Wednesday, August 6, 2014

The World's Most Important Financial Battle Is Coming to a Head

Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

"The world is witnessing a climactic battle between deflation and inflation," Jim Rickards writes in his excellent new book The Death of Money.

"It is just a matter of time" before this battle comes to a head.

At some point, the U.S. economy will experience "an earthquake in the form of either a deeper depression [from deflation] or higher inflation, as one force rapidly and unexpected overwhelms the other."

Which one will win? And what are the potential outcomes? Rickards goes over each of those in his book...

Inflation is the easy one to understand...

For the most part, the government creates this one... by "printing" trillions of dollars.

Deflation is less easy to understand...

For starters, we "have no living memory of it." The last episode of persistent deflation was in the Great Depression. Rickards calls deflation "the Federal Reserve's worst nightmare." For one, deflation "increases the value of government debt, making it harder to repay."

Because of fear of deflation, the Fed can't stop its money printing. If it did stop, "deflation would quickly dominate the economy, with disastrous consequences for the national debt, government revenue, and the banking system."

Which will win – inflation or deflation?

Rickards explains that "the most likely path of Federal Reserve policy in the years ahead is the continuation of massive money printing to fend off deflation." The Fed assumes it can later deal with inflation that it might create.

I agree with him. Governments have proven for centuries that – while they might be pretty bad at most things – one thing they're pretty good at is creating inflation through printing money.

The easy conclusion is that inflation will win... but many times, the easy conclusion isn't necessarily the right one.

In his book, Rickards builds a strong case for how deflation could win as well.

Whether inflation or deflation wins this battle, Rickards makes a strong case for a higher gold price.

If inflation wins, then it will take more paper dollars to buy an ounce of gold. And if deflation wins, then the price of gold will move higher to break that deflation...

- Source, The Daily Wealth