Our economy has a LOT of problems. Inflation barely makes the list.
I think you may be confusing the
effects of inflation with the
actuality.As TigerJimmy stated, inflation is
not rising prices. It is an increase in the money supply that will eventually, inevitably, cause prices to rise. With the trillions of dollars that the Fed has dumped into the money supply, the
inflation is already a done deal. Now we're just waiting on the
effects.
Things cost pretty much the same today as they did 50 years ago. In 1962 a man earning good wages could buy an entry-level car for about eight weeks wages, say $2,000. In 2011, a man earning good wages can still buy an entry level car for about eight weeks wages, say $20,000.
The car hasn't become more expensive, at least not in the only currency that counts: how many man hours did it take to buy it. The money has become worth less.
That's inflation.
If I were smart enough to be an economist, perhaps I wouldn't have this nagging suspicion that there is a basic flaw in our whole economic system. Apparently in order to sustain itself the economy has to
grow at an annual rate of 4% or so. If it doesn't, then bad things happen. Well, we're living on a finite planet with finite resources, and open-ended growth like that is simply not sustainable. What is going to happen when it's time to "pay the piper"?
I have this dreadful suspicion that we're about to find out.
tanstaafl.