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Budget deficits to the left of us, money growth to the right of
us, and an oil price shock behind us, will leave only inflation
in front of us!
Information
featured in a The New
York Times article last month says it all. These are not
wimpy numbers!
|
Consumer
Price Inflation over the last six months
United States, Euro Countries and Britain |
|
|
|
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United
States
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5.0%
|
|
Euro
Countries
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3.6%
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Britain
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3.1% |
(Today
it takes $237.14 to buy what $100 could buy in 1980)
Other
countries are also showing what can be done when budget deficits
and the money supply are cranked up and currencies are allowed
to fall. A prime example of this is Venezuela and Russia. Even
with all their wealth from oil, they suffer from very high
consumer price inflation:
|
Consumer
Price Inflation
Venezuela and Russia |
|
|
|
|
Venezuela
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15.0%
|
|
Russia
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12.5% |
Even
countries that have tremendous wealth from resource sales to
China are experiencing escalating consumer price indexes:
|
Annual
Consumer Price Inflation
Argentina and Brazil, Indonesia, Turkey and The
Philippines |
|
|
|
|
Argentina
and Brazil
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9.6% |
|
Indonesia,
Turkey, and
|
8.0%
|
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The
Philippines |
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The
fueling engine causing this inflation is a combination of large
world budget deficits and overly accommodative central banks,
which have fostered rapid growth in money and credit:
|
Budget
Deficits as Percentage of GDP
|
|
|
Short
Term Interest Rates |
Budget Deficits as Percentage of GDP |
|
Japan
United
States
Europe*
*Broad
Money Growth in Europe is 8% |
0%
3.5%
2.0% |
6.0%
4.0%
3.0% |
World
money growth is at its boiling point. China is printing money at
an annual rate of 16 percent; Denmark is 15+ percent; Australia,
Britain, and Canada are over 10 percent and broad money growth in
Europe is 8%. While the broad measure of money growth in the
United States is only 5 percent, growth of total credit is double
digit!
After
raising short-term interest rates to 3.5 percent, the Federal
Reserve said they were still accommodative. They really meant it!
Low interest rates in the United States, Japan, Europe and China
– combined with an “anything goes money growth” philosophy
– has allowed the United States to finance its $700 billion
annual trade deficit and run an economy with negative consumer
savings. These budget deficits and money growth are creating
demand, which causes inflation. The world simply has too many
Dollars, Yuan, Yen and Euros that are chasing a fixed number of
barrels of oil. Believe me, the last thing inflation needed was
Hurricane Katrina’s devastating impact on oil production.
A
number of market analysts and “cheerleaders” for the stock
market have called for the Federal Reserve to stop raising
interest rates because Katrina may cause the economy to slow.
However, when you actually take a look at the budget deficits and
money and credit growth (above), if the Federal Reserve stopped
raising interest rates, the dollar could crash causing inflation
to run at well over 5 percent a year.
The
inflation numbers for August and September in the United States
should look real ugly. While Congress seems intent to increase the
budget deficit by as much as $150 billion to rebuild the south, we
will watch the Federal Reserve response very closely and, like
many foreign investors, be ready to dump the dollar if the Fed
once again listens to the mob’s cry for easy money.

© 2005 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial
Archive l www.sfgroup.org
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