How can Schiff who's been right about so many things, be so unable to comprehend bitcoin?
He is wrong about a lot of things too. For example when the first QE was announced he kept saying that interests will surge.
He was wrong about hyperinflation too. And when inflation didn't come he said that he was right but nobody can see it because CPI number is false.
What the right answer here is really depends upon how one defines inflation. Most people think of price inflation, particularly at the supermarket. True inflation is the expansion of the monetary supply relative to the user base. We have undoubtedly had that, but the CPI does not now, and long has not, considered the costs of food stocks or energy into it's caluculations; however it does (sort of) include a calculated value of housing. So while the actual pump costs of a gallon of gasoline has risen by more than 50% in the past 6 years, the real estate market is still way below the peak value in 2007. The real estate market crash "destroyed" a lot of credit availability (i.e. money supply for many consumers) and has overwelmed the inflationary policies of the US Federal Reserve in the meantime. So, in reality, the CPI number published by the government fails to represent the amount of monetary expansion during that time. This cannot continue forever, however, and eventually we will get our inflationary period. I still doubt it would be "hyperinflationary" because hyperinflationary destruction of a currency is a vicious cycle of the loss of public trust in a currency, almost always triggered by a political event (war, invasion, revolt, revolution, etc.) and not a fiscal policy event.
It seems Austrian economists nowadays don't understand money multiplier and don't have ever heard about what happened in Japan this last 20 years.
Austrian economists understand the money multiplyer theories just fine, they are just bullshit. The government like to claim this stuff to justify it's own entitilement programs, but consider this...
If the "money multiplyer" of food stamp program funds really was $1.73 of economic "benefit" (defined how, exactly? It's never said) for every $1 of aid,
and that multiplier is both consitant across time and consistant across a range of largesss (two things left up to the public to
assume although this is never actually stated), then it would be easy to permantly avoid recessions by simply dialing up or down the monthly food stamp benefits in order to match the largess to the target level of economic growth. It would be an immoral action to do anything else. The fact that this is not happening, and never really has (it has been tried, so we know it doesn't really work) is proof enough that multiplyer theory is false. All of the multiplyers presented in the media are the calculated results of
past events, not current economic conditions. If past events really provided significant insight to future economic trends, then "ideal" stock prices would be easy enough to caluculate for just about everyone, and any significant diversion from that expectation would be newsworthy, offering a huge profit opprotunity for the quick.