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Old 09-23-2021, 07:02 PM   #238
Enoch Root
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Join Date: May 2012
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Quote:
Originally Posted by blankall View Post
The problem right now is that the central banks (and the government for that matter) aren't being "very diligent" about keeping inflation in check. In fact, the combination of ultra low interest rates and constant payouts are making inflation much much worse.

A slow down in the economy would cause a temporary disadvantage to everyone, but halt the long term damage to the poor that inflation is causing. Inflation benefits those who have lots of capital already, and horribly hinders those trying to acquire it.

The current path is, more or less (a small percentage of people can work their way out of it, but it's a very uphill battle), a class system. If you're born into a family with lots of real estate, investments, etc... you're going to acquire that wealth. Meanwhile everyone else is born into a lifetime of renting and scraping by.

People in Calgary aren't quite experiencing the crunch yet, as the real estate market was already so depressed. But that's quickly changing, as both the cost of acquiring and the cost of renovating/maintaining real estate in Calgary are rising rapidly.

People are demanding higher wages to combat the inflation driven increases in the cost of living, but the fact of the matter is that many small business owners are scrapping by themselves and cannot afford to increase salaries. So we end up with the death of small business and the furtherance of mega corporations like Amazon.
I agree that inflation risks have grown significantly in the last 6 to 12 months, but that isn't what was brought up in this thread. Would slowing down the economy take some of the wind out of the sails of inflation? Sure. But slowing down the economy now, with high unemployment, and so many small businesses hurting due to Covid, would create many other problems.

Also, I think the current source of the increased inflation is commodity-based and scarcity-based, not due to over-heated economic activity.
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