Should Wimpy have Purchased the Beach House Tuesday?
Why do you gladly pay Tuesday for a hamburger today? And Why You do Not
Inflation and Deflation
What They Actually Are — and What They Signal to Consumers
Most people talk about inflation and deflation as if one is bad and the other is good.
That framing is lazy. And wrong.
Inflation and deflation are not moral judgments.
They are signals.
They tell consumers when to spend, when to save, and how to think about tomorrow relative to today.
That’s it.
Nothing mystical. Nothing political. Just incentives.
Inflation Is a Signal to Spend Now
Inflation is monetary devaluation.
It occurs when the supply of money grows faster than the supply of real goods and services. When that happens, each unit of currency buys less over time.
The signal to consumers is simple:
If something will cost more tomorrow, buy it today.
If a loaf of bread will cost more tomorrow, you buy it today.
If a car will cost more next year, you buy it now.
If housing prices are rising, you don’t wait — you move capital into the asset before its purchasing power erodes further.
This isn’t psychology. It’s math.
Inflation penalizes holding cash. Money sitting idle loses purchasing power. As a result, inflation nudges consumers to:
spend rather than save,
invest rather than hoard,
borrow rather than wait.
Does it matter whether we need more cars, clothes, or houses?
From a macroeconomic standpoint, not really.
Inflation doesn’t care about need.
It responds to incentives.
When policymakers expand the money supply beyond productivity growth, they manufacture urgency. Spending accelerates. Credit expands. Economic activity continues to move forward.
This is why modern economies tolerate — and even target — moderate inflation. It keeps money moving. Now it is also possible that from time to time in the aggregate, the consumer has fewer needs as money supply grows. With fewer needs for aggregate goods and services, excess money then finds its way into paper assets.
Deflation Is a Signal to Wait
Deflation is the mirror image.
When prices fall, the purchasing power of money increases over time. The signal flips:
Why buy today if it will be cheaper tomorrow?
Under deflation, consumers are rational to delay discretionary purchases.
Why buy a car now if it will cost less next year?
Why buy a house today if prices are trending lower?
Why spend savings if money itself is becoming more valuable?
Deflation rewards patience.
As a result:
saving increases,
spending slows,
credit contracts.
This is not because consumers are afraid.
It’s because waiting is rewarded.
Deflation tells people to preserve capital, not deploy it. All else equal. Because our society is built on spending and consuming, and because inflation has pulled forward demand and borrowing overtime, deflation, and its slowing effect leads to job losses…and on I can go.
But this is an all else being equal conversation.
Savings and Credit Follow the Signal
These signals show up clearly in behavior:
Inflation environments
Savings rates fall
Consumption rises
Credit expands
Debt becomes more attractive because inflation erodes its real cost
Deflation environments
Savings rates rise
Consumption slows
Credit contracts
Debt becomes more expensive in real terms
Again, no morality here. Just incentives responding to price movement.
What If Prices Never Moved?
Now ask the real question.
What if prices stayed flat for years or decades?
No inflation.
No deflation.
In that world, consumers would buy what they need — no more, no less.
There would be no urgency to spend early and no reward for waiting. Capital allocation would be driven purely by preference, utility, and productivity.
That world would be stable.
It would also be slower.
Modern economies are built on movement, not stasis. Inflation and deflation are tools — blunt ones — that influence behavior to keep the system dynamic. Make no mistake about it, societies, governments and central banking regulators have every incentive in the world to create inflation and none to create deflation.
Why Neither Is Good Nor Bad
Inflation isn’t evil.
Deflation isn’t virtuous.
They are simply price signals about time.
Inflation says: Tomorrow is more expensive.
Deflation says: Tomorrow is cheaper.
Problems arise not from the existence of these signals, but from:
their speed,
their magnitude,
and whether wages and productivity adjust alongside them.
Understanding this reframes the entire conversation.
Inflation and deflation don’t tell you what to think.
They tell you when to act.
Closing Thought
Money is not wealth.
It is a claim on future goods.
Inflation weakens that claim over time, encouraging action.
Deflation strengthens it, encouraging restraint.
That’s the whole story.
Everything else is noise.
Wait a minute!!!!
Epilogue - What I really Think!
Sandcastles, Signals, and the Lie We Tell Ourselves
So what the hell does inflation, deflation, and monetary signaling have to do with building sandcastles at the beach or buying a vacation home for your family?
Everything.
Because at its core, this was never an economics paper.
It was a paper about time.
Inflation is a signal that says tomorrow costs more.
Deflation is a signal that says tomorrow costs less.
But life doesn’t operate on price indices.
It operates on windows.
There is a window where your kids still want to build sandcastles with you.
There is a window where they still reach for your hand without irony.
There is a window where “someday” actually exists.
There is a window where you “kids” are now your grandkids and you move a little slower.
There is a window when you will reach for a hand and maybe find it just a memory.
There is a window where someday was yesterday.
People obsess over whether it’s a “good time” to buy a vacation home.
They ask about rates, cycles, appreciation, taxes, and timing.
Those are real questions. They matter a bit.
There are realtors that are trying to sell you the investment dream, the bonus depreciation trick idea and then there are those that have lived a bit, gathered some scars along the way and realize what they are trying to do is to help others live with life scars more intentionally and more graciously with more joy.
I wonder about this when I say it. Do people really care that much or will they just work with anyone that can spin a lockbox code?
The question is this:
What signal are you responding to — money, or life?
Inflation teaches people to act before value erodes.
Life should do the same thing — only quietly, without a CPI report.
Time will be more expensive tomorrow. There will be less time tomorrow and more demand for it as we age.
And unlike currency, you cannot print more of it.
So if you’re asking what inflation and deflation have to do with vacation homes, sandcastles, and family —
Oh yes…….actually……..Nothing at all.
Sources & Citations
Investopedia – Inflation vs. Deflation: What’s the Difference?
https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/111414/what-difference-between-inflation-and-deflation.aspInvestopedia – How Inflation Affects Your Cash Savings
https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/090715/how-inflation-affects-your-cash-savings.aspBritannica – Inflation vs. Deflation
https://www.britannica.com/money/inflation-vs-deflationEuropean Central Bank / Household Expectation Studies – Inflation Expectations and Consumer Spending
https://hj.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1866922/FULLTEXT01.pdfFederal Reserve Bank Research – Deflation, Expectations, and Consumption
https://www.sjsu.edu/people/ali.reza/docs/AMR%20paper%20Defln_Jun.pdfResearchGate – The Dynamics of Deflation in a Growing Economy
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/310834733_The_dynamics_of_deflation_in_a_growing_economyLyn Alden – Prices as Signals
https://www.lynalden.com/price-signals/

