Inflation is a measure of the rate of increase of the price of a basket of selected goods and services.
For a primer on inflation, check out my thread below.
Deflation is the decline in the price level of a basket of selected goods and services. It can be thought of as negative inflation.
It is typically expressed as a negative % and serves as an indicator of the increase in purchasing power of currency.
While typically discussed on an economy-wide basis, we may see deflation in certain areas of the economy and inflation in others.
This may occur from a contraction in money supply or credit (i.e. people are saving or banks aren't lending).
It may also occur from accelerated tech/productivity progression.
Imagine the same primitive island society from our Inflation 101 example.
On this island, they use rare seashells as currency. There are only 1,000 seashells on the island.
The prices of goods are stable.
In the aftermath, the islanders find that 500 of the rare seashells (1/2 of them) have washed away.
There are now only 500 units of the currency, but the same amount of goods.
What happens?
Now there is too little money chasing the same amount of goods, so sellers of the goods lower their prices. Simple supply and demand.
This is deflation in action.
The original 1,000 seashells would not have been able to keep up with the increase in goods.
(h/t @JeffBooth for @priceoftomorrow)
Savers, who had stored seashells for later use, benefit as each stored seashell has become more valuable in its ability to purchase goods.
Asset Holders may see the value of their assets decline.
Why?
Deflation may incentivize saving over spending. If you believe your money will be worth more in purchasing power terms later, you are more likely to save it.
In their minds, if deflation incentivizes saving, deflation is bad.
So they seek the "Goldilocks solution" - with a level of inflation that is just right.
Given the current balance between the pandemic shock and the rapid increase in money printing, these debates have taken center stage.
It is important for everyone to understand the basics.
I plan to continue to build upon this foundation in future threads.
That was Deflation 101! I hope you found it useful.