The English word 'deflation' was formed in the late nineteenth century by combining the Latin prefix 'dē-' (down, away from, reversal) with 'inflation.' The word follows the pattern of Latin 'dēflāre' (to blow away, to blow down), though 'deflation' itself is a modern English coinage rather than a direct Latin inheritance. The physical sense — the act of releasing air from something inflated — appeared around 1891. The economic sense — a general decline in prices and the purchasing power of money increasing — followed in the early twentieth century, gaining particular currency during and after World War I.
The prefix 'dē-' in Latin could mean down (as in 'descend'), away from (as in 'depart'), reversal (as in 'decompose'), or removal (as in 'dethrone'). In 'deflation,' all these senses converge: prices come down, value moves away from goods, the inflationary process is reversed, and purchasing power is removed from producers and transferred to consumers. The rich semantics of the prefix help explain why 'deflation' feels more precise and evocative than a simpler term like 'price decrease' would.
Economic deflation is often misunderstood as the simple opposite of inflation — and therefore, by intuition, a good thing. If rising prices are bad, falling prices should be good. But the economic consensus, shaped particularly by the experience of the Great Depression (1929-1939) and Japan's Lost Decades (1990s-2010s), is that sustained deflation can be more economically destructive than moderate inflation. The mechanism is a deflationary spiral: falling prices cause consumers to delay purchases, reduced demand
The Great Depression was the defining deflationary event of the twentieth century. Between 1929 and 1933, the U.S. price level fell by approximately 25 percent. Wages fell, unemployment soared to 25 percent, and the real burden of debt — mortgages, business loans, government bonds — increased crushingly. The economist Irving Fisher described
Japan's experience from the 1990s onward provided a modern case study. After the collapse of its asset price bubble in 1991, Japan entered a prolonged period of deflation and stagnation that proved extraordinarily difficult to reverse. Despite near-zero interest rates and massive government spending, prices continued to fall or stagnate for decades. The term 'Japanification' entered economic vocabulary
The vocabulary of deflation includes several related terms that economists distinguish carefully. 'Disinflation' describes a decrease in the rate of inflation — prices still rising, but more slowly. This is generally considered healthy and desirable, unlike deflation. 'Reflation' describes deliberate policy actions (typically monetary expansion) aimed at reversing deflation or stimulating a stagnant economy
The physical metaphor embedded in 'deflation' is powerful and accessible. A deflating balloon loses air, loses shape, loses its buoyancy. A deflating economy loses money circulation, loses dynamism, loses its capacity to support activity. The metaphor extends naturally: just as a partially deflated balloon is limp and dysfunctional, a partially deflated economy is sluggish and unresponsive. And just as reinflating a balloon requires external air (someone has to blow into it), reflating an economy requires external stimulus (a central bank has to inject money).
Modern central banks treat the prevention of deflation as one of their core mandates. The Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and the Bank of Japan all target low, stable, positive inflation — typically around 2 percent annually — precisely to maintain a buffer against deflation. The 2 percent target exists not because 2 percent inflation is inherently optimal, but because it provides a margin of safety: if a shock hits the economy and inflation drops, there is room for it to fall without crossing into deflationary territory. The word 'deflation' thus carries