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by perl4ever
2162 days ago
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>it is a transfer from everyone who is not a financial institution, to financial institutions I don't understand what this means. Aren't the victims you are imagining the hypothetical people who have large amounts of money in checking, savings, or literally under their mattress? And maybe this is ignorant, but I really didn't think that was a significant segment of the population. I've read comments like yours a million times before, so I know your take isn't unique or novel, I just have never understood it at all. I guess I can interpret you as talking about say inflation in the 1970s, but at this point that seems like ancient history and moot. |
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Suppose you have ten people and the money supply is a hundred dollars, of which each person has ten. And then suppose you print ten more dollars and give them all to person #10, so that person now has 20 dollars. That is equivalent, economically, to keeping the money supply the same but taking 91 cents from each of the other 9 people and giving it to person #10: in both cases, person #10 now has 2/11 of the total money supply, and persons #1 through #9 each have 1/11. And that means their respective fractions of the total buying power have changed the same way, since the buying power of money is the fraction of the total money supply that that money is equal to. So person #10 can now buy more of the things he wants, and everyone else can buy less.
In the case of the Federal Reserve printing money under normal circumstances, person #10 is financial institutions and persons #1 through #9 are everybody else.
> Aren't the victims you are imagining the hypothetical people who have large amounts of money in checking, savings, or literally under their mattress?
The "victims" are everybody who isn't getting some of the printed money. The fact that they already have other money doesn't change the fact that they lose buying power. Nor does it matter where their other money is stored. It could even be in assets like a 401k; as long as the assets are denominated in money (your 401k balance is in dollars), the buying power they represent is affected.
> I really didn't think that was a significant segment of the population.
Everybody who doesn't get new money the Federal Reserve prints under normal circumstances is almost all of the population.