If you're theory that bank money wasn't money...or more importantly it did not have the affect of the money (like inflation) then in 2008 when the MB spiked to unprecedented levels (bottom right graph of the first link) we should have seen more than a 10% spike in inflation.
No.
This is the reason why:
ed; whoops, forgot the graph
The money has NOT been added to the economy, nor loaned.
It sits in FED.
Thus, printing a qazzilion dollars by the FED, but kept in the FED vault is exactly the same effect as the FED not printing a gazzilion dollars.
Other thing to consider is...there are other causes of inflation. Crop failures, over-population, immigration, monopolies
Never.
Crop failures spike prices in CROPS, not systemic across the market.
Supply and demand changes in commodities
other than money does not cause inflation.
It creates supply and demand issues in that commodity and adjacent products - nothing more.
A shortage of Ferraris - with their subsequent rise in price - is not "inflation".
redemptions of the dollar from being a reserve currency
Huh?
How does spending a dollar cause inflation?
competition with other currencies
This is true.
Money is an economic good, and obeys all the laws of economics -no more and no less- as all other economic goods.
The Law of Supply and Demand effects money.
Competition affects demand.
Therefore, competitive currency will affect the demand curve of money.
Huh You can largely look at the supply of money but it is not the whole story.
All of your other "causation" are not relevant at all to inflation/deflation.
But as I pointed out above, in this post and previous posts, the supply/demand law commands money, like it does all economic goods.
Yes, supply changes impact money, thus inflation and deflation.
And, as we agree here, demand changes also impacts money, thus inflation and deflation.