Every time we have a recession, or the depression, the inflation rate skyrocketed through the roof. The inflation rate is so high because the government spends too much.
I don't mean to go offtopic, but that's not how it works. If there's a recession or a depression, there's a shortage of money in circulation for one reason or another (Stock market crash, housing crisis, mass migration of money out of the country, whatever), and inflation is the means to try to preserve the value of money when there's a shortage. A government ideally should have money saved away for such occasions, so that the new influx of money can help generate circulation of capital. Whenever there's a recession or a depression then, the government dips into its money reserves and infuses the market to generate growth, by public programs, purchases from private companies, or other means. After all, it is the government that ideally should regulate and evaluate its own currency.
Government spends money in reaction to shortage, it's not the cause of it. FDR's New Deal of the 1930s to fix the Great Depression is an example of this kind of recovery. Reagan's push for more corporatization and the private sector was a factor of 1980s economic expansion. Dubya's 2008 bailout prevented banks from channeling money overseas (avoiding the fate that fell upon Argentina in 2004) to keep money within US circulation, and Obama's stimulus package helped increase consumer spending and to support public workers like firefighters and police officers so that the economy isn't in freefall. In each of those cases, regardless of party affiliation, the government spent a LOT of money in order to stabilize the economy, or at least to curb the depletion of capital.
Think of it like a swimming pool. Water can't circulate if there's not enough in there. But if you pour in enough water, not only will there be enough to use, but there'll be enough to keep the filter pipes flowing, ensuring quality. The main problem to worry about then is injecting the system with too *much* water, which is why the government keeps money in reserve rather than flooding the market with it.
With that said, the only thing I can ever see any sort of regulation when the holodeck is around is the implementation of safety measures (the protection of life, as well as liberty and happiness). Beyond that, depending on what state or city you live in, these days the government rarely cracks down on places like bathhouses or sex shops or pornography or honeymoon suites.