Anonymous wrote:I think an under-analyzed source of inflation is due to the lack of housing supply. That's allowed the prices of existing homes to rise rapidly since 2010. Anyone who owned a home in 2010 and was willing to move could sell, pay off their mortgage, pay cash for a new home, and still have proceeds left over. That meant a lot of money sloshing around the upper middle class, looking for a place to be spent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is everything so expensive now compared to just 3 years ago? Is it ever going to go back to how it was? I learn a lot on this board so I'm looking for genuine insight. Is it because the government put so much money into circulation during the pandemic and disincentivized work?
I'm always curious when people say this - who do you imagine is disincentivized to work? Are you disincentivized? Do high prices really pair up with disincentive to work, in your mind?
"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it’s because the government gave people too much money. They didn’t need money, they just needed the government to allow businesses to open so that people could work again and earn money.
No, it will never go back to how it was before. That’s why it’s so bad and why so many people were warning about it.
Can you explain why our inflation is on par with Japan and SK and lower than almost all of Western Europe and Canada?
Sure. It’s because the US has the world’s reserve currency, so the rest of the world needs dollars to do things like buy oil and so on. Therefore, part of the inflation that would ordinarily result from the US’s money printing is squelched by other countries’ buying dollars. Other countries don’t have that luxury, so they feel the full brunt of their own money printing.
In essence, the US has abused its role as the provider of the world’s reserve currency to live beyond its means for decades. Once we lose that status, the US will likely face serious economic collapse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it’s because the government gave people too much money. They didn’t need money, they just needed the government to allow businesses to open so that people could work again and earn money.
No, it will never go back to how it was before. That’s why it’s so bad and why so many people were warning about it.
Can you explain why our inflation is on par with Japan and SK and lower than almost all of Western Europe and Canada?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is everything so expensive now compared to just 3 years ago? Is it ever going to go back to how it was? I learn a lot on this board so I'm looking for genuine insight. Is it because the government put so much money into circulation during the pandemic and disincentivized work?
I'm always curious when people say this - who do you imagine is disincentivized to work? Are you disincentivized? Do high prices really pair up with disincentive to work, in your mind?
We had a long run of cheap labor performed by immigrants (immigration dried up during covid) and people who were working multiple low-paying jobs. It did not take a lot of loosening in the job market -- a huge demand for blue collar workers and construction, some people dying of covid, some people getting better jobs once WFH opened them up to a broader group -- for the people working multiple service jobs to find a single job that paid the bills. That's not "nobody wants to work anymore" it's "people can do better than they were."
OP here. I meant the government was paying out heightened unemployment benefits during the pandemic, which disincentivized work, or at least that's what I'm thinking. I didn't mean that high prices themselves disincentivize work. I was more thinking that since many lower wage earners decided to stay home and collect benefits, businesses were forced to raise wages in order to lure them back, and then were in turn forced to raise prices to cover the higher wages. Your second paragraph is some good perspective for me for the other question I had which is "Where did all the workers go?" Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it’s because the government gave people too much money. They didn’t need money, they just needed the government to allow businesses to open so that people could work again and earn money.
No, it will never go back to how it was before. That’s why it’s so bad and why so many people were warning about it.
Can you explain why our inflation is on par with Japan and SK and lower than almost all of Western Europe and Canada?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is everything so expensive now compared to just 3 years ago? Is it ever going to go back to how it was? I learn a lot on this board so I'm looking for genuine insight. Is it because the government put so much money into circulation during the pandemic and disincentivized work?
I'm always curious when people say this - who do you imagine is disincentivized to work? Are you disincentivized? Do high prices really pair up with disincentive to work, in your mind?
We had a long run of cheap labor performed by immigrants (immigration dried up during covid) and people who were working multiple low-paying jobs. It did not take a lot of loosening in the job market -- a huge demand for blue collar workers and construction, some people dying of covid, some people getting better jobs once WFH opened them up to a broader group -- for the people working multiple service jobs to find a single job that paid the bills. That's not "nobody wants to work anymore" it's "people can do better than they were."
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it’s because the government gave people too much money. They didn’t need money, they just needed the government to allow businesses to open so that people could work again and earn money.
No, it will never go back to how it was before. That’s why it’s so bad and why so many people were warning about it.
Anonymous wrote:Why is everything so expensive now compared to just 3 years ago? Is it ever going to go back to how it was? I learn a lot on this board so I'm looking for genuine insight. Is it because the government put so much money into circulation during the pandemic and disincentivized work?