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Amal's avatar

I have never heard inflation explained quite this plainly before. Thank you.

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Roy Brander's avatar

The talk the newspapers would be giving if they weren't mostly neoliberal is the simple analysis in The Guardian to counteract the "Inflation is the Terrible Top Problem for Joe Biden" subject of most Times and Post inflation articles right now.

It used three numbers for Jack Average (American, our numbers are lower). Inflation is 6.2% since last October, but Jack's wages are up 5.8%. Jack is also an average $66,400 in debt on the mortgage and car.

So where Jack used to have $100 in his pocket and $100 in grocery bills, he now faces paying $106.20 with his $105.80 in wages, and must pull 40 cents from his luxuries budget to pay for necessities. But his full necessities are $30,000 per year, vs $10,000 in 'luxuries' (or at least, non-necessities), so he has to do that 300 times, sucking $120 from his bar/restaurant/nice-clothers/Xmas/vacation fund into his food/clothing/shelter budget. (Worse, those luxuries are up $620 from their $10,000 start, so he's lost 7.4% of his luxuries.)

Sucks to be Jack, by $740 of fun lost to inflation.

BUT! Jack's $66,410 in debt has effectively shrunk 5.8% in size relative to his ability to pay, so his *wealth* has increased by $3851. (Shrinking debt == increased wealth).

Until Jack has to renegotiate his mortgage at new, higher rates, he's clearly winning from inflation. And the rich end of the economy, that makes money by loaning their great wealth to Jack, have effectively lost 6.2% of the wealth they go a-loaning with.

Reckoning at least the first few years of modest inflation as a wealth-transfer from the rich to the indebted class, as I did with Jack getting $3851, is also a useful model to view it with.

And that, says the lefty Guardian, is why every paper that's neoliberal may be recognized as such by how alarmed they are by the very first news of inflation. In 2008, it was posed as "Wall St. vs Main Street", and oh, my god, how Wall Street won that one.

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