3 Things: Inflation, Stocks Vs. Bonds And Everyone’s A Genius

 | Jan 26, 2017 06:56AM ET

h3 Another View On The Inflation Argument

There is little evidence that current levels of inflation are stable. As I wrote in , outside of just two areas, rent and health care, there remains a broader deflationary trend currently.

Importantly, as I noted, there are two types of inflation:

“Inflationary pressures can be representative of expanding economic strength if it is reflected in the stronger pricing of both imports and exports. Such increases in prices would suggest stronger consumptive demand, which is 2/3rds of economic growth, and increases in wages allowing for absorption of higher prices.

That would be the good.

The bad would be inflationary pressures in areas which are direct expenses to the household. Such increases curtail consumptive demand, which negatively impacts pricing pressure, by diverting consumer cash flows into non-productive goods or services.”

There is another way to view whether the “good” inflation is manifesting itself within the economy. The chart below shows the three major components that input into creating economically viable inflation – commodity prices (which reflects real economic activity,) wages (which allow for increases in spending and support for higher prices,) and the Velocity Of Money (which shows the demand for money through the economic system.)

When we combined these three components into a composite inflation index, and compare it to CPI, we find an important outcome.