Explaining Inflation, Again
By Brad Zigler
In a recent column, I referred a reader to our real-time inflation indicator (explained in "Computing Inflation In Real Time"), naively thinking that the method - or the madness, depending upon your point of view - utilized to derive it would bolster my argument for an impending recession.
Well, no such luck.
Our indicator gauges inflation through the gold market by comparing the metal's dollar-denominated price to its value in euros. The fact that gold was used as a medium, however, vexed our erstwhile reader.
"If you're going to measure inflation in terms of gold," he shot back, "your 12-month measure will show massive deflation in a few months because the price of gold dropped this summer/fall (or the price of dollars rose, whichever). This doesn't tell us anything a price chart for gold wouldn't tell us."
Oh no?
Take a look at the accompanying chart. At the beginning of the year, gold was selling for $841 an ounce. Gold was fixed on October 3 at $842, virtually unchanged from its beginning price. Yet look what happened to monetary inflation in the intervening nine months. The annualized inflation rate slowed by nearly 7.5%.
Monetary Inflation Vs. Gold

Inflation, in fact, was slowing while the price of gold was rising early this year. If that sounds counterintuitive, keep in mind that the indicator is measuring monetary inflation.
Commonly, inflation is confused with rising consumer prices. The mostly widely followed metrics usually associated with inflation are those produced by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. But the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the Producer Price Index (PPI) measure price changes, evidence of "demand-pull," not monetary, inflation.
Monetary inflation is caused by working government presses overtime, printing more greenbacks to cover deficits. Demand-pull inflation rears its head when credit is easy, spurring demand for goods.
The accompanying chart shows that monetary inflation can still be measured positively on an annualized basis. In this sense, it hasn't disappeared. But it is decelerating even as gold prices have stagnated.
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This article has 7 comments:
- PastTense
- 93 Comments
Oct 06 02:27 PM- Whidbey
- 771 Comments
Oct 06 02:34 PM- Smarty_Pants
- 841 Comments
My Website
Oct 06 02:35 PMWhile that's much better than 18%, it's not going to stop the dilution of the unit dollar very much.
- Cesato
- 60 Comments
Oct 06 03:44 PM- Managing Editor
- 129 Comments
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Oct 06 06:37 PMYou CAN have inflation without rising wages. Rising wages characterize "cost-push" inflation. What we've seen recently, though, is monetary inflation overlaid with "demand-pull.&quo...
- Managing Editor
- 129 Comments
My Website
Oct 07 09:24 AMThe "lecture" that galls you so offerred an explanation of inflation past, not future. Domestically, it wasn't a wage spriral that inflated asset prices,. In large part, excess liquidity was supplied by the Fed.
Perhaps you didn't read that when you did YOUR homework.
- User 30121
- 275 Comments
Oct 07 11:39 AMLook at it this way. If you don't buy gold (and don't forget SILVER!), then what WILL you buy? Where do you place your $$$ to be able to sleep nights? Short term it may be volatile, but over the next 2-3 quarters, it should rise nicely. As to "when" to buy. I refer you to a quote by a BILLIONAIRE gold investor: "Don't wait to buy gold. Buy gold and wait". Good luck.
Oh, by the way, buy from a source that has it IN HAND! DO NOT buy where you can't take physical possession within a couple days MAXIMUM! That keeps you out of BIG problems trying to either get your money back or the bullion you purchased!
Again, don't forget silver! Silver may well be the BEST opportunity for INCREDIBLE gains down the road. Some very astute precious metals gurus predict that silver could rise in price/value MANY TIMES that of gold!
Good Luck