How does inflation work in relation to the Federal Reserve and interest rates? I know inflation happens when the FED prints more money, thus devaluing the dollar, but what about interest rates? Do low interest rates drive inflation, or is it high interest rates?
If someone could respond as quickly as possible, I'd appreciate it ^_^
Things are not as simple as you suggest here.
First, there are two main sources of inflation, one common and one exceedingly uncommon. The less common source occurs as the result of systemic but organic economic circumstances. For example, if for whatever reason an economy goes moribund and then begins to decline because the availability of a great and overwhelming majority of commonly traded items becomes stressed, you will experience inflation through what is effectively universal increases in demand for basically everything. If, for example, an island community that had existed in happy isolation and material abundance for ages suddenly finds itself short on many basic resources such as food, water, metals, and so fort, inflation will be the result - assuming a free market economy. This is what I would call "organic" inflation arising as the result of what tends to be very uncommon circumstances. Uncommon in that universal shortages do not occur very often, save during catastrophes such as wars, meteor strikes, Armageddon, and so forth.
The commonly experienced brand of inflation, which is to say that which is
artificially induced as the result of the structure of a monetary system is the direct result of the fundamental debt-nature of the world's fiat currencies, which are not
monies in any traditional sense. Issuance of currency
with interest owed is a loser from the get-go because debt can
never be avoided. The more currency issued, the greater the debt incurred because every unit has interest attached. How can that interest ever be paid? Answer is that it cannot because you have to pay back more money than was issued. The ONLY way to get that additional currency is to issue more. Instant more debt. It is a death spiral by its very structure that can never lead to prosperity but only to ever growing indebtedness through increased borrowing to pay back what you had already borrowed.
Example: Say you are the government and you go to the Fed, hat in hand, and ask them for some "money". You borrow $100 @ 1% simple interest never compounded over time (just to keep things clear) That means you have to pay back $101. How will you pay back that debt? Even if you can retrieve the full $100, where will the extra $1 come from? By definition it must come the Federal Reserve, which means that you must BORROW it, which means more interest and more debt. And of course in the real world the government never recover 100% and must therefore borrow to cover the shortfall. Then there are the ever growing budgetary requirements due to ever expanding social programs, military ambitions, as well as the effects of this built-in inflation, which acts as the perpetualizer of this debt scheme even if government remains within a given spending boundary year over year. But in reality it cannot precisely because of this inflation, so borrowing more MUST occur just to maintain budgetary stasis.
Fiat currencies are not evil in and of themselves, but when interest is attached they become a most profound source of woe and ultimate slavery.
One other point: increasing the money supply does NOT necessarily cause devaluation of a currency. Money is supposed to be a
store of value, which is to say that it has value in and of itself. The concept of "value" is somewhat problematic from several standpoints, one of them being the subjective nature of the concept and its attendant fluidity. Currency, on the other hand does not necessarily have intrinsic value and is therefore not a store of value but a
representation thereof. Therefore, a gold-backed dollar bill, worth in itself nothing more than the resources and labor required to print it, represents the unit of gold that is held in some vault and is presumed to have some value in the open and free markets. So long as the gold is present as an underlying asset represented by a dollar bill and as long as that bill is redeemable on demand, all is good and right with the world, all else equal.
This said, the body of a nation's money supply is supposed to represent the value of the economy as a whole in some reasonable way. As an economy grows through the
value-added nature of industry, the money supply has the choice either to grow, to shrink, or to remain static. Example: assume economy's total value is $100 today and there are one hundred dollars in currency circulating. Tomorrow that value grows to $110. If the currency pool remains static, then the value that each bill represents is now $1.10 instead of $1. This leads to deflation almost by necessity. Those holding dollars are in great shape and those needing to earn them may be said to be at something of a disadvantage, though this is arguable depending on how one views this situation.
If I shrink the currency pool, we get the same result, only magnified. But if the pool grows by $10, the overall effective purchasing power of each bill should remain the same, which is a good thing from the standpoint of general economic stability. It is through the mechanism of artificial inflation that wealth is stolen from people. If my dollar will buy 1 unit of a supply-stable commodity today whereas it bought 2 yesterday, then someone has robbed me by inflating away the purchasing power of my "money".
Also note that in an asset-backed monetary system, effectively half of the value of that economy needs to be held idle in order that it be available to represent the value of the other half as money. This is an argument against asset backing because real commodities are more valuable if they are used than if they remain idle, at least according to some points of view. Here is where gold reigns nicely as the store of value because it is actually not that good for much else, save jewelry and electronics. Gold sitting idle is not as great a drag on the economy as, say, commercial jets sitting in mothballs as "money" or foodstuffs, machinery, vehicles, medicines, petroleum, and so forth. But even gold has its uses as stated and ideally should be active in the economy too. This is the argument to be made in favor of fiat currency and it actually is a good one, contrary opinions notwithstanding. The interest aspect is what kills our system the most, but there is also the discipline aspect - and that is another area where governments simply cannot be trusted because they have never shown themselves worthy of it, save for relatively short periods. People inevitably give in to the temptations of debasement and it is all down hill from there. History is rotten with examples of this.
What we have addressed here are just the barest fundamentals set in the vacuum of otherwise "perfect" conditions. In the real world, things become a whole lot more complicated; so much so that even experts cannot predict all outcomes and at times seemingly none. But it is pretty safe to say in general terms that money should be real and its supply should track with economic growth and recession. Without this, money, investment, savings all have no meaning and cannot be relied upon. Without confidence, the money system becomes worthless and the only thing to which people can then look forward is economic strife. This is a hazard in any money system due to the nature of money itself even under ideal conditions. It is a hazard of the beast, but when money is properly conceived and administered the risks are just this side of nonexistent. With inflation built in, the hazard is all but guaranteed. Experts in money and currencies know this. The architects of the Federal Reserve system knew it going in; it was their goal to build this into the system precisely for the power it handed to them on golden platters.
This system is no joke, no mistake, and there was no innocence involved in the process of contriving it. Rest you certain of that.