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by chung8123 1107 days ago
The only way for the record profits was an increase in funds to spend at the corporations. There is no magic behind this. People had more money to chase fewer goods and companies were able to raise their prices.
3 comments

I'm not sure people outright have more money. I think a big part of it is that the average person has access to a lot of credit.

Generally the way I suspect it goes is

1. Draw from savings to buy essential goods.

2. Slowly load whatever you can't afford on your credit cards.

3. Get new credit cards before you start missing payments.

4. Load more on your cards.

5. Have nowhere else to go so start taking payday loans.

6. Run out of money.

Which is in stark contrast to pre-2000s recessions where access to credit was far more limited.

As it is currently, if you've had a credit card, it is incredibly easy to get more and you can get an incredibly large amount of accessible credit. The average american has around 30k USD in available credit (10k for 18-22 and 20k for 23-38 but 30k overall) with only around 5k or less of that utilized on average. That's a lot of money that companies can draw on before consumers pockets are truly empty.

https://www.bankrate.com/finance/credit-cards/what-is-the-av...

It's not solely due to increase in funds (I assume you mean stimulus?) I'm fairly sure corporations are getting money that would've went to other things (savings, for example).
If so, how do said corporations get access to the the money that would have previously gone to savings?

More plausible to me is the idea that stimulus — printing new money by fiat — resulted in more cash in circulation. Corporations are like organisms that have evolved to capture and eat cash. They fed on the surplus cash, and their waistlines show it afterwards.

Meanwhile those of us with savings accounts pay the price when inflation reduces the buying power of the cash we had diligently set aside for future use.

Well usually I save my surplus cash. But if stuff costs more, I now save less implicitly. That is corporations getting access to my savings by raising prices. They aren't getting any stimulus money from me here because I never got any.
> But if stuff costs more, I now save less implicitly.

Or you could just change your spending habits.

I could and am in a macro sense. But when things I normally buy are a little more expensive and I'm gonna buy them anyways (a grocery trip is a good example), I don't especially notice the haircut.

I guess you can blame me for not micromanaging every dollar I spend? But if I'm sitting in a drive thru grabbing a burger and fries and notice it's $5 more than it used to be, I'm probably still gonna buy the burger and fries. And I probably will still go grab one occasionally when I want it. Because saving $5 every so often isn't gonna really affect an activity that makes up a microscopic amount of my expenses (I've got fast food including coffee at 2.5% last I reviewed my data.)

But regardless I think what I'm describing is a real bit of human behavior at scale - and isn't that just economics at the end of the day?

I don't know. Over the years, I've stopped drinking alcohol, eating fast food and cut down on pointless spending. Sure, grocery shopping is more expensive, so I also stopped buying certain items that also affect my health and the planet... most meat. I changed my spending habits to focus on becoming healthier and happier as I age. I look at my dad who, like his father, refused to change anything and decided to break the cycle.

$5 is $5... every penny counts.

> People had more money

Where are you getting this information? Raises are not keeping up with inflation. A few thousand in stimulus dollars years ago is not driving anything. PPP money didn't increase wages.

Feel free to downvote this because it is a very simple observation and not based on deep academic study. I really hate wages have been so stagnant and have not kept up with inflation. I feel like I've been treading water the last 10 years of my adult life despite making above minimum wage. But I also can't help but notice a lot of people used to say "$15 dollars per hour is going to equal $15 dollar hamburgers" and now where I live $15 dollars per hour has become a pretty common starting wage and now everything is more than usual inflated.
Individuals and businesses received direct payments in the form of stimulus checks. I have to think also money got into people’s hands by lending as the banks are how the new money gets into circulation. That’s my layperson’s understanding of a very complex system.
> Individuals

A few thousand dollars 2-3 years ago?

> Businesses

Payments that, at most, kept wages the same?

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People need to stop using "people are getting free money and that's raising inflation" excuse. Prices are rising and people are going into their savings or credit to keep spending. That's it.

Yeah the business money in theory was just to keep people on payroll