sMiLeYz
Platinum Member
- Feb 3, 2003
 
- 2,696
 
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Here is a response I received from one of the economists:
Dear XXXXXX,
One important reason for an asymmetry between the two cases is that it is always possible to bring down inflation (reasonably quickly, if need
be) by raising nominal interest rates to a sufficient extent (as was done in the US in the period 1979-82, for example). But one cannot similarly end deflation by sharply lowering nominal interest rates, because no amount of monetary expansion can push nominal interest rates below zero (a constraint that had already been reached by the Bank of Japan in the late 1990s).
It is hard for me to suggest readings without knowing more about your background in economics.
Sincerely,
YYYYY
He is correct but being very vague, nominal interest rates in the US are at a zero lower bound. They're already super low, thus making them lower won't change anything.
Quite a few economists have been suggesting that the United States is in the very stages of this right now. A liquidity trap, where monetary policy right now has no effect on stimulating the economy and deflation is near certainty.
Alot of economists especially of those of the Keynesian school are calling for trillions of dollars in fiscal stimulus to head off a deflationary spiral like Japan. Because the consequences of high unemployment, and falling prices are certainly more dire than adding to the national debt.
				
		
			