Only reason I can think of is that supplier sentiment is the market is overheated and we're bound to have a recession, (see for instance onetrust laying of 10% after a record q4 in 2021, Tesla layoffs etc.). — Benkei
The idea that supply would follow demand only follows up to the point there aren't any physical limits we run into to increase supply. — ChatteringMonkey
That's why you have the price mechanism. If something becomes unobtainable, it's price goes extremely high. That creates incentives to replace the "something" with another thing. Hence high oil prices are the best thing that can happen to alternative energy resources. — ssu
Hence high oil prices are the best thing that can happen to alternative energy resources — SSU
And btw to everybody, has anybody seen anything anymore from the MMT crowd? :snicker: — ssu
The real question is that are people aware of this? Do they understand how inflation works? It's been a long time, 40 years, that the nation (meaning the US) has been on a high inflation environment. — ssu
And the way to handle this, would be higher interest rates. — ssu
What if supply just isn't as easy to increase as one thinks? You see this all the time in economics, that increase in supply is just a matter of demand incentive and volition. But in case of energy and materials there are physical processes to mine or harvest them. The idea that supply would follow demand only follows up to the point there aren't any physical limits we run into to increase supply. — ChatteringMonkey
It's decreasing though. — Benkei
Second area, we've seen shortages in components and raw materials due to covid disruptions since 2020 causing inflationary pressures during the pandemic. You would expect, especially if people would be spending more coming out of covid, that production capacity would increase. Instead we've seen three quarters of reduced shipping in consumer electronics. Why? — Benkei
QE is definitely a contributor, we've had years of asset inflation already — Benkei
Energy crisis, making basically everything more expensive globally as it is at the base of the entire economy. — ChatteringMonkey
Inflation is nothing other than an increase in the total amount of currency, thereby reducing the value of each individual unit of currency. — Tzeentch
When there is out-of-control inflation, it is because central banks are printing too much money. — Tzeentch
Because it's an easy, short-term way for governments to get more money to spend on all its hobby projects, and it makes the public carry the cost (inflation is literally a hidden tax). — Tzeentch
Besides this, the public needs to understand that there is no such thing as free money, and they need to stop demanding it from their governments through the voting process, because this is part of what incentivizes governments to make unaffordable, unrealistic promises that can only be fulfilled through printing money. — Tzeentch
I think you have in the options many important issues as options lacking in the OP. — ssu
Higher interest rates isn't quantitative tightening, Quantitative easing was double talk for money printing. — ssu
And the way to handle this, would be higher interest rates. The Paul Volcker response. — ssu
Sure, but when profits are so high it's worth asking whether or not these corporations can absorb the cost. Turns out they could -- I see no reason why they can't, or no good reason. Rather, they raise prices -- which is passing the extra cost onto others. Why should this be ignored? It's glaringly obvious this is just rampant greed. — Xtrix
Right, you're asking for systemic change then, because companies are no social organisations but specifically set up to make profit. — ChatteringMonkey
In the current set-up one would expect corporations to try and keep their profit margin, right? I mean, I certainly would be surprised if corporations all of a sudden would collectively and voluntarily decide to absorb the cost themselves. — ChatteringMonkey
And I will say, I doubt all corporations could absorb the increase in cost all by themselves. Some, the bigger ones probably could, other ones I'm not so sure. — ChatteringMonkey
Mostly what I see is record profits. For those without record profits, the usual happens: they enrich themselves to the bitter end, then file for bankruptcy while giving themselves huge bonuses. — Xtrix
Milton Friedman's theories are now obsolete. [...] Too simple, and assumes rational actors and efficient markets -- neither of which we have. — Xtrix
Even the Fed acknowledges this. — Xtrix
Everyone knew it was coming, and everyone knows it's failed government fiscal policy at the root of it. — Tzeentch
Milton Friedman's theories are now obsolete. [...] Too simple, and assumes rational actors and efficient markets -- neither of which we have.
— Xtrix
Indeed, we have markets that are to a great degree controlled by governments, which turn them neither rational nor efficient. — Tzeentch
Likely they use the same line of argument as you do, arguing that theories that put the blame on government are "now obsolete and things are more complicated". Please. — Tzeentch
Inflation is nothing other than an increase in the total amount of currency, thereby reducing the value of each individual unit of currency.
— Tzeentch
Milton Friedman's theories are now obsolete. — Xtrix
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