That turns out to be the answer I've been trying to figure out for years: regardless of the technicalities of "printing money", all this quantitative easing should have been causing inflation. And it is... in the stock market, which doesn't figure into the consumer price index.
The CPI, meanwhile, has been stable, or even under the Fed's target. Presumably because those are basics, and you don't really need to buy much more of the basics just because you have more money. (The people with newfound stock wealth, that is; the people without it don't have any more money to spend in the first place.)
It's still a little unclear to me why the S&P 500 has remained in the "inflated but not insane" through most of the past decade -- though for the past week or so it's trending back to "insane" (a P/E ratio well above 20). That means that earnings were coming from somewhere, and if not from core consumer products, then presumably from other things that the stock-market-wealthy were buying from each other, at presumably inflating prices, or at least quantities.
All the QE since 2007 has also caused massive inflation in real estate, and it's ongoing. Housing is actually rising in some markets in spite of record unemployment and a high risk of many mortgage defaults.
It's worth pointing out that housing costs are included in CPI (by proxy of rent).
On an inflation adjusted dollars-per-square-foot basis, housing is exactly the same price as it was in the 1970s [1] -- right around $115/sqft in constant dollars. 2008 didn't actually make a big dent on average.
The reason houses are more expensive today than they were in the past is that they're on average twice as big. This is due to city zoning ordinances, not inflation.
Similarly house prices exploded in major metros like SF because of artificial supply constraints. The city won't allow new building -> refuses to allow smaller units -> prices go up. Again, not inflation.
>> It's worth pointing out that housing costs are included in CPI (by proxy of rent).
I think that is the reason CPI hasn't increased. CPI only accounts for rent and not the cost of actually buying the house. There are definitely highly inflated price to rent ratios particularly in land constrained urban areas.
I think a better way to put it is that there is low/no Consumer Price Inflation but there is tremendous Asset Inflation (in stuff that wealthy people buy).
And perhaps if there did need to be inflation, then perhaps this is better than the reverse (i.e. high CPI inflation which would impact people's ability to buy the basics)?
> There are definitely highly inflated price to rent ratios particularly in land constrained urban areas.
The point I was making was that the price of housing on average ($/sqft) is the same as it has always been. Since we know major metros have gone up it likely means that tier-2 and below cities have actually gone down.
Further, it might be nuanced, but major urban areas aren't land-constrained. They are constrained by their city councils staunch refusal to permit new, tall construction to the benefit of existing landowners and at the detriment of renters. This is not an inflation-linked issue however but a city policy issue. It's strictly supply and demand.
You could say that houses are twice as big because nowadays you have the dual-income family, and a family pays more for one house because the amount of money on the supply side has increased, so prices on the demand side have caught up. The fact that now there is twice as much enclosed space is immaterial, a family needs a house to live in.
I suspect families were actually larger in the past than they are today, as evidenced by the rapidly declining fertility rate. In the 1970s there was an average of 2.48 births per woman, and today it's 1.77. My unsubstantiated opinion is that folks were willing to make do with less in the past, and again, city councils have forbidden building smaller buildings forcing the real costs up -- not through $/sqft but rather mandatory minimum sqft if you will.
==That means that earnings were coming from somewhere, and if not from core consumer products, then presumably from other things that the stock-market-wealthy were buying from each other, at presumably inflating prices, or at least quantities.==
It isn’t a given that you need to increase earnings to increase your P/E ratio. The “E” is your Earning Per Share. Buying back shares lowers your denominator and magically increases EPS, which drives the price higher.
It's been a hot, hot minute from my econ degree, but here goes...
I believe the big question of "Where is the inflation" has to do with lending excess reserves. The amount banks have to keep in reserve is set, but it changes. They can lend the balance after that, although there's a rate set by the fed that also works as a lending/holding incentive too.
"Excess reserves are capital reserves held by a bank or financial institution in excess of what is required by regulators, creditors or internal controls. For commercial banks, excess reserves are measured against standard reserve requirement amounts set by central banking authorities"
So, this money actually hasn't really hit circulation. It doesn't really explain what's up with the SP (perhaps: credit based on reserve holdings, to hand wave a ton of complexity...), but it explains why there's no direct pipeline from Fed money prints -> my wallet -> CPI.
The CPI, meanwhile, has been stable, or even under the Fed's target. Presumably because those are basics, and you don't really need to buy much more of the basics just because you have more money. (The people with newfound stock wealth, that is; the people without it don't have any more money to spend in the first place.)
It's still a little unclear to me why the S&P 500 has remained in the "inflated but not insane" through most of the past decade -- though for the past week or so it's trending back to "insane" (a P/E ratio well above 20). That means that earnings were coming from somewhere, and if not from core consumer products, then presumably from other things that the stock-market-wealthy were buying from each other, at presumably inflating prices, or at least quantities.