It's Money, Not Spending, that Causes Inflation

You don’t have to read or listen for long these days before you hear a politician, pundit, or politically-inclined person say: “Government spending causes inflation.”

Don’t get us wrong…anyone who wants to cut the size and scope of government is a friend of ours. Government is WAY too big. It slowed the growth rate of the economy, hurt living standards, and made people fight over fixed slices of the pie rather than working to grow the pie. But, government spending, itself, doesn’t cause inflation.

Just think about it. If government taxes (or borrows) $1,000 from Peter and gives that $1,000 to Pauline…Peter doesn’t have it, but Pauline does. Is there any more money in the economy? Absolutely not.

The only thing that can increase inflation – in fact, the definition of inflation – is excess money creation. Inflation is a decline in the purchasing power of a currency caused by central banks that inject more money into an economy than an economy really needs. Inflation isn’t an increase in the prices of goods and services, it’s a decline in the value of money. And government spending, all by itself, does not increase the money supply.

And if you don’t believe us, how about Milton Friedman? He wrote “Fiscal policy is extremely important in determining what fraction of total national income is spent by government and who bears the burden of that expenditure. By itself, it is not important for inflation.”

Some people wrongly assume that government borrowing creates money. But think about it. Who does the government borrow from? China, Japan, retirees, and banks all buy Treasury bonds. They buy them with dollars that they earned exporting to the US, working for incomes, or taking in deposits.