Posted by Curt on 5 April, 2013 at 7:40 pm. 2 comments already!

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Pater Tenebrarum @ Zero Hedge:

Central Banks Urged to Drop their ‘Fear of Inflation’

An example for the relentless pro central planning and pro inflation propaganda we are regularly confronted with nowadays is a recent editorial at Bloomberg, entitled “Central Banks Must Master Their Fear of Inflation” Here is an excerpt from this pro-inflation screed:

“The details get complicated, but the basic reasoning is straightforward. Although nominal interest rates can’t fall to less than nothing, real (inflation-adjusted) interest rates can. To push real short-term interest rates as low as it deems necessary, a central bank merely has to achieve a sufficiently high rate of inflation. (A nominal interest rate of 3 percent is a real rate of 3 percent if prices are expected to be stable, but a real rate of only 1 percent if inflation is expected to be 2 percent.)

In fact, the central bank only has to promise to raise inflation and be believed — that’s enough to change real rates. This is a promise a central bank, and only a central bank, is in a position to make.

Could it therefore make sense for the Federal Reserve to promise, say, three years of 4 percent inflation as a way to drive real short-term interest rates lower? Theoretically, it turns out, the answer is yes. Yet the idea fills most central bankers, raised on the consensus forged in the 1980s, with dread.

The dread is understandable. If higher inflation becomes entrenched, bringing it down again may require a policy-induced recession. Any central banker will tell you that anchoring inflation expectations is vital for economic stability. Few want to be suspected of even considering a controlled dose of higher inflation — in fact many would say there is no such thing.

This thinking is counterproductive. Modern central banks pay lip service to the idea of transparency and insist they want their actions to be better understood. When it comes to discussing the trade-off between inflation and a more rapid recovery, they prefer to look away.

Lately, however, this reluctance has collided with the inescapable reality that, with all the advanced economies growing so slowly, maintaining or increasing monetary stimulus through QE is necessary. At the same time, central banks know that doing QE while promising to keep inflation very low is partly self-defeating.

Which brings us to the important question: As part of a new monetary-policy framework, can central banks openly aim for a therapeutic spell of higher-than-target inflation while containing the danger that the treatment would go too far?

The answer’s unclear, and the central banks’ unwillingness to confront the issue squarely isn’t helping the discussion. Our view is that a new target, tied to nominal incomes or to the level of future prices rather than the rate of inflation, could serve this purpose. (For a more thorough examination of this idea, see this accompanying essay.) There are good reasons to fear inflation. But no one should be so afraid that the subject can’t even be discussed.”

(emphasis added)

The fact that such arguments are forwarded in editorials and by many modern-day economists is simply stunning. Even if one knew absolutely nothing about economic theory and were instead only aware of economic history, one should recoil from such ideas. The very same argument – namely that there is a ‘trade-off between growth and inflation’, read: inflation can somehow ‘create growth’ – has for instance been made the members of France’s revolutionary assembly in 1789. And for a while it seemed that they were right. These men were not stupid; they thought: ‘all we will do is give the economy a brief shot in the arm, until it is revived again, then we will stop’. But then it turned out that they simply could not stop.

They then proceeded to deliver a historical achievement of some distinction: they completely destroyed two currencies in a row, back-to-back (the ‘assignat’ and the ‘mandat’). For a detailed account of that experiment, see “Fiat Money Inflation in France” (pdf) by Andrew Dickson White. This is a text everyone should read – it stands as a monument for the folly of continually trying to ‘stimulate’ the economy by means of inflation. It also shows how well educated men can, in spite of actually knowing better, easily fall for committing this abject error.

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