I know. I know. Many of us have read dozens of articles with similar headlines over the past 5+ years, some have been interesting and informative but others (too many IMO!) were a confused ramble of wild claims or thinly veiled advertisements. However, Gonzalo Lira lays out a plausible scenario of how events may unfold over the next year. Its easy to forget that it seemingly took a number of huge interest rate hikes from Volker and Co. to stave off low double digit inflation in the early 80s. Of course the Reagan tax cuts are given little credit for getting us out of the woods. You can lower prices by not only cutting demand, but also(and preferably) by increasing supply (a.k.a. real growth).
Anyway here is a link and an excerpt below. Hope you had a nice Christmas!
http://liraspg.com/will-the-dollar-crash-in-2014/
If there is a recession, the Federal government will have no choice but to go into further deficit spending in order to “save the economy”, while the Federal Reserve under incoming Chairwoman Janet Yellen—who is an avowed “dove” when it comes to QE—will quite naturally raise the level of Quantitative Easing. Retracing the taper and going up to $100 billion a month would not be outlandish inference, with a ratio of bond purchases more skewed towards buying Treasury bonds than agency bonds, in order to keep interest rates low.
Now, if this happens, there is no way that the Fed or the Federal government would allow an increase in interest rates. ZIRP would continue, bond yields would remain minuscule precisely because of QE. In fact, the Fed would want there to be a bit of inflation, for the Keynesian “pump-priming”.
Here is the mistake I believe will happen: Once consumer price inflation begins, it will not be possible to rein it in, the way Chairman Paul Volcker did in 1980 following the inflation brought by the Iranian Oil Shock of ‘79. The Fed will not want to rein it in, as they will see it as a sign that the economy is improving. And once inflation reaches double digits—as it did just before Volcker slammed the brakes hard via 22% interest rates—the Federal Reserve under Janet Yellen will not have either the room-to-maneuver or the inclination to raise rates to fight inflation.
Inflation can easily spiral out of control. I personally have seen it in South America—Chile, Argentina, Brazil. Once that genie is out of the bottle—and once a central bank proves itself unwilling to apply the strong medicine necessary to stop it—inflation will accelerate and blow up.
We are already seeing excessive asset price inflation due to the Federal Reserve’s QE and ZIRP policies: Equities are at historic highs while being completely divorced from fundamentals, bonds are yielding historic lows.