Are Concerns About Inflation Inflated?
By Mark Perry on June 25, 2008 | More Posts By Mark Perry | Author's Website
M2: Percentage Change from Year Ago
M2: Monthly Percent Change, At an Annual Rate

The charts above (click to enlarge) are from the St. Louis Fed’s most recent “Monetary Trends” report for M2 growth on a: a) percent change from a year ago basis (top chart), and b) monthly percent change at an annual rate basis (bottom chart).
If stability in the growth of M2 was one measure of monetary policy stability, it would seem like the Fed has been doing a pretty good job. The year-to-year change has been steady at about 5% in 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2008. Although the month-to-month annualized change spiked in early 2008, it is now down to about 0%.
Doesn’t this mean that inflation should NOT be a problem?
If you like this article please...
Leave A Comment :
Recent Market Opinions:
Can The Retail Sector Rouse The Recovery?
Why Agriculture ETF Outlook Appears Promising
Stock Charts For Tuesday: S&P 500, Nano, Hertz
With T-Bill Yields At Zero, It’s Time To Beware Of The “Bond Bears”
U.S. Economy Will Grow Faster Than Expected, Jobs To Return To Growth Next Year, Economists Say
Recent News:
Annual Rate Of Decline In Home Prices Shows Continued Slowdown In September - 1 min ago
Consumer Confidence Index Jumps To 49.5 In November - 8 mins ago
*Consumer Confidence (November) 49.5 - 18 mins ago
Stocks Seeing Modest Weakness As Traders Digest Data - U.S. Commentary - 34 mins ago
Bulgaria Sept. Gross Foreign Debt Decreases - 49 mins ago
Opinions From Our Contributors


