A phase transition in monetary function explains expansion without inflation
TLDR
Monetary function is phase-dependent; new money can occupy distinct compartments, explaining why large expansions don't always cause inflation.
Key contributions
- Proposes monetary function is phase-dependent, with new money occupying distinct functional compartments.
- Introduces phi (reserve-share fraction of monetary base) as a measurable order parameter.
- Identifies a phase transition in Japan (post-2013) from cash-dominated to reserve-dominated regime.
- Shows unexpected base expansions are absorbed as reserves, significantly attenuating CPI inflation.
Why it matters
This paper challenges scalar views of "money supply" and inflation. It provides a novel framework to understand why large monetary expansions might not lead to consumer-price inflation, offering a new perspective for policymakers.
Original Abstract
Large monetary expansions do not necessarily generate consumer-price inflation, challenging scalar views of "money supply." Here we propose that monetary function is phase-dependent: newly issued base money can occupy distinct functional compartments with different coupling to prices. Starting from an accounting framework that separates reproduction, consumption, and reservation, we operationalize a measurable order parameter, phi=RB/MB, the reserve-share fraction of the monetary base. Using Japan's monthly record (1971-2026), we identify a compositional phase transition after 2013 from a cash-dominated to a reserve-dominated regime, quantitatively captured by a Landau-type order-parameter transition. Phase-conditional local projections using unexpected (residual) base-growth shocks show that, in Japan, unexpected base expansions are absorbed primarily as reserve balances-phi rises significantly-rather than entering the consumption-goods transaction sector; consequently, the core CPI inflation response is strongly attenuated and can even reverse sign. This demonstrates that increases in monetary supply do not necessarily cause inflation: the key is the "phase" in which incremental money accumulates (reservoir versus circulation). We further define function-specific efficiencies for reservation absorption and CPI transmission and provide an operational distinction between circulation-driven and reservation-dominant inflation regimes.
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