Home › 6a) Gold & Monetary Metals › 6a.) GoldCore › Why Do Central Banks Want Higher Inflation?
Permanent link to this article: https://snbchf.com/2021/10/flood-why-central-banks-higher-inflation/
Receive a Daily Mail from this Blog
Live Currency Cross Rates
On Swiss National Bank
-
SNB Sight Deposits: increased by 1.7 billion francs compared to the previous week
24 hours ago -
2025-07-31 – Interim results of the Swiss National Bank as at 30 June 2025
2025-07-31 -
SNB Brings Back Zero Percent Interest Rates
2025-06-26 -
Hold-up sur l’eau potable (2/2) : la supercherie de « l’hydrogène vert ». Par Vincent Held
2025-06-24 -
2025-06-25 – Quarterly Bulletin 2/2025
2025-06-25
Main SNB Background Info
-
SNB Sight Deposits: increased by 1.7 billion francs compared to the previous week
24 hours ago -
The Secret History Of The Banking Crisis
2017-08-14 -
SNB Balance Sheet Now Over 100 percent GDP
2016-08-29 -
The relationship between CHF and gold
2016-07-23 -
CHF Price Movements: Correlations between CHF and the German Economy
2016-07-22
Featured and recent
-
US ‘strikes price cut deal’ with Swiss pharma giants
-
Swiss Senate rejects cuts to Swissinfo’s finances
-
Swiss watch exports contract further in November
-
Swiss banks stung with CHF237m rates rigging fine
-
How a Swiss compromise could save UBS billions
-
Ukraine: 524 Mrd. Schaden | Technik-Chaos in Deutschland | Kinder werden ärmer (Morning News #523)
-
Trump sets Switzerland tariff deal deadline
-
Desperate to save their children, parents become unexpected drug developers
-
Look For THESE $12 Quarters IMMEDIATELY!
-
Lass dein Geld für dich Arbeiten
More from this category
- US ‘strikes price cut deal’ with Swiss pharma giants
18 Dec 2025
- Swiss Senate rejects cuts to Swissinfo’s finances
18 Dec 2025
- Swiss watch exports contract further in November
18 Dec 2025
- Swiss banks stung with CHF237m rates rigging fine
18 Dec 2025
- How a Swiss compromise could save UBS billions
18 Dec 2025
- Trump sets Switzerland tariff deal deadline
18 Dec 2025
- Desperate to save their children, parents become unexpected drug developers
18 Dec 2025
- Switzerland is recruiting 85,000 foreign workers – the fake news that never dies
17 Dec 2025
- Ruffled Republicans, the cost of LA fires, and Disney goes AI
17 Dec 2025
- Consumer groups warn against risks of influencer marketing
17 Dec 2025
- Cost-cutting by Germans could affect Swiss ski resorts
17 Dec 2025
- Snow Compass: guiding Swiss skiing through warmer winters
17 Dec 2025
- Troublesome Swiss train will not operate abroad
17 Dec 2025
Blockchain Reaches Operational Maturity at Swiss Banks, with Stablecoins Becoming the New Strategic Priority17 Dec 2025
- It’s Time to Renew Your Mises Membership
16 Dec 2025
- Indoctrination Wars: Taking Back Control of What Your Kids Actually Learn
16 Dec 2025
- What Happened to Climate Change?
16 Dec 2025
- How Religious Freedom in America Was Founded on Privatization and Decentralization
16 Dec 2025
- President Trump’s “Mission Accomplished” Moment
16 Dec 2025
- An Economic Contagion
16 Dec 2025







Why Do Central Banks Want Higher Inflation?
Published on October 23, 2021
Stephen Flood
My articles My videosMy books
Follow on:
Why do Central Banks want higher inflation?
The debt ceiling debate in U.S. Congress and related political nonsense brings even more to light the exponential growth in US federal government debt. US government debt has doubled in the 10 years since the last major debacle Congress created over raising the debt ceiling back 2011. The debate and Congress’s unwillingness to increase the limit back in August 2011 resulted in declining equity markets. It also resulted in Standard and Poor’s downgrading U.S. debt to AA+ from AAA!
The Political Standoff
The political standoff over raising this arbitrary restriction of how much debt the US can issue has become just another political lever in the dysfunctional Congress. As Secretary Yellen points out…
Borrowing Through The Good Times & Through Bad
The chart below shows the debt ceiling limit (red bar) and the Total debt issued (yellow bar). The debt issued line runs right with the debt limit bar. Both have seen exponential growth, approximately doubling every 10 years over the last 40 years.
Going back to Keynesian principles governments should borrow and increase spending during times of economic downturns (recessions) to help stabilize their economies. Then when the economy recovers the government can pay down the debt through increased revenues and less economic stabilizers – such as unemployment insurance, turning the deficit into a surplus. However, in recent times governments have increased debt levels in recessions and proceed to continue spending more than their revenues when the economy recovers. This leads to exponentially growing debt levels. As the chart below shows higher debt to GDP levels as debt grows faster than GDP. As the chart below shows – U.S. government debt has grown from 40% of GDP to over 125% of GDP.
US Government Debt Ceiling Limit Tracks Total Debt
And here in one chart is why Central Banks want higher inflation!
After all the economist Milton Friedman did say…
It is challenging to read any newspaper, social media feed, or participate in a discussion forum without the topic of inflation coming up these days.
And the extra money printed by central banks around the world for the last 40 years, which has also grown exponentially for the last 15 years is now creating that inflation. A country’s nominal GDP growth is a combination of real growth, meaning how much an economy increases output and then inflation added on top. On the chart below of US debt as a percent of GDP; we have added brackets of the average CPI (Consumer Price Inflation) rate for each of the changes in trend. Starting with the period of 1965 to 1980 CPI averaged 6.9% but has declined to average only 1.7% since 2010. Bottom line is that all else being equal, higher inflation will help reduce the massive government debt levels.
.
We leave you with a quote on inflation:
Full story here Are you the author?Follow on:
No related photos.
Tags: central-banks,Commentary,Economics,Featured,inflation,newsletter