News & Analysis
UK Stagflation - Now It Begins
Bank of England's Mervyn King (left) warns over inflation ... Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has warned that high inflation will continue to erode earnings power through next year as the economy faces the threat of 'stagflation'. Prices rises have consistently defied the Bank's expectations of a slowdown, adding to pressure on households as wage growth remains weak and the Government introduces a strict austerity package. The Bank's rate-setters are charged with keeping inflation at 2% but the Consumer Prices Index benchmark has been above 3% throughout the year. However, addressing a committee of MPs, Mr. King suggested that they will be reluctant to try to curb the problem by raising borrowing costs from 0.5 per cent any time soon because of the weakness of the economy. "There will come a point when we will certainly need to ease off the accelerator and return Bank Rate to more normal levels," Mr. King told MPs today. "I look forward to that time because it will probably be a signal that there is a smoother drive ahead, with the economic outlook improving in a durable way. But I fear there is some considerable distance to travel before we can begin to use the word 'normal.'" – UK Telegraph
Dominant Social Theme: Stagflation is part of a normal recovery.
Free-Market Analysis: Bet you didn't know that Britain was suffering from high inflation. We didn't anyway and we try to keep on top of these things. We knew that Britain was suffering from a high jobless rate. And we knew that Britain's debts were out of control, causing the country's new prime minister David Cameron to insist that years of austerity were going to be needed to put things aright. But now, apparently, Britain has high inflation to contend with as well. And its not just Britain. Here's something recent from the Daily Mail on Europe generally:
Euro zone 'heading for stagnation' after Greek debt crisis ... 'Uncertain': The euro zone will have years of 'anaemic' growth, warned the IMF ... The Greek debt crisis was an abrupt wake-up call for the euro zone, the world's leading economic watchdog said yesterday. In a devastating critique, the International Monetary Fund painted an alarming picture of an unruly economic confederation lacking the necessary controls to rein in its profligate members.
It warned of a prolonged period of stagnation unless Europe puts its house in order. Its report said a 'patchy and uncertain' recovery will unravel unless the root causes of the crisis were tackled. Faced with weak growth rates, many states sleep-walked their way into the crisis by living well beyond their means. ... The Washington-based economic body said: 'With lacklustre demand, low inflation and high public debt, a prolonged period of stagnation [is] a distinct possibility.'
Is there a dominant social theme here? We think it is interesting that Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has begun to warn about the "S" word. Thirty years ago, in fact, stagflation was not even an admitted phenomenon in central banking. But today it so well known – and dreaded – that King is talking it up even before its general inception. Call it a sub-dominant theme or mini-meme. With everything else that Britons have to worry about today, stagflation will soon be taking its place at the table. "Expect stagflation," King is telling his countrymen. "It is a normal part of the recovery process. Do not be alarmed."
It may be a normal part of a central-banking crack-up boom, but stagflation is a distinctly irregular financial phenomenon, and one that was for a long time denied by banking types. It is interesting to note that stagflation was really not an accepted phenomenon (except by unknown Austrian economists like Murray Rothbard) back in the 1970s when term was first coined. Mainstream economists liked to proclaim that the process wasn't even possible. Of course overt Keynesianism was the rule of the day; Keynesian economists believed that once central banks began to stimulate the economy that jobs and growth would return. Hence, no possibility of stagnation (joblessness, etc.).
But as the 1970s wore on with a combination of high joblessness and high inflation, it became evident that central bank monetary stimulation was not doing the trick. We discussed this just yesterday in our article "Is It a Deflationary Depression?" We pointed out that in the real world a economic crack-up was followed by severe deflationary deleveraging and then probably even more severe price inflation. We didn't mention it yesterday, but we've mentioned before that almost inevitably after one of these severe central banking downturns, stagflation has got to be a factor.
It's obviously going to be an issue in Europe and it's going to be an issue in America as well. It will also be made worse by the West's obsession with "austerity," which wasn't nearly so apparent as we recall back in the 1970s. But in the 2000s we can see clearly what awaits. There will be high inflation, high interest rates, high joblessness and little government money to cushion the pinch.
As a free-market oriented publication we are not in favor of government programs – not even a single one – but the trouble with fiat money economies is that they can get so far out of whack that the downside is infinitely greater than it would be in a normal economy. In a normal economy with gold and silver money, downturns are often brief. While they may be sharp, they are regional in nature and one probably has little trouble traveling to a more bustling area.
But in the current "globalized" economy, there is no place to turn. First central banks gun the West's economies in unison to the breaking point. Then during a crack-up boom such as the one we are experiencing now, the West again in unison experiences a terrible reversal. Jobs dry up, credit is withdrawn and bankruptcies rise. Not only that but people are over-leveraged and without any survival skills. Fiat economies tend to remove people from subsistence employment by tempting them into incandescent professional jobs that are of short duration. This happened in the 1990s during the tech boom.
Mercantilist central banking is a terrible curse. Economies climb a cliff and then commit virtual suicide, jumping off. Combine inflation, unemployment, high rates and "austerity" together and you get an economic disaster that will haunt the West for years. Additionally, the powers-that-be who have set the terrible parade in motion have just finished propping up "too big to fail" entities which further distorts the economy and guarantees that the parched era of stagflation will continue even longer than it would have otherwise.
It is hard to fathom how a real monetary market would work, absent the current central banking plague. Interest rates would be regional, gold and silver would flow in and out of regional economies as necessary. Banks would offer fully backed bills, real bills and perhaps even fractional reserve notes. There would be monetary competition and no one would be terribly worried about a depression because the economy would exit in a patchwork state where some areas were always doing better than others.
Conclusion: The reality however is stagflation and austerity. Stagflation is a direct result of mercantilist central banking and an indefensible gunning of the money supply. Austerity is oriented around the insistence that the same power-elite entities that created the larger Great Recession need to be paid back for the loans that they have made using the full-faith-and-credit of the population that they are now plunging into poverty. The question at this point – and we have asked it before – is not whether times will be tough but how a population increasingly educated by the Internet about the reality of modern monetary system reacts to what's happening around it. The same thought has no doubt occurred to the power elite.
Latest Daily Bell Articles
Feedback


Posted by Sally Preston on 07/29/10 09:38 PM
A novel idea. If these celebrities weren't so darn self-absorbed, a bright one or two might pick up the mantle. I'm not going to hold my breath.
Posted by John Acord on 07/29/10 09:12 PM
Today we learn the records of the SEC, like those of the Fed, are now entirely protected from public scrutiny meaning that no investigation by any individual, public interest group, or the media will be allowed under the Freedom of Information Act. I do not understand why even the conservative media are not howling in protest.
This provision was buried in the so-called financial reform measure passed by Congress sand signed into law by Hussein yesterday. The Predators are now allowed to pursue whatever agenda and thefts they wish without any threat of public scrutiny or revelation. What we have here is TOTAL CORRUPTION by a Mafia cabal of predators who intend to steal every last sou from the middle class. Now, they will blame the ensuing malaise on "Stagflation"!
Posted by Leave Me Be on 07/29/10 12:37 PM
My pessimistic view is that this younger generation will, like all of us, see the bare fist and hard boot of corporatism fully exposed, then they will start saying NO in large numbers. Then things get interesting. Not sure how it turns out unless someone invents a cheap way to get off the planet and reach other star systems. If that happens, a goodly number will seek freedom away from the corrupt, thieving, oppressive central authority.
Posted by Dave Narby on 07/29/10 12:33 PM
Au contraire!
I am running for local office as a Libertarian in one of the most "secure" Democrat districts in a system entrenched and dominated by America's two party system... And I am being well received.
I recommend all Liberty minded people get involved in their local governments, that is where you are most likely to get elected.
Do it now, there is no time to waste!
Click to view link
Posted by AmanfromMars on 07/29/10 12:13 PM
A financial system is simply a tool for any economic system, it is NOT capitalism." ... Posted by Sovereignjim on 7/29/2010 11:37:52 AM
That would then make it lawful, and one's sovereign duty of care, to bring the system down and/or chastise and replace it with a better control .... in AI Beta Control with Cloud Crowd Controllers and CyberIntelAIgents is a Prime Premium Option with Myriad Derivative Hedges for Supporting Variety.
Posted by Ed Waggoner Sr. on 07/29/10 12:12 PM
I would think, considering the mess we are in, that we would all had a belly full of paper and ink money and "fractional reserve" banking.
I don't get it. Am I just stubborn or am I stupid?
Reply from The Daily Bell
There is a difference between private money privately offered and public money that is "legal tender" and has monopoly authority.
Posted by Sovereignjim on 07/29/10 11:37 AM
"the SUBVERSION of capitalism has brought us here."
It should say:
The SUBVERSION of a corrupt financial system has brought us here.
A financial system is simply a tool for any economic system, it is
NOT capitalism.
![]() |
Posted by Boatman on 07/29/10 09:52 AM
what, they're gonna save GM but let california go under?....
in a bailout world?....
all but done...
and illinois,florida,nevada,new york....whoever.
next tell me gold has topped.......not hardly
last time i checked you HAD to win cali to win the presidency
basically
Posted by Archie Dean on 07/29/10 08:41 AM
I do hope you are right about this "increasingly educated" population. Personally however, I see no evidence of it at all " the general ignorance about money, its definition, purpose and history remains universally overwhelming.
Worse, of the monetary reformers that do exist (Ellen Brown, Stephen Zarlenga, James Robertson & Michael Rowbotham to name but four well known in the field) the huge majority (including all the above) favour issue directly by the State " the very institution that established (and continues to offer unstinting support to) the current wholly corrupt monetary edifice.
If ever there were a case of 'out of the frying pan, into the fire' then surely this is surely it. The unsavoury truth remains I fear, that the vast bulk of the population will continue to be fleeced as ever they were, with most monetary reform issues going no further than to debate which particular predatory institution should do the shearing.
Yours gloomily
Reply from The Daily Bell
See our India article, for more on this point.
Posted by AmanfromMars on 07/29/10 08:01 AM
And Mike who posted on 7/29/2010 7:11:57 AM, is living in a very strange and deluded world, and apart from the more educated and made aware masses who would gathering, what he has failed to consider is a Rogue Renegade section of an Alternate Power Elite, which could even be a major player within the present "arrangement" deciding that more Power and Control would be readily available to them on their own, with the new Internet Wave of Great Game Virtual Terrain Team Players, without the impediment of Old Family and Defrauded Money free loaders, with no new ideas and inkling for changing the present to the future.
Nowadays, with the Intelligence Community Technology which is practically freely available to anyone able to use it anywhere on the planet, is such a change, dead easy to start, and once rolling along with the right algorithms directing search for solutions and knowledge, will it create a Momentum which will Generate a Greater Power, maintained and sustained all by itself, which will be Impossible to Stop, even if one were mad and bad enough to try.
And the like of a wimpy Cameron can talk until he is blue in the face about austerity, but everyone knows that there are trillions in accounts, which is public money which the bankers and power elitists in the system are just keeping for themselves, so that they can screw around and gamble with everybody else money and lives again, except that they are having much greater difficulty in scamming the markets with their crazy schemes, for the markets are wise to their every failing and would now ruthlessly exploit every vulnerability and ZerodDay Opportunity until the cupboard is bare and the system collapsed and on its knees for want of Beta Leadership.
Posted by Sean on 07/29/10 07:32 AM
![]() |
Posted by Boatman on 07/29/10 07:20 AM
from the mandating of credit to those who could not afford it in the US(and the repackaging and sale of that debt by those giving it)....to the intitlement programs of europe mounted on the backs of the germans and a few others that still produce something.
greek hairdressers a "hardship" occupation with full retirement at 52?.........those girls musta had a "book" on the politicians to get that......but i guess it saved some marriages.
Posted by Stephen Cameron on 07/29/10 07:14 AM
Another good question is where does tax revenue go? Again, when you actually begin to think about how much tax is collected in any given year, it becomes obvious that if all that money was spent on education, health care and other public services, we would be living in paradise. Consider how many taxes we pay. Income tax, VAT, road tax, National Health Insurance, council tax, and all the rest. And don't forget Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs. Most of the money collected is used to service the debt of the innumerable loans that governments have borrowed from central banks and their shareholders. Once the debt is serviced, then government can allocate what's left to public services.
If we ever see a stable, solid, gold and silver backed money supply, only then will we see financial stability and an end to these severe and completely unncessary boom/bust cycles.
Posted by Mike on 07/29/10 07:11 AM
The mistake is in assuming that the American people can think and understand what the problems are. This is a bad assumption. Even when the vast majority of people are penniless and living in tents and being told to move on by oppressive police, the people will not squawk or murmur a word. They will not be able to verbalise or comprehend what happened to them. Some politician will appear in their camp ground and proclaim that help is nigh. The people will adore him and return to their tents with joy.
In conclusion, nothing will change until Paris Hilton and other celebrity idiots start educating the masses.
Posted by AmanfromMars on 07/29/10 06:18 AM
Inevitably, and very quickly, will there be a settling of accounts and a new regime of Order to take over from the decimated ranks of the Old Corrupt Guard and Establishment Power Elite, ...... unless they are wise enough to buy into that which will save and replace their outdated and perverted control levers, and to tarry on that smart move will risk more information and intelligence on the abuses which the heads of power elites enjoy and fuel, being made readily available to the masses and their anger against the system leaders being uncontainable ..... and probably also cleverly channeled to be most effective and destructive of its rotten core elements/cabals.
And it will get personal too, with many well known talking heads being distinctly uneasy with who they are and have been, for they would be well enough aware of the abuse and damage they have done to one and all in their shenanigans.
Time for a radical change for the better with something new, gents, for more of the same is not a viable future option and will lead to more Foe and Woe than can be outsmarted.





