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Price Inflation Isn't an Accident; It's a Policy If you listen to government officials and central bankers talk about price inflation, you might think they don’t have the foggiest idea of what caused it. It might have been supply chain problems, or perhaps it was Putin’s fault. Maybe greedy corporations are jacking up prices. Or it could be that consumer expectations are driving price inflation higher. They can’t tell you exactly why prices keep rising, but trust them... they’re doing their best to stop it! But this is all deflection and obfuscation. They’re causing price inflation. When they point fingers everywhere else, they’re either unforgivably ignorant or they're lying. Economist Milton Friedman was right - inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon. Or as economist Daniel Lacalle put it, “The government’s destruction of the purchasing power of the currency is a policy, not a coincidence.” But why? Why would the government devalue its own currency? The answer is simple – it’s the only way they can keep making the government bigger without causing a revolt. Nothing the government does is free. The citizenry ultimately forks over every penny the government spends. But the government people know they can only raise direct taxes so high before the people pull out the torches and pitchforks. To avoid this, the government borrows money. But borrowing doesn’t really solve the problem. It just piles up debt, and debt has to be repaid. The U.S. national debt stands at nearly $34.6 trillion. The Biden administration spends more than half a trillion dollars every single month, running massive deficits that push the debt higher at a staggering rate. But that’s just a drop in the bucket compared to unfunded liabilities that the government will have to cover in the future. The estimated unfunded Social Security and Medicare liability alone amounts to $175.3 trillion. That’s six times the U.S. GDP. As Lacalle put it, “If you think that will be financed with taxes ‘on the rich,’ you have a problem with mathematics. So, how do politicians and government functionaries try to “fix” it? With the inflation tax. This is precisely why governments want to devalue their currency. As Lacalle explains, inflation is the equivalent of an implicit default.
But the average person doesn’t realize it. Because government people have effectively redefined inflation and can blame rising prices on “the reasons.” Inflationary policies allow government people to continue their borrowing and spending malfeasance out from under the cloud of blame. As Lacalle explained, “Governments know that they can disguise their fiscal imbalances through the gradual reduction of the purchasing power of the currency.” This allows them to achieve two things.
The result? An ever-growing government at the expense of the private sector and the economic well-being of average people.
Gold Tells the Story Real money – gold – tells the story of government monetary malfeasance. Lacalle noted that financial asset reflects “evidence of currency destruction.” The dollar price of gold has gone up 89 percent in the past five years. Despite setting records, the S&P 500 is up slightly less – 85 percent. And government bonds? The U.S. aggregate bond index is up a paltry 0.7 percent. Gold and equities continue to climb higher while bonds do nothing. Lacalle said, “It is the picture of governments using the fiat currency to disguise the credit solvency of the issuer.” And even equities are getting a hidden boost from price inflation. Money Metals Exchange CEO Stefan Gleason pointed out that, yes, stocks do indeed continue to race higher – in terms of depreciating fiat dollars. But stocks are actually losing value when priced in gold. U.S. stocks haven’t hit a record in terms of gold in more than two decades. Lacalle argues that gold isn’t expensive at all when viewed through the lens of price inflation.
Mike Maharrey is a journalist and market analyst for MoneyMetals.com with over a decade of experience in precious metals. He holds a BS in accounting from the University of Kentucky and a BA in journalism from the University of South Florida.
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