That would be a nice problem to have, to be frank. As a consensus among economists, our biggest concern here is that, net net, this will be a disinflationary occurrence, that the economy will recover slowly enough that there's persistent downward pressure on inflation. That's why I said it's so important. If we didn't do this, there would be a significant disinflationary force acting on the economy.
If we actually fell into the territory where we had negative inflation for a persistent period of time, this is the part that economists really want to avoid most of all. That's because when you have existing debt and prices are falling, in real terms the debt is rising and your ability to service it is actually falling through time. That is the kind of interaction that gives you prolonged recessions or perhaps even.... That's how the Great Depression unfolded.
Avoiding that means being really aggressive with the kinds of policies that we're talking about today. I was only half-kidding when I said that if inflation pressures did start to emerge, it would be a nice problem to have, because that is the one that we best know how to deal with. You'd be right, but as those conditions evolved, you'd be saying it's time for all this to start going back to normal, and ideally back it would go to normal. Yes, interest rates would rise normally in that situation and cool things off to a point where we have the perfect soft landing. That's the dream scenario.