So, in a system of sound money inflation is regulated by producers. The laws of supply and demand apply for goods and services with money as another valuable commodity. If a manufacturer builds too many cars, or there are too many car manufactures, then they "inflated" society with more cars than needed so the value of cars go down. The same with gold, oil, food, electronics, etc. Inflation is controlled by natural occurrences, efforts of work, and honest exchanges. Sound money creates a self-regulating free-market.
+rep just for the reminder, one that takes all the spooky mystery out of money.
I would add that:
The actual supplies of everything produced and made available for exchange on the free market -
real or counterfeit - have both inflationary and deflationary aspects to them -- in the aggregate, and
relative to themselves alone.
It was Milton Friedman who said, "Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon." Economists, politicians and others who insist on reckoning inflation as an effect only (e.g.,
a general rise in prices, according to Bernanke), might well agree with Friedman, even while pointing to other, decidedly
non-monetary phenomena as causes, in direct contradiction to Friedman's assertion.
For example, highly competitive technology facilitates the production of goods and services, the supply, quality and often utility of which are all increased simultaneously. Technological advances can have a profound affect the entire economy, and can serve to
inflate both the quantity and quality of goods overall. And even though the quality has increased, the sheer growth in available quantity causes downward pressure on prices - of everything, not just the raw technology itself, but the production of goods and services to which these technologies (TOOLS) were applied. That is
reflected as a general decrease in prices, but that is NOT
monetary deflation, nor is it strictly a monetary phenomenon, because
the money supply did not need to change for any of that to happen. That is a natural phenomenon in any free and competitive market, regardless of the soundness or unsoundness of the currency.
So I can only agree that inflation is
"always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon" if we define all unlike things of value as "monetary", the supplies of which can be inflated and deflated without any change in the supply of any specific thing (like currency). Then yes, both inflation and deflation are a monetary phenomenon, but only if everything of value is considered money - or "monetary".
Unsound Currency: Counterfeit. Fiat money is "created" out of nothing.
Exactly. And I have a thought on this too, as the term "out of nothing" can be taken to mean "in a vacuum". Nature abhors a vacuum. Counterfeits, including counterfeit currencies, do have value. But that value did not come from nowhere. Its value might begin, as pro-counterfeiters of all stripes like to claim, with a mere "faith and belief that it has value" - but that's a slippery ignorance of fundamental mechanics that govern value, which includes the pre-existence of something already known and believed to have value - from some real foundation. The "faith and belief" part is only that it will can be exchanged for full
present value
before the quantity of its existence, relative to like things it imitates, is detected by the market.
The value of fiat money, which is real in any given moment, does not come from the same vacuum from which it is created. From the very moment it is introduced, its value is not based on one person's belief in the moment (even that was established by the market over time), but rather is siphoned directly from the value of the rest of the supply that it imitates, dilutes, and instantaneously places downward pressure on, regardless how negligible or seemingly undetectable on its own.