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by bko
561 days ago
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> Your expectation is that the money hidden under your couch should never go down in value? Why should it go down? If there were a fixed or slowly growing monetary base (i.e. slower than productivity), the dollar would appreciate and this would be a good thing as we would all benefit from the gains of productivity and living in a prosperous society. I never bought the idea that we need to inflate our monetary base and have inflation. It seems too convenient as the government uses it as a backdoor form of taxation. And every few decades it gets out of control. The argument pro moderate inflation never rang true to me. The biggest one is "people wouldn't spend money if they knew everything will get cheaper", which is on its face wrong because the hottest selling goods in this economy are quickly depreciating. This year's iPhone or car model depreciates very quickly but somehow people keep buying it and the world doesn't fall apart. |
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So my response would be because great depressions are not desirable.
But what I really don't understand is the outrage that the money under the couch should go down- when assets like treasury inflation protected securities are available. (Yes they are not always available at profitable rates- though they currently are- and I don't think the people complaining about inflation are whining when stocks or Treasuries or bank accounts are paying more than inflation.)