Financial prediction: intentional inflation will follow the recovery

Posted on March 18th, 2009 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Here’s a quick financial prediction; I’m interested to know what you think so please feel free to leave comments or send me an email. As I write this post we’re in the throws of a global economic crisis. The US Government’s response, i.e. a Keynesian approach to shoring up the economy through massive injections of capital, will have the inevitable effect of driving up national debt to historic levels. Eventually that debt has to be repaid, but I have a pet theory on how that painful reality is going to be softened: I think the federal government will pursue a strategy of intentional, controlled inflation. But why will they do this?

During an inflationary period, prices, wages, etc. all tend to go up. This has the effect of “cheapening” the dollar; what used to cost $1.00 now costs $1.50, therefore a dollar in the future is worth less than a dollar in the past. A side effect of this (or in our example, the primary motivation) is that debt incurred in past dollars can be paid with future dollars at a reduced cost. Let’s look at a simplified example:

Assume it’s 2007 and John works for a company that pays him $50,000 a year. By 2012 (post crisis) inflation has been underway for a while and prices have risen. John’s salary will rise as well, and while it may not rise as quickly as prices (a bad side effect of inflation), his nominal income is now $60,000 a year. Let’s also assume that John borrowed $1000 back in 2007 and now, five years later in 2012, he is ready to pay it back. Because of inflation the value of $1000 in 2012 will be less than it was in 2007 when John borrowed the money. So the net effect for John is that he can pay off old 2007 debt using cheap 2012 dollars; it’s a advantage to John and a disadvantage for the lender.

So lets get back to the US government and the massive amounts of debt they are accruing right now in 2009. Given the fact that the government can directly affect inflation through fiscal and monetary policy, why would they not pursue a strategy of controlled inflation? It’s an advantage to borrowers, both the US government as well as all of the individual borrowers who spent too much and saved to little. Unfortunately it’s a disadvantage for all of the people who saved their money, as well as all of the lenders (like China) who loaned the US a lot of money in pre-crisis times.

Any thoughts?

PennyPuddle.com in beta

Posted on December 13th, 2008 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Penny Puddle, the human-powered financial planning web site, is officially in beta. The beta test is currently only available to closed group of users, but the site will go live in January and be available to the public. Penny Puddle is a new service that replaces expensive financial planning boutiques (which can charge thousands for a financial plan) with an affordable online option that’s powered by real people. I’ve been working closely with the founder, David Podley, to get the site ready to go. Stay tuned for details.

Nassim Taleb on Charlie Rose

Posted on December 7th, 2008 in business | No Comments »

Here’s an excerpt from a recent Charlie Rose interview with Nassim Taleb, author of The Black Swan and Fooled by Randomness. It’s a very interesting perspective on how we got into our current economic mess.

Thoughtful analysis of the Wall Street crisis

Posted on September 29th, 2008 in business, news | No Comments »

Harvard Business School published a very thoughtful analysis of the current Wall Street crisis in their most recent Working Knowledge newsletter. I highly recommend reading it to understand the background and the events leading up to the current situation.

Guy Kawasaki on Venture Capital (Part II)

Posted on September 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Here’s Part II of Guy Kawasaki’s talk:

Guy Kawasaki on Venture Capital (Part I)

Posted on September 3rd, 2008 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Here’s Part I of a talk Guy Kawasaki gave on venture capital. He boils his advice down to 5 points and shares some very insightful commentary.

Great post by Gary Vaynerchuk re: “you can do it”

Posted on August 21st, 2008 in Uncategorized | No Comments »

Just ran across this great post by Gary Vaynerchuk (of Wine Library TV) talking about how you can build your new media show / business / podcast etc. without quitting your day job. As he calls it, “hustle 2.0″. Very good message to people who think their day jobs are crowding out their passions.