Xequecal:
1. Housing is a factor in inflation. A housing bubble will help drive inflation, as housing is one of the significant and important costs in everybody's life.
2. I already stated (in the segment you've chosen to quote me, no less) that wages are not pacing inflation.
3. Well, yes. Bubble, skewed supply/demand, massive unemployment and foreclosures... The real estate market isn't in a position right now to really be measuring/basing trends off of. It's far from stabilized.
Okay, let's use the Big Mac index, as it's something I can readily find some information on, and is easy to process data for since it's a single item. Granted, it's a single item, so it's only one series of data points and thus only loosely representative of the economy as a whole, but it's what I've got that doesn't involve a bunch of basket manipulation (that is, essentially, at the heart of the argument in the first place).
1997, the
Chicago Sun Times reports the price of a Big Mac as $2 in an article about the introduction of Extra Value Meals at McDonald's.
2008,
Wikipedia quotes the price of a Big Mac as 3.57.
That's a 78% increase in price over 11 years, and conveniently before any of this economic meltdown brouhaha. So, 1.78^(1/11) = 5.4% annual inflation. I consider that "high", especially when you compare it to what the 2-3% figure government has been claiming to have held inflation at between 1991 and 2007.
Also, I don't typically run around touting double digit inflation. The numbers I quote are usually more on the order of 8%, for the record.