Falling Prices Are Bad For You??

Price inflation has slowed, but that doesn’t mean prices are coming down. They just aren’t rising quite as fast as they were.

Price inflation is by design. Remember, the powers-that-be target a 2-percent reduction in the value of your dollar.

Conventional wisdom holds that falling prices are detrimental to the economy.

Once again, conventional wisdom is wildly wrong.

If you are a sane person, you understand this. In fact, most people wish prices would go down right about now. It would undoubtedly help your quality of life, right?

In reality, deflation may be bad for the government, but it’s not a problem for any normal person or for the economy more broadly.

In a recent post on X, somebody trotted out the conventional wisdom, claiming we need fiat money that the government can incessantly print because “It became a necessity when the inelasticity of gold-backed currencies failed to accommodate aggressive economic growth."

However, as economic historian Tom Woods pointed out, this is a ridiculous notion, easily disproved by looking at American economic history. The United States became an industrial power even as prices fell and operated with "inelastic" money.

Woods explained the economic reality.

“If there's more economic activity, you don't need 'more money' to accommodate it. Prices simply fall so the same amount of money can process the increased number of transactions. No big deal.”

When faced with this logic, proponents of the fiat system will tell you that hard money exacerbates or even causes depressions.

This is also wrong.