Jimbob
Registered
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2018
- Messages
- 180
- Likes
- 185
The following inflation.When? In October?
The following inflation.When? In October?
this is a classic case of a simple answer to a complicated problem that is wrong.Inflation is caused by printing money. Period. Point blank. End of sentence.
It has nothing to do with the relative value of that currency vs other currencies.
So long as the government continues to rein in the money supply, inflation will be controlled.
Which countries didn't print money? Big inflation started all around the world around mid of 2022 largely due to a bunch of free money that was given to people/businesses during lockdowns.during and after Covid, inflation rose in most places due to supply chain issues, even and especially in countries that did not print money.
Inflation is caused by printing money. Period. Point blank. End of sentence.
It has nothing to do with the relative value of that currency vs other currencies.
So long as the government continues to rein in the money supply, inflation will be controlled.
I think the most pertinent question is what is your "real" inflation? Meaning what is the cost per unit of the items you regularly consume in the currency you earn in?So what is the realistic value of the peso / dollar exchange? 2,000 to the dollar?
You're just wrong in every detail. To drop inflation from over 200% to 20% in a year and a half is quite a feat. There is still to much money in the economy. To lower it faster would have required actually destroying currency in circulation.this is a classic case of a simple answer to a complicated problem that is wrong.
during and after Covid, inflation rose in most places due to supply chain issues, even and especially in countries that did not print money.
Historically, many other things have caused inflation, in many countries, including Argentina.
The "Printing Money" crowd completey discounts human beings and their psychlogy, tariffs, duties, taxes, global economies, the price of oil, wars, famines, climate change, and a hundred other agents.
But its an easy answer.
However, Milei has not "controlled" inflation. He has caused enormous amounts of it, and continues to.
Correct. That is the textbook definition of inflation.Inflation is caused by printing money. Period. Point blank. End of sentence.
It has nothing to do with the relative value of that currency vs other currencies.
So long as the government continues to rein in the money supply, inflation will be controlled.
Inflation is caused by printing money. Period. Point blank. End of sentence.
It has nothing to do with the relative value of that currency vs other currencies.
So long as the government continues to rein in the money supply, inflation will be controlled.
Where is Milton Friedman when we need him?A glance at Wikipedia is all that's needed to debunk the would-be experts: "In economics, inflation is an increase in the average price of goods and services in terms of money". That's it, no mention of printing money. Things get more expensive, we see inflation.
If you read a bit deeper, classical economics identifies "three separate factors that cause a rise or fall in the price of goods: a change in the value or production costs of the good, a change in the price of money which then was usually a fluctuation in the commodity price of the metallic content in the currency, and currency depreciation resulting from an increased supply of currency relative to the quantity of redeemable metal backing the currency". The second factor is presumably no longer relevant, only the third factor implies printing money. The first factor is very relevant, particularly if you consider the US Dollar as a base against which to compare local production costs.
And no, going from 200% annualized inflation to 35% (not 20%) does not count as "quite a feat" when Milei was responsible for a large part of the 200% by devaluing the Peso by 54% in December 2023.
More understanding and less didacticism would be useful, perhaps?