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-   -   Is The United States Experiencing Inflation? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1154414)

RummyBoy 11-13-2014 06:19 AM

Is The United States Experiencing Inflation?
 
http://www.bloomberg.com/video/tilma...Gyv1G9Ryw.html

Sorry, I gotta ask this because the government figures seem to indicate nil or very low inflation. Then I see a video like above which tells a totally different story so I wanna ask you guys:

Do you feel that prices are going up?

If so, Is it a creeping increase?

If so, Is it a significant year on year increase?

Where do you see price increases happening most?

Best-In-BC 11-13-2014 06:29 AM

lol, everyone has experienced inflation, you would have to be a idiot not to see it. Its been going on for 50 years.

aka123 11-13-2014 06:29 AM

Most countries have some inflation as it is the desired state.

US too has inflation as far as I know. Big influencers to inflation are usually oil prices, food prices and house prices. The inflation is calculated from a "basket" of goods, those have different kind of emphasizes in the overal calculation.

woj 11-13-2014 06:42 AM

the figures they publish seem to be about right... you barely notice it, you really only notice it when thinking "when i was a kid, I could buy xx for $1, now it's $3"...

RummyBoy 11-13-2014 06:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aka123 (Post 20288073)
US too has inflation as far as I know. Big influencers to inflation are usually oil prices, food prices and house prices. The inflation is calculated from a "basket" of goods, those have different kind of emphasizes in the overal calculation.

Sure, inflation is always better than deflation. However, if inflation is way below target (assuming target is around 2%) then wont lower oil prices decrease it even further?

Well im not a US person so im curious what kind of inflation people here are seeing? Are you seeing it in goods? Or products? Looking at the property and stock markets, there is obvious asset price inflation but what about food price inflation?

slapass 11-13-2014 06:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RummyBoy (Post 20288062)
http://www.bloomberg.com/video/tilma...Gyv1G9Ryw.html

Sorry, I gotta ask this because the government figures seem to indicate nil or very low inflation. Then I see a video like above which tells a totally different story so I wanna ask you guys:

Do you feel that prices are going up?

If so, Is it a creeping increase?

If so, Is it a significant year on year increase?

Where do you see price increases happening most?

I have to say not much. Food and fuel did a nice jump in the last ten years but the rest of it has been pretty steady.

Rochard 11-13-2014 06:56 AM

Gas is down below three dollars. No one is complaining.

aka123 11-13-2014 07:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RummyBoy (Post 20288081)
Sure, inflation is always better than deflation. However, if inflation is way below target (assuming target is around 2%) then wont lower oil prices decrease it even further?

Yes. Although that won't cause the feared kind of deflation, or at least it is kinda hard. It's kinda hard to postpone fueling the car. Although some bigger buyers like industry might do it if they have sufficient stocks. But, biggest players usually lock down the prices with futures.

Barry-xlovecam 11-13-2014 07:07 AM

Inflation is segmented ...
  • The price of gasoline is down.
  • The prices on computer parts is stable to down.
  • The prices of foodstuffs fluxuate but are overall up.
  • The prices of homes has recovered a lot but in most places is still down from the peaks in 2006 -- but how often do you buy a home (or other real estate)?
  • Rents are up -- they are always up ...

The stated US government figures are manipulated to an average that looks better than it is IMHO. The real inflation rate for everyday consumers is probably in the 4% to 6% annual rate.

pornguy 11-13-2014 07:28 AM

We are currently working on Massive inflation.

Just wait until Burger flippers get 15$ an hour.

PR_Glen 11-13-2014 07:40 AM

are you going to post every single article from that site today?

slapass 11-13-2014 07:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pornguy (Post 20288110)
We are currently working on Massive inflation.

Just wait until Burger flippers get 15$ an hour.

Would solve a lot of issues but would wipe out some old folks savings. So depends on who you like.

aka123 11-13-2014 07:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by slapass (Post 20288124)
Would solve a lot of issues but would wipe out some old folks savings. So depends on who you like.

Old folks don't know how to invest?

MassMarketing 11-13-2014 08:05 AM

Gas is under 2.70 a gallon here. But Coffee is up, milk, nuts, etc. They say there is a reason for everything though. Coffee because of a drought in Brazil, same with nuts and fruits, drought in Cali, etc.

RummyBoy 11-13-2014 08:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 20288095)
The stated US government figures are manipulated to an average that looks better than it is IMHO. The real inflation rate for everyday consumers is probably in the 4% to 6% annual rate.

The government may well have a reason for manipulating inflation figures. Inflation reduces the value of debt at as well as, if translated to profits/wages increases tax revenues for the government. You can tax inflation but you cannot tax deflation and hence that's just one reason why inflation is more desirable.

However if you really do have inflation in the US the government has an incentive to show lower inflation because higher inflation would mean interest rates should go up. Increase interest rates soon enough and fast enough to end easy money policy and it will sink the stock market, economy all over again.... although there's talk about raising rates next year, I get a sense that its just talk (to indicate a normalizing economy).

Well, most governments manipulate the figures but 4 -6% is a very substantial amount of inflation and everyone else here seems to believe the government figures, so where do you get that from?

Barry-xlovecam 11-13-2014 08:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RummyBoy (Post 20288153)
[W]ell, most governments manipulate the figures but 4 -6% is a very substantial amount of inflation and everyone else here seems to believe the government figures, so where do you get that from?

The real world?

Barry-xlovecam 11-13-2014 08:32 AM

Shadowstats bears out my estimate BTW :)
http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate...flation-charts

RummyBoy 11-13-2014 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Barry-xlovecam (Post 20288186)
Shadowstats bears out my estimate BTW :)
http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate...flation-charts

Its ok, point taken.

This is John Williams site...... I trust it. :)

Barry-xlovecam 11-13-2014 08:39 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MassMarketing (Post 20288149)
Gas is under 2.70 a gallon here. But Coffee is up, milk, nuts, etc. They say there is a reason for everything though. Coffee because of a drought in Brazil, same with nuts and fruits, drought in Cali, etc.

Fruit has more to do with transportation costs I think.
Coffee is always a wild commodity. Coffee retail prices are up 35% right now.
Meat prices have risen 50% in the past year or two -- there was competition by the ethanol production from corn that could be used for cattle/poultry feeds ... Crop yields are up this year in the grain belt but once prices go up they tend to remain high to recoup lost profits (or widen profit margins).


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