| When I first heard about this, I thought "oh man, how dumb! they're just going to make inflation worse!", and then I read more of the details. By my understanding, the case for stimulus checks leading to inflation comes when the stimulus checks are paid for by printing more money (thus increasing the overall money supply). This program is not that. This program is providing a tax refund from CA's tax surplus. No new money is being created. The only change is who gets to decide how the money is being spent? (e.g., the state? or the people?) If CA could have seen the future, they could have achieved the same end by lowering taxes this last year for people in an equivalent amount. Would anyone seriously argue that lowering taxes is inflationary? How about the contrapositive? Would anyone seriously argue that we should fight inflation by _raising taxes_? |
Money supply isn't the only factor in the monetary side of inflation. The velocity of money[1] is also important. If you "printed" a load of new fiat currency but it all stayed in say for example savings accounts, then its pressure on inflation would be greatly diminished. The spending of that money is what bids up prices when more goods and services can't be produced fast enough.
The fear here is that the stimulus checks will increase the velocity of money. Tax dollars sitting in CA's coffers is effectively not part of the money supply. As soon as the check go out, it reenters the money supply and probably gets spent.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocity_of_money