(no title)
throwaway5Am1k | 2 years ago
It absolutely does. If people have "extra" money (e.g. COVID payments), they can bid higher on limited resources (i.e. inflation). If there's more employed (i.e. government jobs), that's again, more people with more money, for limited resources (i.e. inflation).
While I'm sure companies are taking advantage of the fact, they must also realise that there's more demand for their limited resources, which causes them to raise prices.
These companies are making "record profits", but you also need to consider that the purchasing power of your dollar is being debased, and these companies are (at least partially) trying to keep up with inflation.
shagie|2 years ago
How is that amount still causing inflation?
You say "While I'm sure companies are taking advantage of the fact" - that's a present continuous tense... I used the past tense for when I last got a stimulus check.
So why present continuous? Why not say "while I'm sure companies took advantage of the fact?"
Lets try another take on it...
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/21/business/procter-gamble-3...
> Another round of price increases on household products like Gillette razors, Dawn dish soap and Swiffer dusters bolstered Procter & Gamble’s bottom line last quarter, the company said on Friday, a sign that stubborn inflation may linger as companies defend their profit margins.
> Procter & Gamble, a consumer goods bellwether, said its profit grew in the first three months of the year after it raised prices 10 percent across its brands. That rise was the company’s second consecutive quarter of double-digit increases. Its profit margin expanded in the quarter, with price increases more than offsetting the rise in what it paid for raw materials.
> Revenue rose 4 percent last quarter from a year earlier, even as sales volumes — the number of rolls of Charmin toilet paper and boxes of Tide detergent — fell 3 percent as consumers traded down to less expensive alternatives or bought less. In other words, Procter & Gamble made more money even though it sold fewer products. Sales volumes at the company have declined in the past four quarters.
So, can you explain why my $2000 two years ago is still contributing to the increase of dish soap today, and why the prices are going up, and why the company is making even more?
throwaway5Am1k|2 years ago
I can't tell if this is a disingenuous question. Your $2200 is a very, very small amount of the total pie. Have a look at how the money supply changed during the pandemic. At the very start of the pandemic, when money was being printed there were experts saying "we will see inflation in the next 2 years", that's what we're seeing now.
Here's a Deloitte paper published in 2020 (see page 9: https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/insights/us/articles/6...)
>According to Friedman’s view, the United States will experience very significant inflation in 2022
autoexec|2 years ago
What little "extra" money made it into the hands of regular Americans isn't and never was the problem and while most people here are well insulated from the hardships, Americans are seeing their quality of life decline and are having to struggle in ways they never had to before. The American people are not sitting on huge piles of free government money while bitching about the price of eggs. The middle class is struggling (and sliding into poverty) and poorer Americans are even worse off.
Rury|2 years ago
However, some people do have "extra" money, particularly people who have access to the money printer, or who are bailed out by the people with the money printer. Guess who buys most of the government debt, allowing the government to overspend? The Fed.
Government spending isn't in a vacuum either. Every dollar the government spends goes into someone else's pocket, who they go on to further spend it. And the government doesn't spend it's money equally, meaning not everyone gets that "free money" equally, which means, some people are getting the short end of the stick, as others are getting richer because of it.
If you want to know how the rich get richer, while the poor get poorer, this is how.