Regular inflation is this, but at a much slower pace. Still means if you’re rich, you HAVE to invest your money somewhere, or it loses all of its value over time. And all the investments that actually make a good amount of money over the long term involve lending your money to someone else to be able to do something productive so both parties can benefit.
If you’re not rich, you just get raises and things get cheaper over time in comparison to the national average salary which rises faster than inflation or at least at the same rate. People today can afford more things than people 20 years ago. Unless you live in the US or some other similar shithole country. If you do, it’s not inflation that’s keeping you down, it’s the absolute lack of any kind of respect for the working class. Yes, in that environment, inflation is bad for workers. That’s why you need unions and strong labour laws.
As long as there’s currency, you want inflation. You also want to not live in a country where workers don’t get raises that outpace inflation. That’s the thing you have an issue with, it’s completely separate from inflation.
Mate, I’ve probably read more books than you, but that doesn’t change the simple fact that if you’re rich and the economy is inflating, your money loses its value when stored as literal cash with no yields, whereas if there’s no inflation, it’s safe to keep it as cash and it’ll never lose value. Conversely, the working class usually is not sitting on a ton of cash that would lose value over time… And often have loans which become less impactful with inflation since salaries rise, but the loan principal does not. If your salary goes up 2x over 15 years but your mortgage stays the same, that means your life gets easier over time.
This is really basic economics, you don’t even need to take a course to figure it out.
In reality there are options other than “cash no yield” and “circulating in a way that helps anyone else”, and reality is something that basic economics famously does not account for at all. Keep reading.
Regular inflation is this, but at a much slower pace. Still means if you’re rich, you HAVE to invest your money somewhere, or it loses all of its value over time. And all the investments that actually make a good amount of money over the long term involve lending your money to someone else to be able to do something productive so both parties can benefit.
If you’re not rich, you just get raises and things get cheaper over time in comparison to the national average salary which rises faster than inflation or at least at the same rate. People today can afford more things than people 20 years ago. Unless you live in the US or some other similar shithole country. If you do, it’s not inflation that’s keeping you down, it’s the absolute lack of any kind of respect for the working class. Yes, in that environment, inflation is bad for workers. That’s why you need unions and strong labour laws.
As long as there’s currency, you want inflation. You also want to not live in a country where workers don’t get raises that outpace inflation. That’s the thing you have an issue with, it’s completely separate from inflation.
Anything’s possible when you make shit up
Ah okay, seems you haven’t ever been outside of the US and don’t know how actually functional economic models work.
There is nowhere on earth where your ideas about inflation are anything other than fucking moronic, log off and read a book
Mate, I’ve probably read more books than you, but that doesn’t change the simple fact that if you’re rich and the economy is inflating, your money loses its value when stored as literal cash with no yields, whereas if there’s no inflation, it’s safe to keep it as cash and it’ll never lose value. Conversely, the working class usually is not sitting on a ton of cash that would lose value over time… And often have loans which become less impactful with inflation since salaries rise, but the loan principal does not. If your salary goes up 2x over 15 years but your mortgage stays the same, that means your life gets easier over time.
This is really basic economics, you don’t even need to take a course to figure it out.
In reality there are options other than “cash no yield” and “circulating in a way that helps anyone else”, and reality is something that basic economics famously does not account for at all. Keep reading.
I mean if you can’t even grasp basic economics then how are you going to understand actual reality?