31) And if you average those out, you get something closer to what the monetary growth implies: that real, true inflation has probably been closer to 17% than 2.5%.
Conversation
41) So what does all of this imply for the future?
Well, on the one hand, inflation–true inflation–is high. Really high. High enough that it would generally be worrying.
Does that mean markets will keep going up? Especially given that even CPI inflation is now high?
Replying to
42) Maybe. But maybe not. Because to some extent, that should already be priced in to “efficient” markets.
As soon as the world realized what was going to happen to policy because of COVID, prices should have adjusted to the full increase that all future QE would bring.
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