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by MiroF
2213 days ago
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> The money never entered the economy - it is being held in a vault at the central bank (or more realistically is just a number in a spreadsheet) This is just incoherent. The money does enter the economy because now the banks can lend out money without their cash reserves dipping too low. The reason that inflation is not spiking is because of the actual reason that the Fed reserve felt that it was necessary to engage in QE in the first place - huge amounts of deflationary pressure. Without the QE, we would be seeing deflation right now. |
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>Try proposing that after the last round of QE finally fails.
>But even if the Fed tried to print a fraction of that, it still wouldn’t result in hyperinflation.
>Europe has printed almost twice as much as what we have, when compared to GDP, and it has very low inflation and lower growth than the U.S. That’s because our workforce and demographics are flattening, but not declining, as is the trend in Europe and Japan.
https://www.economyandmarkets.com/economy/central-banks/japa...
QE is deflationary.