πŸ“• Node [[inflation]]
πŸ“„ inflation.md by @neil οΈπŸ”— ✍️

inflation

The general increase of the prices of goods and services.

Stuff costs more; your money doesn’t go as far as it did. The cost of living goes up.

Attitudes towards inflation have long been seen as a dividing line between left and right. Most Keynesians saw rising prices as a small price to pay for an otherwise healthy economy, given that tackling inflation tended to require higher interest rates, which curtail investment, output, and employment over the short term

– [[Tribune Winter 2022]]

[[Neoliberals]], on the other hand, saw inflation as public enemy number one. First, rising prices eroded the real value of assetsΒ β€” if consumer prices are rising while house prices are stagnant, your house is worth less in real terms. Second, keeping interest rates low reduces returns from lendingΒ β€” important for profits in the finance sectorΒ β€” and low unemployment made it harder to discipline labour

– [[Tribune Winter 2022]]

The question we should therefore be asking is not β€˜is inflation bad?’ The questions we should be asking are β€˜which prices are rising, why are they rising, and who is bearing most of the impact

– [[Tribune Winter 2022]]

This can happen for a number of reasons: a run on a country’s currency that increases prices of imported goods; a large stimulus to the economy when the system is already at or near full capacity; a strongly unionised labour force exercising its bargaining power; a sudden shortage of labour (following Brexit, for example) or international cost-push factors outside an individual country’s direct control.

– Economics made simple: 10 experts on where the cost of living crisis came fro…

The French, for example, have forced their energy companies to keep electricity price increases to households to no more than 4% this year, which has kept inflation lower in France than in other European countries.

– Economics made simple: 10 experts on where the cost of living crisis came fro…

The problem now is that demand-pull inflation, which we experienced when Covid restrictions were lifted and the economy surged, has turned into cost-push inflation, determined not by wage growth but by the war in Ukraine, which has sent energy and food prices soaring.

– Economics made simple: 10 experts on where the cost of living crisis came fro…

πŸ“„ inflation.md by @maya

I’m really suspicious of all discussions of inflation. The ambiguities [[matt stoller]] talks about here probably shape that.

πŸ“„ inflation.md by @ryan

inflation

πŸ“„ Inflation.md by @agora@botsin.space

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