Looking At Deflation Through A Magnifying Glass (Part I)
Ben Bernanke and many other economists regularly blame falling prices as a cause of an economic collapse. In fact, this forms the foundation of Ben Bernanke’s analysis of the Great Depression. Regrettably for Ben Bernanke and these other economists, falling prices are always an effect of a bad economy and not a cause. This week’s article discusses the unhealthy fascination economists have with falling prices.
http://www.the92ers.com/blog/fed-century-looking-deflation-through-magnifying-glass-part-i
Include with this week’s article is the figure below – which I have introduced elsewhere. This chart – which plots excess reserves during the Depression era – proves Ben Bernanke’s theory of the Great Depression makes no sense. Bernanke believes the Fed should have further expanded credit to keep prices from falling. However, look at excess reserves. By the mid-1930s, excess reserves had soared and exceeded the entire pre-Depression reserves of the banking system. The money supply – and prices – collapsed during the Depression era not because of an insufficiently active Fed or inadequate banking reserves, but as a result of businesses refusing to borrow money.
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