20.57% : Singapore M3 slows a tad
Posted by lowem,
Fri Oct 26 13:28:00 UTC 2007
mas.gov.sg -> mas.gov.sg (pdf) :
This could have been titled : "Do you hear anything?" You could almost hear the screeching of brakes as the Singapore M3 money supply growth rate slowed down, year-on-year, from over 23% to a 20.57% rate as presented in the Sep 2007 edition of the MAS Monthly Statistical Bulletin, for the month of Aug 2007.
The other sounds you hear might include the crash back on 17 Aug 2007, fading into the distance, accompanied by hushed whispers from some property agents about a softening housing market.
Poetic license aside, here's the M3 data (click here if you don't see the table in the IFrame below) :
Singapore's 2007 Q3 GDP growth was 9.4%, and if we take the two figures we do have for Q3 and divide by that, we find that M3 growth is still outpacing GDP growth by a factor of some 2.3x. Which is still inflationary, according to me (and those who follow Austrian economics).
And that is not exactly helped along by high wheat prices, which have doubled in the past year to over US$9 per bushel, driving up the cost of flour, which, you know, is made from wheat, and therefore also driving up the cost of bread, which, you know, is made from flour. A loaf of my favourite Gardenia high-fibre white bread has gone up from $1.70 to $1.80, then $1.90, $1.95 and now it is $2.00. I fully expect it to hit $3.00, then $4.00 some time later on, and patiently await the arrival of the $10 loaf of bread.
While we are talking about inflation, have you noticed the price of crude oil recently? I woke up early in the morning to a new record high in NYMEX crude oil prices - US$90.60 per barrel. Which was promptly broken a few minutes later, and the record (at the time of writing) is now $91.10 $91.19 $91.29 $91.40 (shucks, it keeps hitting new record highs as I am writing this). A hint to motorists reeling from the recent 5 cent petrol price hike (from $1.910 to $1.960 for RON98 and from $1.836 to $1.886 for RON95) : you ain't seen nothing yet. I patiently await $100 oil. And then $150. And then $200.
A friend once asked me, so how do we stop all this inflation? I promptly replied : they have to stop printing money. He said that's not possible. I replied, yes, unfortunately, you are right.
See also :
1. 23.62% : Singapore M3 money supply growth (11 Sep 2007)
2. Singapore STI versus M3 money supply
3. 23% : Singapore M3 money supply growth rate
4. 22.34% : Singapore M3 money supply growth (Jun 2007 update)



