Deflation

RECENT NEWS
Upstream Online  Nov 6  Comment 
US independent GMX Resources reported a net loss for the third quarter, compared to a profit last year, as sales declined 37%, largely due to oil and natural gas deflation.
MarketWatch  Nov 6  Comment 
Delhaize was upped to neutral from underweight by J.P. Morgan after the gruop's third-quarter results. The broker said the upgrade was on abating deflation over the next quarters. Market Pulse Stories are Rapid-fire, short news bursts on stocks...
BBC News  Nov 6  Comment 
England's five million housing association tenants will get their first ever rent reduction from April because of deflation.
MarketWatch  Nov 4  Comment 
The U.S. and the global economy will experience massive deflationary forces through 2012, said Nouriel Roubini, economist at New York University, Wednesday. At a conference, Roubini said that although easy monetary policies have fueled another...
Clusterstock  Nov 4  Comment 
There's just no evidence anywhere that central banks are halting the relentless deflationary slide. MarketWatch:  September producer prices in the 16-nation euro zone were down 7.7% from the same month last year, the statistics agency Eurostat...
Random Roger's Big Picture  Nov 4  Comment 
If you read enough you can find persuasive arguments for both deflation and inflation. We've have clearly had an asset price deflation and people like Mish are convinced there will be a debt deflation, which would be bad. One bit of clarity about...
Wall Street Journal  Oct 31  Comment 
Japan's central bank predicted the economy will remain in deflation over the next two fiscal years, suggesting it may keep interest rates at an ultra-low level for an extended period of time.
FX Street  Oct 30  Comment 
The unemployment rate surprisingly dropped for a second month in a row in September and there are now clear signs that the labour market has stabilised and the unemployment rate has peaked. In addition, there are signs in today’s consumer...
Clusterstock  Oct 30  Comment 
It's not just in Japan. Deflation is winning in Canada, too. David Rosenberg:  PRODUCER PRICES IN CANADA CONFIRM DEFLATIONARY TREND  Canada’s industrial product price index (IPPI), which is similar to the U.S.’s producer product index...
FX Street  Oct 30  Comment 
Bank of Japan (BoJ) at today’s monetary meeting announced plans to scrap most of its non-conventional easing measures. In addition, BoJ published new macroeconomic forecasts. BoJ’s view of the economy remains benign and it expects deflation to...
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Deflation happens when prices of goods and services are falling in an economy. It is the opposite of inflation.

Causesl of deflation: In mainstream economics, deflation may be caused by a combination of the supply and demand for goods and the supply and demand for money, specifically the supply of money going down and the supply of goods going up.

From a monetarist perspective deflation is caused primarily by a reduction in the velocity of money and/or the amount of money supply per person.

In modern credit-based economies, a deflationary spiral may be caused by the (central bank) initiating higher interest rates (i.e., to 'control' inflation), thereby possibly popping an asset bubble or the collapse of a command economy which has been run at a higher level of production than it could actually support.

Effects of deflation: Deflation increases sales and economic activity by making essentials (food, housing, fuel etc.) which cannot be delayed, more affordable to struggling consumers, thereby reducing severity and duration of recession.

In more recent economic thinking, deflation is related to risk: where the risk-adjusted return of assets drops to negative, investors and buyers will hoard currency rather than invest it, even in the most solid of securities. This can produce the theoretical condition, much debated as to its practical possibility, of a liquidity trap.

Deflation is, however, the natural condition of hard currency economies when the rate of increase in the supply of money is not maintained at a rate commensurate to positive population (and general economic) growth. When this happens, the available amount of hard currency per person falls, in effect making money more scarce; and consequently, the purchasing power of each unit of currency increases. The late 19th century provides an example of sustained deflation combined with economic development under these conditions.

Counteracting deflation: Until the 1930s, it was commonly believed by economists that deflation would cure itself. As prices decreased, demand would naturally increase and the economic system would correct itself without outside intervention.

This view was challenged in the 1930s during the Great Depression. Keynesian economists argued that the economic system was not self-correcting with respect to deflation and that governments and central banks had to take active measures to boost demand through tax cuts or increases in government spending. Reserve requirements from the central bank were high and the central bank could then have effectively increased money supply by simply reducing the reserve requirements and through "open" market operations (e.g., buying treasury bonds for cash) to offset the reduction of money supply in the private sectors due to the collapse of credit (credit is a form of money).

With the rise of monetarist ideas, the focus in fighting deflation was put on expanding demand by lowering interest rates (i.e., reducing the "cost" of money). This view has received a setback in light of the failure of accommodative policies in both Japan and the US to spur demand after stock market shocks in the early 1990s and in 2000 - 2002, respectively. Economists now worry about the (inflationary) impact of monetary policies on asset prices. Sustained low real rates can be the direct cause of higher asset prices and excessive debt accumulation. Therefore lowering rates may prove only a temporary palliative, leading to the aggravation of an eventual future debt deflation crisis.

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