BlutoSays wrote:Great news - we've hit 8.5 percent annual inflation. Such a proud moment.
I just received a certified letter from the U.S. government stating my chocolate rations have been raised from 300 grams to 200 grams per month. All hail Oceania!
His 2nd part is obvious snark, to be ignored.
Lurkers, Bluto can't understand that rising prices are an intended result of his beloved free market's response to shortages. We are seeing clear evidence of shortages every time we go food shopping. There are empty shelves.
. . . The free market is supposed to raise prices to efficiently distribute the reduce amount of goods to those who have the most money, and not let the poor buy them before the well off can buy them. Bluto is saying indirectly that this effect is not why prices are rising. Instead, prices are rising because there is more money in the economy because of all the deficit spending by Biden [note that he ignores the fact that more of the deficit spending was authorized while Trump was in office then when Biden has been in office.
. . . Bluto is also ignore the fact that the US economy is now controlled by corps that have effective monopolies and can increase their prices more than necessary to keep the poor from buying the goods before the rich can. He is also ignoring the related effect the OPEC is having on all prices when it increases oil prices or doesn't increase production to replace Russian oil in the international market.
. . . Bluto is also ignoring the normal effect of a war like the one between Ukraine and Russia.
He just wants us to agree with his internet sources that ALL of the inflation is being caused by too much money being in the economy.
Lurkers I already proved this is false. I posted here a graph based on data from the IMF [a conservative source] that graphed many nations' covid spending vs its inflation. The graph showed that the more the nation spent the very slightly less its inflation was. The 4 nations that had the highest inflation were in the bottom third of covid spenders, AND there was
NO nation that had high covid spending and high inflation, not one. The 2 nations with the highest covid spending were near the median amount of inflation. The rest of the nations were in a tight cluster stretched out going slightly down from left to right. This cluster is 5 times longer right/left than it is high [up/down].
. . . The only possible conclusion to draw from this is not that high covid spending cause lower inflation. Instead, the proper conclusion to draw is that the large covid spending in some nations did NOT cause them to have higher inflation. That is, there was no relationship between these 2 things, NONE. The scatter was caused by other things, like how exposed to shortages was the nation and how many monopolies are there in its economy.
BTW Note --- I had to use a work around to post a link for you to easily click on it to see the graph. I was asked to delete my work around after 10 days and I did, so the link will not work now.
. . . The graph was created by Prof. Bill Mitchell [an MMTer] using IMF data.
I [Bill Mitchell] have also compiled a database using data from the IMF – Fiscal Monitor Database of Country Fiscal Measures in Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic (last updated October 2021) and – Consumer Price Index (CPI) – data from their Macroeconomic and Financial Data repository.
You can see the graph here. Just scroll down some. It is easy to see.
Link =>
http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=49216.