Eurozone in Deflation; Monetarist Mouthpieces Will Scream
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Forget all the talk about CPI or as they call it in Europe HIPC (harmonized index of consumer prices) floating just under 1%.
The true measure of inflation is credit expansion. And for the second month, credit contracted in the Eurozone.
Reuters reports Euro zone lending contraction compounds ECB headache.
Lending to households and firms in the euro zone fell again in January and money supply growth remained subdued, adding to pressure on the European Central Bank to take action next week to support the economy.Monetarist Mouthpieces Will Scream
The ECB has cut interest rates to a record low, pumped extra liquidity into the banking system and announced a fresh government bond purchase program, but the measures have so far not managed to unclog lending to the real economy.
Euro zone inflation is also running at only 0.8 percent - far below the ECB's target of just under 2 percent.
Loans to the private sector fell by 2.2 percent in January from the same month a year earlier, ECB data released on Thursday showed. That compared to a contraction of 2.3 percent in December.
Euro zone M3 money supply - a more general measure of cash in the economy - grew at an annual pace of 1.2 percent, picking up slightly from 1.0 percent in December.
Credit contraction news will have all the monetarist mouthpieces screaming yet again.
Ignore them.
Stepping on the gas pedal with QE will not do a damn thing except create an even bigger asset bubble in European equities.
When bubbles pop - and they always do - the only thing monetarists will have to offer is still more monetary stimulus.
On January 27 I stated Deflation Will Return: Europe First, Then US.
Here we are.
For a discussion as to why the monetarists are dead wrong about what to do about the situation, please consider ...
- What the Crisis Taught Us: More Bubbles! We Need Bigger Bubbles to Combat Deflation!
- Monetarism, Abenomics, QE, and Minimum Wage Proposals: One Bad Idea Leads to Another, and Another
Throwing money at problems has never once in history solved anything over the long term.
Nonetheless, monetarist mouthpieces who do not understand history will be screaming for more currency intervention.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com