate term the next six or 12 or even 18 months, I don’t think we have to fear very much either from inflation or deflation. For the longer term, however, inflation is the threat largely because of the tremendous liquidity the Federal Reserve has poured on our markets.

Andy Serwer provides this brilliant overview of the inflation vs deflation issue at hand at The Captain’s Blog from CNN Money :

High inflation is bad of course, but a little bit of inflation is a good thing and actually optimal. A moderate rate of inflation seems to make it easier for businesses to raise prices (which is good for growth) and allows employees to ask for raises. A little bit of inflation also encourages folks to invest their money instead of leaving it in their mattress. On the other hand, deflation, or falling prices, is a bad thing since it causes people to freeze up and delay purchases until prices are lower. This can induce a death spiral of deflation and economic contraction, which is what happened in Japan. Right now economists are much more concerned about deflation than inflation. No question, we are pulling in our spending horn right now, which seems to have eradicated inflation, now the question is, will prices fall?

And he has these words when it comes to what we can expect on price developments in 2009 :

So if you were a betting person, would you wager that prices overall will fall this year? Well, the wild card is energy, but other than that, it’s tough to see prices going up. Just how badly this hurts the economy is a huge unknown. Hey, we made it through 1955, we will most likely make it through 2009.

Christopher Grey of TheStreet.com explains why the US Government is dead scared about the looming deflation :

In just a few months, the Fed has effectively printed trillions of dollars and the Treasury has spent more than a trillion dollars trying to increase the supply of money. That should demonstrate their seriousness about preventing deflation.

According to Grey there is also an even bigger agenda as to why the US Government has a strong incentive to create a strong inflationary economy and hence fight deflation tooth and nail :

Second, it is in the national interest of the U.S. and the personal interest of most American consumers to create inflation. The U.S. government owes trillions of dollars to foreigners. It has a strong financial incentive to destroy the value of the dollar in order to repay that foreign debt with cheaper currency. Similarly, most Americans are deeply in debt and would benefit from inflation that would effectively reduce that debt burden on their households.

Grey finishes off his insight into the inflation vs. deflation issue with some sound reasoning why the consumer should look at inflation as a positive thing and also what can be done now to ensure financial success assuming of course that Grey is right and that inflation will soon prevail :

Another way to benefit from future inflation is to take advantage of low-interest rates and lock in long-term financing to buy income property such as apartments in supply-constrained markets that will benefit from future inflation through increased rental rates and higher cash flow to the owner.

Do not believe the hype about deflation. It could be dangerous to your financial health. Right now is the best time to start hedging against future inflation because most people don’t believe it’s going to happen. Now is the classic time to buy a straw hat in winter, because people are just giving them away.

So let battle commence between these two giants ! It does, however, seem that major economies such as the US, Japan and China have more to lose by allowing deflation to take over from the traditional inflationary economies and hence we should expect strong efforts by Obama and Co to fight deflation on all fronts which hence is likely to be major theme for 2009 and probably also 2010.

 

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2009 Outlook: Continuing Global Downturn Or Major Recovery ?

December 20th, 2008

recession-ahead

With a very troubled 2008 soon behind us and many private as well as institutional investors breathing a short sigh of relief, the big question facing the world is of course: will 2009 be a year of recovery or will the crisis worsen and prolong the Recession or even, as some fear, slide further into a full blown Recession ?

This post looks into what some of the analysts have to say about 2009 and whether to world economies and all its dependants are in for a recovery or if indeed we shall have another very tough year to face up to.

MarketWatchpoints out that whilst the downturn is gathering pace in Europe and The US, the same crisis has now also spread in full to The Far East and Asia with the pace of the economic downturn in China being the most surprising factor to economists and experts.

Quoting experts on the development of the economic downturn in Asia, the article says:

Experts painted a grim picture for the Asian region in 2009.
“Asia is not doing well at all,” said Son Won Sohn, an economist at the Martin Smith School of Business at California State University, Channel Islands.
“Decoupling, which looked for a while like it was going to work — turned out to be a myth.”
Japan is mired in a recession, South Korea will be lucky to reach 2% growth this year and Chinese growth could fall below 6%.
The downturn in global trade has just begun to have a negative impact on China’s economy, but it is pressure that will last for most of 2009, according to Brad Setser, an expert on China at the Council of Foreign Relations in New York.
“The latest data for November was off-the-charts bad,” Setser said.
In addition, China’s own domestic cycle looks to have turned, he said.
“The pace of the downturn has been a little bit of a surprise,” he said.
Many are concerned that the falling US Dollar and the zero US Fed interest rate combined with the below USD 40 / barrel oil prices will not be the right cocktail for an economic recovery as this quote from AFP indicates:

Oil prices fell despite a record drop in the US dollar on Wednesday, a day after the US Federal Reserve slashed its base lending rate to 0-0.25 percent. A weak greenback tends to lift the price of dollar-priced oil for buyers using cheaper currencies.

“If a plunging dollar and a zero interest rate can’t save oil, don’t think that OPEC can. The market is bigger than the cartel and the demand destruction is something that will not be cured by trying to raise prices,” said Phil Flynn, an analyst at Alaron Trading.

“The last thing the world’s consumers need is another advance in oil prices,” oil analysts Cameron Hanover said.

“Any artificial or engineered rise in prices will exacerbate and extend the economic slowdown.”

MarketWatch quotes more doom and gloom from observers of the Euro economies in 2009 :

“I  think that’s going to make itself evident in business investment in the euro zone as well, so that’s going to do a lot of damage through the rest of next year,” Brian Hilliard, head of economic research at Societe Generale said.

The downturn hasn’t only hammered countries, such as Ireland and Spain that have echoed U.S. housing woes. It’s also hit more robust economies, even sending European powerhouse Germany into a recession of its own, noted Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics in London. The firm predicts euro-zone GDP will contract by 1% in 2009.
Deutsche Bank predicts that a steep near-term fall will make for a 2.5% contraction in GDP in 2009, marking the 15-nation region’s worst recession since World War II. Growth will rebound in 2010, but the recovery will be more tepid than in normal recoveries, said economist Mark Wall, in part due to a lack of a coordinated policy response across the region.
Despite qualms, the European Central Bank will likely have little choice but to drop its key interest rate below 2% for the first time in its decade-long history, economists predict. The central bank has slashed its key rate from 4.25% to 2.5% in a series of rate cuts that began in October.
There is an overall great concern that the world’s economic locomotive, China, will continue to face reduced rates of growth and high unemployment which will affect overall demand from this economic superpower with obvious negative spill-over effects to the rest of the world. Forbes.com reports:

Li Yizhong, Minister of Industry and Information Technology, also warned on Friday that more measures needed to be taken to revive industry, which is a major employer.

Beijing will need to ensure that industrial output expands by 12 percent next year to hit its GDP target, Li said, while cautioning that growth has not yet bottomed out.

“Industrial growth is slowing significantly and downside pressures are increasing,” Li told a work conference, which was webcast on the ministry’s website (www.miit.gov.cn).

But the economy still expanded by 9 percent year-on-year in the third quarter, compared with 11.9 percent in all of 2007.

“It is not a recession, but it will feel like one to the average citizen and will feel like a depression to the 100 million or so migrant workers, many of whom are out of a job and stranded far from home,” economists Ben Simpfendorfer and John Richards said in a note to clients.

“Social tensions are likely to be on the rise.”

The government has launched a series of measures to counter the slowdown, including a massive stimulus package, repeated interest rate cuts and measures to support the property market.

MarketWatch paints a picture of different views by leading experts, some of which are quite optimistic about the recovery of the US Economy :

Bailey, the former top economist for Clinton, sees a 20% chance of an upside surprise in growth in the second half of the year if things start to bottom.
Nothing Obama will do will stop the two negative quarters. But he may instill some confidence to lead to a turnaround.
However, there is a 30% to 40% chance that the economy stays in recession through the entire year, with the unemployment rate rising above 10%, Bailey said.
But some economists are optimistic about a rebound.
Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors, said that U.S. businesses are reacting quickly to the downturn and will be in better shape for a rebound after the first quarter.
“Businesses are reacting so quickly they are not going to need to keep cutting back, which is what typically keeps recessions going longer,” Naroff said.
For Ricchiuto of Mizuho Securities, the biggest test will come quickly next year when the market will expect the Fed to follow up on its promise to keep printing money.
“Are they (the Fed) ready to walk the walk after they’ve talked the talk,” he asked.
The same MarketWatch article finished off by saying that apart from country specific issues and challenges there are also very much global threats at play which could influence the recovery of the world economy as such:
Economists remain very worried about protectionism.
Despite pledges by the G-20 last month to cooperate and avoid protectionism, trade analysts see signs that the opposite may be occurring.
If China moves to protect its export sector, it will likely set off a hostile reaction in the U.S. Congress.
So some experts and and analysts are more optimistic than others and it seems that not all believe we shall slide into deeper recession or even depression in 2009. What does remain an undisputed fact, however, is that 2009 will pose the biggest challenge for politicians and economists alike and the biggest perhaps to the newly elected US President Barrack Obama who inherits a run down US economy, weak consumer demand and a collapsed real estate sector to mention some of the challenges he faces.

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CIC Won’t ‘Dare’ Invest in Financial Firms, Lou Says

December 3rd, 2008

China’s sovereign wealth fund said it wouldn’t “dare” invest in foreign financial firms after losing $6 billion on stakes in Morgan Stanley and Blackstone Group LP.

“I don’t dare to invest in financial institutions now,” Lou Jiwei, chairman of China Investment Corp., said today at a conference in Hong Kong. “The policies of the developed nations on these institutions are not clear. Until they are clear, I don’t dare to invest in them. What if they go bust? I will lose everything.”

Reaction from one of China’s largest investment houses - read the full story from Bloomberg here !

Asian Investments, Investment News , ,

Home Bittersweet Home: U.S. Stocks Aren’t Worst

November 29th, 2008

Though it is the worst year in decades for U.S. stocks, American investors would have been better off keeping their money at home rather than plowing it overseas.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down 33% this year, even after gaining 9.7% for the just-ended week. But many benchmark indexes from Germany to China have fared worse. Germany’s DAX index has slumped 42% in 2008, and China’s Shanghai Composite is off 64%. For U.S. investors, a strengthening dollar has further magnified many overseas losses.

So perhaps US investors have something to smile about after all ! Read the full story from The Wall Street Journal.

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