ts not a measure of inflation per se, its a targeting of it. An apolitical price would be an ideal signal to peg the major currencies to.
Yes maybe not semantics but slight miscommunication :p (I didn’t mean measuring for measuring’s sake or used in isolation, measuring here is with the clear intention of targeting)
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I think you haven't understood why its important you don't say it the way you did.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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There are 2 components to Nash’s argument: a/ Any non-zero “target rate” (e.g. 2%) of inflation is arbitrary, regardless of the index used. It should be made zero. b/ What is the ideal index for inflation targeting? an intl. apolitical price signal, not a locally-sourced CPI.
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its only b. You don't need a. A is subtly that is difficult to understand and express properly. And you don't need "not a locally sourced cpi" because an "intl apolitical price signal excludes the possibility of using a locally cpi (and locally excludes "apolitical".
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I include (a) because I think in the quoted text, when Nash talked about zero inflation here he meant “inflation” in the traditional sense, i.e., CPI-based inflation. Or is that not correct?pic.twitter.com/M7x3r2qNWa
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It's a very nuanced argument and I think he is saying we need to end the practice of having an x% target and determining x. Use an international price as a peg and have 0%
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Rather than using an apolitical price like bitcoin and then targeting 2% inflation versus bitcoin.
End of conversation
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E.g. if your currency has a one-to-one peg to a price signal X, doesn’t that mean a zero rate of inflation w.r.t. X?