"In recent years, monetary and fiscal stimuli across the world have led to the assumption that serious inflation, if not hyperinflation, is on its way. I believe chronic deflation is more likely."
So begins AdvisorOne contributor and perma-bear A. Gary Shilling in a piece for Bloomberg Thursday, one that flies in the face of conventional inflation wisdom.
"The expectation of rising prices is reasonable," Shilling concedes. "Most people have only experienced inflation. The last meaningful episode of deflation was in the 1930s. That's also the last time the U.S. was truly at peace. Deflation is a peacetime phenomenon."
Yet he argues that even though deflation has been forestalled in the past decade, disinflation—declining rates of inflation—has prevailed since the early 1980s. Indeed, the consumer price index fell in November and December and was unchanged in January, he writes. For February, the cost of living in the U.S. was up 0.7%, the first increase in four months and the biggest since June 2009. Nonetheless, expectations for inflation over the next 10 years are for a continued drop.
So what are some of the factors he says will contribute to deflation?