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by roymurdock
2145 days ago
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this topic will probably get flagged, but if you're serious about learning about inflation look up money supply - m0, m1, m2, m3, m4, velocity of money figure out how federal reserve "printing money" (what does that even mean) affects the different buckets look up difference between how reserve requirements affect money supply vs "helicopter money" look up the federal reserve mandate to target 2% inflation while keeping unemployment as low as possible figure out how the federal reserve balance sheet works (eg what happens if debt the federal reserve owns defaults) and you'll be much closer to understanding our current economic situation than you were in high school ;) |
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- Treasury makes bonds and sells them into the market. The market impact of this tends to increase interest rates (cost of bonds relative to dollars) a bit.
- The government uses the money raised to buy goods and services. This causes the price of goods and services (relative to dollars) to go up a bit.
- The Fed makes dollars and buys bonds. This pushes interest rates down and is roughly the inverse of step 1.
Netting the Fed and Treasury actions (which people never do, mostly because they vary independently according to independent policy), the effect of recent fiscal and monetary policy is "the government" making cash and buying things with it (as well as giving it out to people who need it.)
I guess it's the Fed's job to worry about price stability, but the above does make me think that the fiscal policy is just as relevant to inflation -- if govt spending as a proportion of the economy changes, it gets easier/harder for others to buy things. I guess interest rates mostly change behaviour, and have a less direct (though maybe no less real?) impact on scarcity.