IndieDev said:
US in 1970's was Zimbabwe?
Out of context, in context, your statement that inflation cannot occur without "real" wage growth are simply WRONG. This doesn't make my forecasts right. But it does make you wrong.
See, you're talking about two different things. In this post you're misleading people by attempting to make a point about some inflationary shock, or hyperinflation that hasn't occurred yet. But in your initial post you were talking about U.S Fiscal Policy:
Ok, and now that "the people's champ" has been shown contradictory data, "the people's champ" changes the parameters of his claims...as usual.
Sorry, wrong again. You made a blanket general statement which stated that inflation cannot happen with "real" wage growth and better 9 to 5 jobs.
Simply wrong.
Next, your propensity to read and interpret for everyone else my "advice" is as usual incorrect. You claim I am talking about something very specific, like this year's fiscal policy and that it will some how be inflationary.
Incorrect again on multiple levels. If you actually bothered to read the dialogue throughout the posts, I stated multiple times there will be deflationary pressures and double dip concerns when Qe2 ends and hence rates might stay low.
Oh just so the you are aware, QE2 is a
monetary policy, not
fiscal. But I guess in your "fundamentals" world, slander, libel, its all the same thing.
Unless you're attempting to make the connection that the U.S Government is allowing the FED to "Zimbabwe" the U.S currency as a way to "inflate their way out of the debt problems."
Be a little more creative. The US can inflate their way out of debt without being Zimbawe...its called lowering COLA adjustments. This isn't a statement about today or tomorrow. It will take decades to inflate their way out this way.
But you don't need "real" wage inflation to do it. All they need to do is play with the COLA formula so that they are reducing benefits without "reducing benefits" and their constant dollar benefits will fall.
They will inflate their way out of the debt problem through a combination of
monetary policy and
fiscal policy changes because their is no political will to cut nominal spending or raise taxes sufficiently to address the debt.
This is my prediction (READ NOT ADVICE) for the future. You disagree, then disagree. But just so you are aware, you can usually disagree without attacking people's intelligence or calling them cowards for blaming their kids.
I thought I would just let you know that in case you didn't know it.