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177 points JumpCrisscross | 4 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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argentinian ◴[] No.45190101[source]
Do people in the U.S. have a good understanding of the causes of inflation?
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OgsyedIE ◴[] No.45190196[source]
Not even most economists do, by analogy to how opaque the questions of lifting bodies and rayleigh scattering are to physicists.
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Eddy_Viscosity2 ◴[] No.45190266[source]
Yeah no, economists and a lot of people understand the the causes of inflation. There are economists who are paid very well to not understand it though, and such positions are often high in the government and financial sector hierarchies.
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chrisco255 ◴[] No.45191500[source]
Are these the same Fed economists that claimed the elevated inflation levels were transitory in 2021?

There are multiple schools of thought on causes of inflation, but generally I agree with late Milton Friedman that it is "everywhere and always a monetary phenomenon". Money supply expansion growing faster than GDP expansion causes inflation.

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1. ceejayoz ◴[] No.45191585[source]
> Are these the same Fed economists that claimed the elevated inflation levels were transitory in 2021?

But… that was correct? It went up, then back down, due to a very unusual (almost unique, thus far) external cause.

https://www.statista.com/statistics/273418/unadjusted-monthl...

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2. opo ◴[] No.45192980[source]
The economist Noah Smith graded the predictions of economists who made public statements once the Biden administration started its large spending programs:

>...In 2021, Krugman tweeted: "I like it and plan to steal it. This report does look like what you'd expect if recent inflation was about transitory disruptions, not stagflation redux".

As Smith pointed out:

>...But in late 2021, inflation spread to become very broad-based. Services inflation was always significant, and took over from goods inflation as the main contributor in 2022.

>The notion that this was just some transient supply-chain disruptions that was only affecting specific products was absolutely central to Team Transitory’s claims in the summer of 2021. And that was incorrect.

>...Team Transitory also called the end of the inflation at least a year and a half too soon. On October 13, 2021 Krugman tweeted "Three month core inflation. Why isn't everyone calling this a victory for team transitory"

>...So they didn’t entirely whiff here. They just greatly overstated their case. And their complacency in 2021 probably fed into the Fed’s decision to delay the start of rate hikes until 2022, which in retrospect looks like a serious mistake.

What did get vindicated was mainstream economics as taught in our textbooks.

As Smith wrote:

>...Mainstream macro’s first victory was in predicting that the inflation would happen in the first place. In February 2021, Olivier Blanchard used a very simple “output gap” model to predict that Biden’s Covid relief bill would raise demand by enough to show up in the inflation numbers. His prediction came true. He didn’t get everything right — he thought wages would rise more than consumer prices, and he neglected the lagged effects of Trump’s Covid relief packages and Fed lending programs. But his standard simple mainstream model got the basic prediction right when most people made the opposite prediction, and this deserves recognition.

>More importantly, mainstream macro appears to have gotten policy right.

https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/grading-the-economic-schools-o...

3. chrisco255 ◴[] No.45193136[source]
It went down after they hiked rates in late 2022 (which causes a drawdown in money supply). The asset bubble that occurred in 2021 would have been avoided if they hiked rates in response to inflation data then instead of holding rates at near zero. Had they held rates at zero, it's likely the inflation would have continued.
4. bigbadfeline ◴[] No.45193657[source]
>> elevated inflation levels were transitory in 2021But… > that was correct?

No, it wasn't correct. By "transitory" the Fed meant "no need to do anything, inflation will go down on its own". It didn't go down on it's own, and the Fed had to act, too little too late, which is now causing prolonged inflation problems.

> It went up, then back down, due to a very unusual (almost unique, thus far) external cause.

The cause wasn't external, neither unusual nor unique, it was the Fed's start of interest rate increases, precisely at the time the inflation trend reversed.