Recently I have not been writing as much as in the past. Like many of you, the business of daily life has been consuming all my time. Like a frog in a pot of water that is rising in temperature, the average American is complacent and remains in a state of denial. Inflation is meandering along with a small drop in consumer goods, but that does not mean it is dead. People, whether passively or actively continue to invest in intangible assets. By not buying tangible and real items they help to minimize inflation by diverting money from physical assets like machinery, vehicles, and buildings.
What And Where We Buy Matters! |
History shows that when consumers feel more financially secure and confident they spend
more freely, the reverse is also true. Get ready for the "reverse wealth
effect" to kick in. If this happens it will be a real ball breaker. The
wealth effect is a behavioral economic theory based on people
spending more as the value of their assets rise. Even decades after its economic bubble popped, Japan stands as a monument to the devastation the reverse wealth effect can unleash.
Some of us, long ago predicted inflation would increase and the economy drop away. The flaw in our thinking was underestimating the size of the stimulus the government would put in the pipeline. This massive infusion of money into the economy has only postponed the collapse of the financial system. Still, many investors are
basing their investments on more intervention from central banks and
governments to pull another rabbit out of their hats. It still remains a possibility that currencies will be debased and inflation may soar at the same time the global economy sinks into a funk.
How weird has all this become? We might throw into this mix what could be called the "garage sale factor." You can call this the used items market if you like. This is where a little-used Keurig coffee maker that costs well over $100 is likely to sell for only around $10. In short consumer goods having little or no resale value highlights the fact we already have way too much stuff and could go a long time before needing to buy more. This also supports the idea a loss of the wealth effect will result in a devastating drop in demand for consumer goods. There is a big difference between need and want.
One of the biggest X factors investors and the masses face is corruption
in government and the fact that we have no real say or input into how
things will be resolved in the case of a crisis. Systematic corruption
means things will unfold to do the least damage to those in charge.
Another big issue is world affairs, with conflicts sprouting up in so
many areas, we have little reason to get overly comfortable. The fact
government debt has exploded and the soaring use of the T word,
"trillions" alone is problematic. It is best to remember that when a currency is debased the biggest losers are the masses.
(Republishing of this article welcomed with reference to Bruce Wilds/AdvancingTime Blog)
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