No, Inflation From QE Is Not Inevitable

 | May 05, 2015 04:03AM ET

Over the course of the last 7 years there have been a series of excuses for why bad inflation predictions turned out to be bad. The most prominent excuse is that the bad inflation predictions weren’t wrong, but merely haven’t been right just yet. This is a classic move in economics. If you want to ensure that you’ll never be wrong, you make a prediction, but never apply a time line. That way you can always kick the can on your prediction and say you haven’t been wrong, but merely early. This is a wonderful way to go bankrupt in the financial markets and is often a strategy utilized by morally bankrupt economists.

The most common theory about the lack of inflation with QE is the Liquidity Trap theory. This is the theory that cash and bonds have become near perfect substitutes and that the holders of these assets are relatively indifferent to them. So the demand for money is high for various reasons. This is partially true, but not for the reasons that so many people cite.

During a deleveraging cycle, money is actually destroyed as loans are repaid. Just as loans create deposits, the repayment of loans destroys deposits. A popular chart with the fear crowd in recent years is the excess deposit chart shown below. This chart shows the quantity of deposits that have been created via QE that were not matched by loan growth. In other words, this chart shows you how much the Fed has offset the deleveraging via QE.