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| The Fed’s New Tool to Fight Inflation | | Print | |
| Written by Bob Adelmann | ||
| Monday, 04 January 2010 10:00 | ||
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Last Monday, the Federal Reserve unveiled its new “term deposit facility” as another tool to fight inflation. It was reassuring to note that the Fed has finally defined inflation's causes properly: as a continuing rise in the general price level usually attributed to an increase in the volume of money and credit relative to available goods and services. The Federal Reserve has addressed the financial market turmoil of the past two years in part by greatly expanding its balance sheet and by supplying an unprecedented volume of reserves to the banking system. Term deposits could be part of the Federal Reserve's tool kit to drain reserves, if necessary, and thus support the implementation of monetary policy. There are other tools available to the Fed to remove liquidity from the economy, such as Open Market Committee operations, raising reserve ratios, and using reverse repurchase agreements. However, all of this begs the Big Question: When is the general level of prices going to start moving higher?
The decline in the velocity of money has essentially completely offset the growth in the money supply, reflecting consumers’ uncertainty about the economy, employment, and government intervention in the economy. Ultimately, the Standard & Poor’s Index could rise 200% if the Fed prints enough money. I suppose this will happen over the next 10 years or so. Eventually, the U.S. government will have no other option but to print massively to finance the growing fiscal deficit. History may not have to repeat itself, especially as awareness of the Fed grows along with increasing resistance to its policies. According to U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, the author of a bill to audit the Fed and a book entitled End the Fed: “Whatever happens, the Fed and its defenders have seen that people are becoming very wary of its methods of operation, and many are downright angry at its very existence. Never again will the Fed be immune from the scrutiny of its critics. This is very positive.” Trackback(0)
Comments (1)
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Anon
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Better charts for Money Velocity Here are some better charts for Money Velocity, both the M1 multiplier, and the M2 multiplier: http://www.crystalbull.com/sto...y-chart/M1 and http://www.crystalbull.com/sto...y-chart/M2 Notice the relationship to the stock market (economy) |









