Price Deflation Hits Italy First Time in 55 Years
The Italian National Institute of Statistics (ISTAT) reports that consumer price
inflation declined by 0.1% from August 2013 to August 2014.
Italian consumer prices fell 0.1 percent
year-on-year in August of 2014, matching preliminary estimates. The country’s
annual inflation rate touched the negative territory for the first time in
nearly 55 years due to a drop in energy prices.
Year-on-year, prices of energy fell 3.6 percent in August, mainly driven by a
1.2 percent drop in cost of non-regulated energy products. Additional
downward pressures came from food cost (-0.5 percent), mainly unprocessed
food (-1.8 percent) and communication (-9.0 percent). Meanwhile, prices of
services slowed (0.6 percent in August compared with a 0.7 percent increase
in July).
Italy CPI 2000 - 2014
Eurozone Policymakers Concerned About Falling Prices
A Financial Times headline portrays falling prices as a negative thing: Deflation Takes Shine Off Sales for Italy’s
Shopkeepers.
The appearance of deflation in Italy
suggests a worrying spread from Spain, another peripheral eurozone economy,
where it reared its head this year. Deflation is now stalking the home of
Rome-born Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank president, who has sounded
the alarm about the need to restore growth across the continent and has taken
aggressive and unorthodox measures to do so.
Matteo Renzi, the youthful prime minister who gained power in February with
an agenda of radical economic and political reform, acknowledged last week
that growth would in fact be “around zero” this year.
The hope is that lower prices will start luring Italians back to the shops.
But policy makers – particularly Mr Draghi and other ECB officials – do not
seem to be betting on the resurgence of the Italian consumer.
They have been more focused on – and fearful of – the worst case: that the
country, along with the eurozone more generally, could fall into a
deflationary spiral, in which consumers hold off purchases in the expectation
that prices will fall even further. Deflation would also raise the real value
of Italy’s monumental €2.1tn public debt load, causing angst among investors.
“Even if you think the probability of damaging deflation is low, if it were
to happen it’s a disaster,” says Erik Nielsen, global chief economist at
UniCredit, the Italian bank. “The ECB was right to take out an insurance
policy against it,” he adds, referring to measures including interest rate
cuts the central bank took this month.
Deflationary Spiral Nonsense
The idea that falling prices are bad for the economy is ridiculous. Taking
out insurance against falling prices is even more absurd.
Ask any consumer if he wants lower gas prices, lower food prices, lower hotel
prices, lower computer prices, or lower prices on any consumer items and the
answer will be yes.
Next, ask any consumer who needs a coat, computer, TV, or any other needed
item if he would he wait a year to buy one because prices were
falling.
Assuming the consumer had enough money to buy any needed item, he would buy
that item now.
Thus, the entire deflationary spiral concept of consumers delaying purchases because
prices are falling is ridiculous.
Keynesian Theory vs. Practice
Keynesian theory says consumers will delay purchases if prices are falling.
In practice, all things being equal, it's precisely the opposite.
If consumers think prices are too high, they will wait for bargains. It
happens every year at Christmas and all year long on discretionary items not
in immediate need.
In general, people like bargains, and when bargains get big enough, people do
not wait for even bigger bargains. Consider Christmas shopping. Most do not
wait until after Christmas when bargains are even bigger than before
Christmas.
Yet, these ridiculous myths of consumers waiting because prices are
falling as opposed to consumers waiting for prices they can afford have been
repeated so many times that people actually believe them.
Delays For Other Reasons
People do delay purchases if they don't have a job, or the money, or they
perceive prices are simply too high.
The problem is typically debt, not falling prices. If consumers have too much
debt or too little income they cannot buy. If businesses have too much debt
they cannot expand. If governments have too much debt, they eventually run
into problems.
Assets vs. Consumer Goods
Consumers will buy houses and other assets they cannot afford because they
perceive central bank inflation will bail them out with ever-increasing asset
price inflation.
When the greater fool stops buying, bubbles burst, asset prices fall, and
then debt deflation takes over. Debts cannot be paid back, businesses cannot
hire, and consumers out of a job cannot shop.
Keynesian Nonsense
Keynesian economists want government to pick up the slack when businesses
fail. That's nonsense. Several decades of Keynesian and Monetarist attempts
to jump start the Japanese economy with nothing to show for it but debt to
the tune of 250% of GDP should be proof enough.
Falling prices are never the problem. Rather it's central-bank sponsored
inflation that causes asset bubbles and promotes debt and malinvestment that
is the problem.
The solution, that no central bank cares to promote, is to not sponsor assets
bubbles in the first place. Once in asset bubbles, the best thing to do is
let the bust play out.
Assuming Japan remains on its current path, the upcoming collapse in the Yen
will provide the final proof that Keynesian economics is pure idiocy.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com