RDRUNR wrote:Those who speak of hyperinflation need to visit the German History Museum in Berlin, like I have, and learn about it before making such broad statements. There is no hyperinflation in our current economy (1st world), we are in a deflation period. So the fools with gold feaver, buy gold as it drops, [...]
Nobody is claiming that we have hyperinflation currently. The claim is that the US has the setup for hyperinflation. The setup is lots of debt and high deficits so that they have to keep printing money (borrowing from the central bank). The US has the typical numbers, over 100% debt to GDP and deficit over 40% of spending. At some point people will stop buying the US government debt and the central bank will be the only buyer. They will be buying with newly made money.
The hard question is how soon hyperinflation will start. I think it is in the next 3 years. If you leave bonds early you might miss a couple years of 0.25% interest. Not a big loss.
Paper money sort of suffers from a tragedy of the commons problem. The Germans will resist paying for Greece themselves but there is nobody who fights hard enough to keep the central bank from printing money as it does not seem to hurt anyone enough for them to take up the fight.
America had hyperinflation in 2 of the 3 previous generational crisis. It would have had it in the 3rd as the central bank went bankrupt and paper money became worthless except that they made it illegal for people to own gold and saved the central bank the indignity of going bankrupt.
Anyway, I really have done some homework on hyperinflation and really do think I understand it. I also don't think many people in the current generations in power do understand it, which is why it can happen again.
http://pair.offshore.ai/38yearcycle/#hyperinflation
http://howfiatdies.blogspot.com/
http://howfiatdies.blogspot.com/2010/11 ... ndard.html
http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center ... ts/mfh.txt
(This last URL shows that Foreign holdings of US Treasuries are about what they were 5 months back and have been going down last 2 months. Some of the people who think there is no reason to worry about hyperinflation claim that Foreigners have to keep buying Treasuries (Mish, Pettis, others) but the data shows this is not true. My prediction has been that at some point people will stop buying and that seems to be coming true.)