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- Newsgroups: sci.econ
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!ames!pacbell.com!tandem!orleans!kenr
- From: kenr@orleans.storage.tandem.com (Ken Rose)
- Subject: Re: Since no one is defending inflation, (
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.180808.6155@tandem.com>
- Sender: news@tandem.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: orleans.storage.tandem.com
- Reply-To: kenr@orleans.storage.tandem.com
- Organization: Tandem Computers Inc.
- References: <1jngr2INNfq7@darkstar.UCSC.EDU>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 18:08:08 GMT
- Lines: 62
-
- In article 1jngr2INNfq7@darkstar.UCSC.EDU, david@cats.ucsc.edu (David Michael Wright) writes:
- >
- >In article <1993Jan21.211928.8356@athena.mit.edu> cmk@athena.mit.edu (Charles M Kozierok) writes:
- >
- >|how is [inflation] good? it is rather simplistic to just look at the increasing
- >|price of your house without also considering how the price of everything
- >|else is also increasing, and the fact that the bottom tier of house
- >|buyers is pushed out of the market.
- >
- >Unanticipated inflation is, in general, a good thing: if wages are
- >sticky it gives you the opportunity to work if the real wage is
- >reduced, it makes you economize on money balances so you invest more,
- >it reduces debt and thereby makes it easier to invest, it gives a
- >signal that the economy is improving (which it may be for the
- >reasons above or not) and so boosts consumer confidence. Moderate inflation has
- >nearly always been associated with rising output.
-
-
- I beg to disagree here (that unanticipated inflation is, in general, good).
-
- People and institutions can be categorized in two groups -- net monetary debtors
- and net monetary creditors. A net monetary debtor is someone who owes more
- money than he owns. For example, if you have a $150,000 mortgage and savings
- of $10,000, you are a net monetary debtor to the tune of $140,000.
-
- Unanticipated inflation rewards the net monetary debtor and punishes the net
- monetary creditor. The real value of the money owed by the net debtor erodes
- with inflation, as does the debt held by the net creditor. One gains, the
- other loses. Since on whole the amount of money owed equals the amount of
- money loaned, the gains to one party are offset by losses to the other. It`s
- a zero sum game, and I find it hard to claim that inflation is therefore, in
- general, a good thing. It`s only a good thing if you happen to be a net debtor.
-
- Take the '70s, for example. If you took out a long-term loan for $60,000 and then
- inflation tripled prices, you only had to pay back in real terms roughly 1/3 of
- what you borrowed. And if you were smart enough to have plunked that $60,000
- into a home that merely appreciated enough to stay abreast of inflation, you
- won big!
-
- However, if you were nearing retirement and plugged your savings into long-term
- bonds or a savings account, you lost 2/3 of your nest egg due to inflation. The
- debacle of the S & L's started in large measure because they had long term loans
- at fixed pre-inflation interest rates, while depositors had short-term accounts
- they emptied in search of higher returns in money-market accounts and the like.
-
- Not only is unanticipated inflation a zero sum game, it imposes additional costs
- through uncertainty. People become worried about inflation returning again at
- some point in the future; this drives up the interest rate that must be paid on
- long-term debt. In practical terms, this means your local government has to pay
- more to finance projects with bonds, as does a corporation issuing bonds.
- Unanticipated inflation also distorts market incentives (although I`ve gotten
- the idea that many readers of sci.econ don't believe prices, supply, demand, etc.
- have much to do with directing the economy). When prices for a resource rise,
- it generally means demand has increased (absent fluctuations in the supply); firms
- respond by producing more output, looking for ways to conserve the resource,
- develop substitutes, etc. But if the rise in prices is merely due to unanticipated
- inflation, all these responses were in error.
- ____________________________________________________________________
- Ken Rose (kenr@storage.tandem.com)
- The Usual Disclaimer: Any opinions expressed above are mine alone, not
- those of my employer (who is kind enough to allow me Usenet access).
-
-