Dr. Mintz, I want to change our focus for a second to some of the broader economic implications of the drastic measures we are currently taking.
I was looking back at some of the history of countries that have experienced inflation and hyperinflation. If you go back to after World War I, the Weimar Republic suffered a hyperinflation rate of 3.25 times 106 per cent per month. In other words, after the stimulus spending that went on after World War I, prices doubled every two days. It's a famous incident in history of hyperinflation.
Given the fact that the world is now, in an unprecedented way, throwing trillions of dollars of new spending at this through debt and monetary easing and by increasing the money supply, I am curious to know your economic opinion on where we will be when it comes to not only inflation but the utilization of interest rates to quell that inflation after we come out of all this.