Austrian definition of inflation is increase in money supply. Keynesian definition is price inflation. You didn't know that? The dollar has been hyperinflated by Austrian standards. It hasn't been YET allowed to reflect as price inflation since it hasn't been allowed into the economy. That is going to change shortly.
And the flvorkian definition of inflation is the size of the icebergs. What the definition is to a certain branch of economics is completely irrelevant. Austrians believe that inflation is a monetary phenomenon, and that there should be an increase in the price level with monetary inflation. That hasn't happened.
The statement "allowed into the economy" is telling. It is the idea that the money supply and the price level have some tight connection, but they don't. Banks don't loan out reserves (the money supply), they create them out of thin air.
Not only has Trump already tried to put a smiley face on the coming keynesian price inflation but the Fed has been warning for months that price inflation is coming. You don't read the Fed statements, do you?
Do you read the Fed statements? The Fed has warned of higher inflation as they are planning on increasing interest rates. That will increase inflation as it increases costs throughout the economy. They'e also warned of higher inflation since they believe we might see a wider fiscal deficit. However, they have not at all warned of hyperinflation?
Wow, you really said RP doesn't understand the banking system but you do? Ooook.
That isn't a defense. Ron Paul does not understand the banking system; that is why his predictions have not come true. He lives in a gold-standard world, with a convertible currency and a fixed exchange rate. The dollar is a nonconvertible currency on a floating exchange rate.
What, then, is the point of repatriating foreign held funds if the corps don't intend to spend them?
That may be the
intention, but that isn't what happened. We have data on this. When you give corporations tax relief, it results in a slightly higher stock market and slightly less inflation, though the effect is so marginal that other impacts can easily wipe it out. US corporations have about 2 trillion overseas. Granted, if they bring that all back at once that would be greater than any historical tax benefit, but over time (say 4/5 years), it would be very comparable. Moreover, the vast majority of the US economy is debt financed. Companies use their real assets as a collateral, and borrow to finance investment. Real funds are generally used in acquisitions (to offset higher finance costs), dividend payouts, and stock buybacks. While tax relief would make those overseas funds more valuable, it wouldn't change their assets to a significant degree. Moreover, corporations are already sitting on a few trillion dollars in domestic profit. Yet, they still haven't made too many investments, preferring to give out dividends and buy out stock. Companies and individuals do not make investments because they have access to funds. They do so because they see opportunity.
Once you understand that this is the end of the debt-based FRN system, you'll understand better why they are bringing it back. It's to spend it while it's still worth something! The end of the bankruptcy means the end of the FRN, since the FRN was based entirely on the bankruptcy of 1933, which is ending.
Explain to me how the FRN will be devalued.
Keynesian word salad. "Might", "at like", "capacity", etc. Again, no offense but if you didn't know that this is the end of a long bankruptcy then your fundamental understanding of how the economy has functioned doesn't lead to much faith in your opinions. Spend more time studying history then you'll have a clearer picture.
Appeal to ignorance and attacking the person all in one, huh?
Hmm....gold prices from 1979 till now? Even with serious manipulation? What they've been saying is coming to fruition now. Timing only matters if you're playing it like a casino instead of preparing for the inevitable end of the debt currency cycle.
They have cried about bread lines, currency crises, US default, rocket-high interest rates, and yes, hyperinflation. Ron Paul in the early 80s thought the end was coming when inflation was briefly high.
Also, is the price of gold is the end-all be all of inflation? Why then, from 1980 to 2005, was price of gold was basically flat (fluctuating between 200 and 400ish)? I mean, there was intense monetary inflation during that time. Huge government deficits, etc. But the price of gold really didn't soar...why? It takes 20+ years to work through the system (higher prices in 2006)? Does the fact that around that time, China and India started buying more gold, not change your interpretation of the rising price? Heck, I generally think that the price of gold has gone up because people think it is a hedge against catastrophe, and post financial-crises, people are very scared. The fact that it isn't at 2,000, to me, is people realizing their fears of hyperinflation and bread lines was idiotic. If you didn't have fearmongerers like Schiff and Alex Jones screaming about gold, it'd be even lower.