The kind of inflation outbreak that might prove bitcoinâs power as a hedge asset isnât coming in the near term, according to some economists.Â
âRight now, low interest rates tell us thereâs no evidence that weâre borrowing too much money,â Stanford economist Erik Brynjolfsson said. âSeparately, but related, inflation is also very low. The [Federal Reserve] has set a target of about 2% for inflation, and itâs consistently been missing that target on the low side. We donât see any evidence that inflation is taking off.âÂ
In fact, future economic growth could be in danger if the U.S. doesnât embrace new stimulus, former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers told CoinDesk. He said the potential for inflation isnât as concerning as the potential for economic growth coming to a halt.Â
âI think the greater risks are still on the side of secular stagnation and low interest rates,â Summers said. âThere may be some temporary sense of heat in the economy because of all the stimulus thatâs been provided in the last year.â
Bitcoiners are closely watching inflation indicators such as the U.S. Treasury yield curve steepening in early January, which shows that investors expect economic growth that will require the Federal Reserve to raise rates to control inflation. The five-year breakeven rate, which represents how the bond market foresees long-term inflation, has been above 2% since the beginning of the year.
These indicators point to future rising inflation, but âweâre not seeing it yet,â Brynjolfsson said.
âItâs possible, even likely, that government policy over the coming year will change that and start bringing interest rates back up,â Brynjolfsson said. âThe Fed may monetize some of that [debt] by printing money.âÂ
Right now, the markets are screaming for more debt.
âSupply and demand dictate that when there are more savers than borrowers, then [real] interest rates are going to fall to zero or even negative,â Brynjolfsson said, commenting on a discussion paper by Summers and Harvard economist Jason Furman. âThe markets are willing to buy government assets and if the government were to issue more debt it would be snapped up very quickly.â
Savings have increased significantly during the pandemic while the supply of investment capital has decreased, Summers said. As a result, real interest rates on servicing government debt are negative and likely to remain that way in the near term, which means the government would make money off of borrowing more. (The real interest rate is the interest rate when inflation is taken into account.)
With little room for central banks to lower rates and a clear runway to borrow more, many advanced economies are turning to fiscal policy to stave off the continuing crisis.
âIf you look around the world, thereâs a shortage of demand in lots of large advanced-economy countries ⦠[that] began this crisis at deeply negative interest rates and have had little policy space with interest rates,â U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said during an event hosted by Princeton University last Thursday. âThat all is going to hang around for a while.â
When vaccines create a world that can spend freely again, that may still not produce the high inflation that bitcoiners would be looking for as an affirmation of BTCâs âinflation hedgeâ thesis.
âAs the pandemic recedes and we see a potentially strong wave of spending as people return to their normal lives and begin consuming various services, there could be quite exuberant spending and we could see some upward pressure on prices,â Powell said. âThe real question is how large is that effect going to be and will it be persistent? Because clearly a one-time increase in prices that isnât very large is very unlikely to produce persistently high inflation.â Â
In the near term, bitcoin will still profit from a low interest rate environment even if inflation doesnât skyrocket. The less money investors can make on bond yields, the more money they might instead put into potentially higher-returning assets like bitcoin, Summers said.
âItâs a fairly straightforward argument,â Summers said. âWhen the amount you can earn on bonds goes down, people put less of their money into bonds and more of their money into other assets, and that increases the value of those assets.â
Brynjolfsson added: âThe demand for assets like U.S. Treasurys, gold and bitcoin has dramatically exceeded the supply, driving up prices. Specifically, in the case of Treasurys the markets are saying that they would like the government to borrow more, that there arenât enough secure assets for what people want to do.â