http://www.creditslips.org/creditslips/2007/01/is_there_an_inf.html
Is There an Inflation Lobby?
posted by Jack Ayer
Here's one that is way above my pay grade but this has never stopped me before. 
I write about the inflation lobby, if there is one.  

Anybody out there old enough to remember when Adlai Stevenson was president? 
Okay, how about Jimmy Carter? Remember the great kidney stone of a year, 1980, 
when the inflation rate veered toward 14 percent per year? Not exactly Germany 
1923, but enough to inflict a lot of pain: -"people on fixed incomes," we were 
told, and it was true-if inflation went to 14 percent while your monthly social 
security check stayed just the same, you just had a 14-percent pay cut. It was 
throw an awful lot of small (and some big) businesses under the bus: try 
keeping up with a your monthly revolving when your (floating) rate goes up by a 
factor of, say, three. 


But where you stand depends on where you sit. If you are not on a fixed 
income-if your paycheck goes up-and if your debt is fixed-then congratulations, 
bucky, you just got yourself a big chunk of relief. From your point of view, 
the more inflation the better. 


In the 70s and 80s, we saw the inflation lobby hard at work-no, strike that, 
not hard at work, but sitting on the furnace eating chocolates while the 
pensioners and others did the work. In particular, I'm thinking of all the 
people who bought their homes on 30-year fixed mortgages in, say, 1967, just in 
time to enjoy the jolts and disruptions of the next two decades. 

Clearly, there are political implications here. If we truly have a nation full 
of people with fixed-rate debt (and floating incomes), then there is no 
incentive to control inflation. Quite the contrary: you want all the inflation 
you can. Ironically, this is true even if the subjects don't see it that way 
themselves: way I remember it, some of the loudest grousing about inflation 
came from people who were its biggest beneficiaries. 


This is the point where you would expect me to write about how the inflation is 
coming back again, with the inflation lobby in tow. In truth, I believe the 
first part of that proposition. I'm one of those who believes that we are 
behaving like Donald Duck in the cartoon, suspended in mid-air, having run off 
the diving board and not yet having noticed that he's ready for a fall. But 
what about the inflation lobby? Recall what I said before: "if your debt is 
fixed." Back then, the mainstay of the loan market was the fixed-rate loan. 
Consumer installment loans were fixed-rate. So also credit card debt (if you 
had any). And the system thrived on the 20-year (or 30-year) fixed rate real 
estate loan.

You can see where I am going with this one.  I'm not smart enough or well 
informed enough to say anything conclusive about the loan market today.  But I 
do know that a lot  of our debt is floating-rate. Translated, that means we 
have shifted the risk of rate fluctuation from lenders (where it lay in the 
70s/80s, and since time immemorial) to borrowers. If I'm right, then inflation 
may be far more painful for the mass of borrowers next time than it was last. 
Indeed, this may be one reason why there hasn't been as much worry about the 
risk of inflation as you might expect-it may be that the people most like to 
suffer from it belong to a class that has no memory of any such pain. Keep this 
in mind  as you try to figure out what will happen when payday comes on all the 
borrowing and spending of the last few years.

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