Will Trillions Of Dollars In Stimulus Raise Inflation?

 | Mar 26, 2020 07:58AM ET

Before the coronavirus shock, inflation in the US appeared tame by the standard measures. But the macroeconomic earth has shifted in recent weeks to combat the fallout from COVID-19. The Federal Reserve has announced unlimited asset purchases and is running ultra-dovish monetary policy. Meanwhile, the federal government is about to roll out a new $2 trillion stimulus package. It all adds up to what is perhaps the most ambitious effort in history to grease the economy’s wheels (or at least prevent collapse). Is this herculean effort also laying the groundwork for higher or even soaring inflation?

The experience of the past decade leaves plenty of room for humility in predicting what comes next for pricing pressure. The hyperinflation that many pundits thought was fate in the wake of the Fed’s extraordinary monetary stimulus following the 2008-2009 crisis never materialized. Will it be different this time? No one knows, although the hyperinflation warnings have returned anew in the wake of the latest policy changes.

Peter Schiff, a perennial doomsday pundit and gold bug at Euro Pacific Capital, predicts that the latest changes in Fed policy “ensures that this recession, depression that we’re entering is going to be extremely brutal in the inflation that is going to ravage the economy, particularly investors and retirees.”

Hyperbolic? Yes, especially when you consider that surging inflation forecasts by Schiff and others have been wrong all along. But has something finally changed to turn extreme predictions into realistic estimates? Unclear, although inflation sentiment via the Treasury market’s implied forecast appears to be reviving, albeit modestly so far, after an extended disinflationary run.

The yield spread for nominal less inflation-indexed Treasuries had been falling sharply in recent weeks, threatening to go negative at some point. The 5-year’s inflation estimate, for instance, dropped from roughly 1.6% in late-February to just 0.14% on March 19. But in recent days, the spread has bounced, rising to 0.69% on Wednesday (Mar. 25), based on daily data via Treasury.gov.