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paulusthe | 2 years ago

As someone who has studied financial crashes extensively, I agree with you but worry that we lack the regulations. All these bank-ish companies offering credit cards are having impacts on the money supply (every loan they issue becomes an asset somewhere), and at some point their interconnections with the financial system are going to become a risk. I assume most to all fund their loans with money market borrowing, for example.

Then there's the broader question of whether this is good for productivity. If every company is a financial company, who actually makes tangible stuff?

discuss

order

some_random|2 years ago

What do you mean when you say these companies are offering credit cards? Aren't those cards still managed by Visa, Mastercard, AMEX, or Discover? My understanding is that they're just running the rewards system and putting their name on the card.

lotsofpulp|2 years ago

Visa and Mastercard just operate the network, they do not control the funds or take on any credit risk. Amex and Discover do operate as lenders, and also operate the network.

kylebenzle|2 years ago

When you triple the money supply every couple years what's a few extra trillion here and there?

/s

Hyperinflation is coming, the kind that will be THE central issues for everyones life for awhile. When it happens it won't be these guys fault. I would not blame airlines and home Depot credit cards for the coming hyperinflation, just a symptom of its approach.

NoMoreNicksLeft|2 years ago

How does hyperinflation even work in a country like the United States, in an age like ours?

If you needed a wheelbarrow of cash to buy break at the bakery, it was still true that there was a tiny downward pressure from the baker in that the bread would eventually rot, so he might as well sell it now if they were just shy of the asking price.

If everyone's buying household goods off of Amazon, their pricing algorithm will never be even that much forgiving.

When it last happened here, many workers were still being paid in cash as soon as the timeclock whistle went off on Friday. Now everything's direct deposit, but not necessarily instantaneous. At my last job, the funds were released at midnight that payday, but with the current job for some reason they're not released until the morning (business open, I imagine).

Are people going to starve, because they have the wrong bank and the money's not there for several hours before everyone else's and it has lost too much value?

rcarr|2 years ago

What makes you think hyperinflation is coming? If anything, inflation seems to have peaked and is now starting to fall. The only way I can see hyperinflation happening is if there’s another major conflict, climate change causes some major simultaneous disasters, or some kind of black swan event like another pandemic. Of course, individual countries might see hyperinflation if they’re mismanaged (e.g Argentina right now) but I can’t see it happening globally except in the cases listed above.