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- Nov 5, 2010
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I guess you could start with it's impact on the USD. The price of gold is another example. Look at Bob Murphy's predictions, as well as Schiff's. When you predict high or even hyper inflation year after year, and inflation ends up being below historical average, something must be flawed in your model or way of understanding the monetary system. I'm not saying I'm anti Austrian, but there is nothing wrong with re-evaluating, especially in a "science" like economics, where there is still a lot that we don't understand.
As far as I know, the only particular "prediction" Bob Murphy made with respect to inflation and QE was the bet he made with another economist about what the official CPI number would be at a particular date. His prediction was wrong - and he owned it so and ponied up on his bet. Your claims to the contrary notwithstanding, Bob Murphy does NOT run around predicting "hyperinflation year after year." (I cannot speak regarding Schiff one way or the other, as I do not follow him - but Schiff is not an Austrian economist so much as he is a "fellow traveler." Assigning criticism to Austrian economic theory on the basis of whatever predictions Schiff or other "Austrian-style" or "gold bug" businessmen, investment advisors and "market watchers" happen to make is inapt and misguided.)
Furthermore, Murphy's specific prediction in that one particular case was NOT based on Austrian economics per se. Murphy did not ever say that "Austrian economic theory tells us that inflation will be this or that particular value at this or that particular point in time." (In fact, Austrian economists explicitly reject the idea that that sort of "prediction" is even possible to begin with.) Murphy's prediction was informed by Austrian economics, but it was not derived from Austrian economics. It was derived from psychology (in the light of Austrian economics). That is, it was based on Murphy's personal expectations about how investors and others would react to QE - but he failed to anticpate that banks would hold on to as much QE-created reserves as they did. And that is exactly the sort of thing that makes consistent and reliable economic predictions of that sort and specificity so impossibly fraught to begin with. (Being familiar with Murphy's work and style, I very seriously doubt that it's a mistake he'll ever make again.)
As for your assertion that "when you predict [higher inflation and inflation ends up being lower] something must be flawed in your model or way of understanding the monetary system": it does NOT follow that "something must be flawed in your model." That is merely one possibility. Alternatively, it may be that the veracity or accuracy of inflation measurements is what is flawed - or it may be that your application of your model with respect to those inputs is what is flawed. (It is this latter alternative that tripped up Bob Murphy, not any "flaw" in Austrian economics.)
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