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by wutbrodo
2579 days ago
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> When all your money (and more) goes on just living, inflation is a complete irrelevance (so long as your wages keep up, of course). Yes, but dismissing this caveats is waving away the entire point. High inflation of course includes wage growth (and when it doesn't, you've got a wage growth problem,not an inflation problem). But it does so _on average_: every worker doesn't get an automatic raise every time a price goes up. The poor are the least able to sustain situations that are good on average, because they have the smallest savings buffers to weather the downswings of an average trend. If a poor person falls prey to the various life catastrophes that might make you miss some income, not get a raise, etc, a high inflation provides a much less forgiving environment, since the real value of whatever modest amount was in your bank account is rapidly eroded (and as pointed out above, this type of buffer is rarely if ever kept in inflation-correlated assets) Getting knocked off of an unstable cycle is practically the central challenge of the working poor, and high inflation gives you a lot less wiggle room to avoid this. |
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