| Like the other poster mentioned, we don't really know. I'm not an economist, just an interested investor and from my understanding, using QE on this scale is just an easy short term solution to a longer term, hard problem. Printing money like this has never really been done before on this scale, but the fear is that "printing money" like this will potentially lead to very bad debt and hyperinflation inflation crisis (maybe already started). The limitations of QE aren't entirely known, but will be known as more money is printed and money becomes more worthless. Will having a lot of "monopoly money" in circulation be a problem? Time will tell; however there have been many examples where hyper inflation has caused economies to fail, such as Venezuela recently and the Roman Empire in the past. The US Federal Reserve should probably be careful with their actions because they wouldn't be the first country to run into dire issues doing this. What I fear is, the people at the top of the US are blinded by greed and the desire to be reelected and aren't concerned about the lessons of history. |
But we've had QE for over a decade in various amounts and it didn't lead to inflation, unless there's direct monetisation (the fed prints money and gives it to the government to spend in an unlimited fashion) I'm not sure why the situation would change.