There may be specific examples (HDTV) where waiting means your money buys more, but overall the more you wait the less your money is worth in the economy due to inflation. Technology making products cheaper is not an example of deflation. Inflation and deflation pertain only to currency not products.
If however you hold your currency and everyday its worth more, besides the bare essentials there is barely an incentive to spend it. Also there is no guarantee that the HDTV will become cheaper, however it is guaranteed that a deflationary currency will gain value the more you hold on to it.
Inflation and deflation pertain only to currency not products.
Inflation is when your currency buys you less stuff tomorrow than today. Deflation is when it buys you more. Falling prices due to efficiency gains caused some deflation during the industrial revolution, and technology making products cheaper is definitely a kind of deflation. From Wikipedia:
Growth deflation: an enduring decrease in the real cost of
goods and services as the result of technological progress,
accompanied by competitive price cuts, resulting in an
increase in aggregate demand. A structural deflation existed
from 1870s until the cycle upswing that started in 1895. The
deflation was caused by the decrease in the production and
distribution costs of goods. It resulted in competitive price
cuts when markets were oversupplied. The mild inflation after
1895 was attributed to the increase in gold supply that had
been occurring for decades.
If however you hold your currency and everyday its worth more, besides the bare essentials there is barely an incentive to spend it. Also there is no guarantee that the HDTV will become cheaper, however it is guaranteed that a deflationary currency will gain value the more you hold on to it.