Has Deflation Been Defeated?

 | Nov 19, 2015 04:05AM ET

The last 15 years have been among the most turbulent on record. Since the year 2000, America has experienced two recessions (including a near depression), two stock market crashes, numerous selling panics, two terrorist attacks, and one of the slowest economic recoveries on record.

Just when it appears there might be some light at the end of the tunnel and the consumer is getting his confidence back, the threat of global deflation has appeared and has given them reason to remain cautious. This time around the threat of deflation is coming from overseas, specifically from China.

Thankfully, the near brushes with deflation in the last 15 years have all been averted so far due to the aggressive monetary policy responses of the U.S. central bank. Every time deflation reared its ugly head, the Fed was right there to ensure prices didn’t stay low for long. In doing so, however, the Fed has short-circuited the natural process by which the economy is periodically cleansed of economic excess.

The natural cycle of deflation also brings an important adjustment in the cost of living for everyone, especially the savers among us. Those who sacrifice spending in the immediate term are typically rewarded for their thrift by the long-term economic cycle. This time, though, the long-term deflation cycle wasn’t allowed to completely run its course. The net result was that savers were essentially punished for their thrift while debtors were exonerated. It means that the natural economic order was turned on its head by central bankers.

This begs a number of important questions: 1.) Does this mean the cycle inflation and deflation known as the K-wave has been defeated by the Fed? 2.) Or will the natural order eventually reassert its primacy over central bank manipulation? 3.) Has the Fed run out of ammunition for mitigating future economic downturns?

Samuel “Bud” Kress, for whom the long-term Kress cycles are named, taught that when it comes to attempts by government to circumvent the long-term cycles, “Mother Nature and Father Time” always prevail in the end. If Bud were alive today I have no doubt he would maintain the Fed’s impotence in ultimately destroying the long-term economic cycle of inflation/deflation. The effects of the long-term economic cycle, he always asserted, must win out.

The long-term cycle of inflation/deflation identified by Kress has a period of 60 years and is roughly analogous to the more widely known Kondratieff Wave (K-wave). According to Kress’ numerical system, the cycle was to have bottomed in late 2014. The period between 2000 and 2014 encompassed the deflationary portion of his cycle, and it was during this time that the U.S. economy experienced most of the aforementioned turbulence. During this time frame the closest the U.S. came to the deflationary depression predicted by Kress was in 2007-2008. The Fed stepped in, however, and unleashed record amounts of liquidity in a furious attempt at reversing the deflationary spiral. Its efforts proved successful as depression was averted and prices recovered in the years that followed.

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Yet the threat of deflation is ever present and remains a constant bugbear of central bankers, especially in Asia and Europe. The U.S. Fed may have succeeded in forestalling deflation, but the austerity programs pursued by other countries in 2009-2015 are coming back to haunt them. The interrelated global economy so passionately defended by many has revealed its ugly underside. Deflation, it turns out, can be spread abroad even to countries that aren’t directly experiencing it at home.

A classic symptom of the deflationary pressure many countries are experiencing is the steep decline in commodity prices. The Reuters/Jefferies Commodity Research Bureau Index (TRJCRB) is the benchmark price index for the broad commodities market. As the following graph illustrates, the TRJCRB is at its lowest level since the 2008 credit crisis. This depressed level reflects the lack of industrial demand owing to the global economic slowdown.