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by listenallyall
929 days ago
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I'm not sure what market equilibrium you're referring to. If things always balanced out in the long-term, our economic situation would resemble the 1950's or 60's, where a single-income household could comfortably afford a suburban house and raise kids. Instead, we have people living under their parents' roof until 30 or longer, enormous college debt loads, majority of families relying on two incomes (and often, one or both parents moonlighting at a second job), housing costs taking a larger slice of total incomes than ever before, married couples refraining from having kids as an economic decision, more people than ever relying on some form of government subsidy. None of these factors would be growing if some long-term equilibrium existed, because at some point, we'd be reverting to the mean. Instead, society's lifestyles have slowly shifted in response to the fact that, over the long-term, producers have become increasingly effective at extracting a larger and larger share of consumers' incomes, and ultimately, realized and potential wealth. |
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> society's lifestyles have slowly shifted in response to the fact that, over the long-term, producers have become increasingly effective at extracting a larger and larger share of consumers' incomes, and ultimately, realized and potential wealth.
It sounds like we basically agree (even if I'd describe it a bit differently)?
Edit: I guess what I'm trying to get at is that there are lots of different things that can cause inflation, and not all of them follow your example of "that excess 6% is permanently embedded in prices in all future years" in real terms.