Alarming Increase in Monetary Base May Lead to Long-Term Inflation

Economy |
By Joseph Haslag | Read Time 1 minute

Joseph Haslag, economics professor at the University of Missouri–Columbia and executive vice president of the Show-Me Institute, explains in this radio commentary for KBIA 91.3 FM in Columbia that, although Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has been fretting about deflation, the real danger in current Federal Reserve policy is the potential for long-term inflation. By increasing the monetary base at an alarming rate, the Federal Reserve hopes to meet the existing rising demand for money over other assets. This is fine as long as money demand and supply both grow at the same rate, but if the Federal Reserve doesn’t contract the money supply as the economy grows, it could lead to high inflation rates and unstable markets. “Sound monetary policy is critical for a developed country to function at a high level,” Haslag concludes. “We have seen that reestablishing credibility can be unpleasant once the government lets the inflation genie out of the bottle.”

 

About the Author

Joseph Haslag is a professor and the Kenneth Lay Chair in economics at the University of Missouri Columbia. Until the end of 2018, Professor Haslag was the Institute's chief economist. An expert in monetary policy, Haslag has done research at the Federal Reserve Banks of Saint Louis, Dallas, and Atlanta. He serves on the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas Citys Economic Roundtable and the Federal Reserve Bank of Saint Louis Business Economic Regional Group. He has taught at Southern Methodist University, Erasmus University in Rotterdam, and Michigan State University. Haslag has published his research in the Journal of Monetary Economics, the Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, and the International Economic Review. His research has been cited in more than 100 academic papers. In his role as director of EPARC, Haslag is a standing member of the Consensus Revenue Forecasting Group that forecasts state revenues for state legislators and the governor.

Similar Stories

Support Us

Headline to go here about the good with supporting us.

Donate
Man on Horse Charging