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Full Version: Why is inflation so high? Is it bad?
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December 11, 2021 3.11am AEDT


1. Why is inflation running so high?

There are two basic reasons why inflation has been increasing: supply and demand.

Starting with the latter, consumers are on a spending spree after having spent most of 2020 at home bingeing on Netflix.

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Adding support to households’ buying power are the stimulus checks and other pandemic-related aid

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The increased demand might not be too bad for inflation on its own, but the U.S. economy is also experiencing significant supply chain problems tied to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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wages are jumping as well – up 4.8% in November from a year earlier

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This news is great for workers, but companies often have to pass on these higher costs to consumers.

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2. Is inflation always bad?

Inflation isn’t always bad news. A little bit is actually quite healthy for an economy.

If prices are falling – something known as deflation – companies may be hesitant to invest in new plants and equipment, and unemployment might rise. And inflation can make it easier for some households with higher wages to pay off debts.

However, inflation running at 5% or higher is a phenomenon the U.S. hasn’t seen since the early 1980s.

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For consumers, higher prices on essential goods like food and gasoline may become unaffordable for people whose paychecks aren’t rising as much. But even when their wages are rising, higher inflation makes it harder for consumers to tell if a particular good is getting more expensive relative to other goods, or just in line with the average price increase. This can make it harder for people to budget appropriately.

What is true for households is true for companies as well. Businesses see the prices of key inputs, like oil or microchips, rise. They may want to pass on these costs to consumers, but could be limited in their ability to do so. As a result, they may have to cut back production, increasing supply chain problems.


3. What are the biggest risks?

If inflation stays elevated for too long, it can lead to something economists call hyperinflation. This is when expectations that prices will be keep rising fuels more inflation, which reduces the real value of every dollar in your pocket.

In the most extreme cases – think Zimbabwe in the late 2000s – spiraling prices can lead to a collapse in a currency’s value. People will want to spend any money they have as soon as they get it for fear that prices will rise even over short periods of time.

The U.S. is nowhere near this situation, but central banks like the Federal Reserve want to avoid it at all costs so they typically step in to try to reduce inflation before it gets out of control.

The problem is the main way it does that is by raising interest rates, which slows the economy. If the Fed is forced to raise interest rates too quickly, it can even cause a recession and result in higher unemployment – as the U.S. experienced in the early 1980s, around the last time inflation was this high. Then-Fed chair Paul Volcker did manage to rein in inflation from as high as about 14% in 1980 – at the cost of double-digit unemployment rates.


https://theconversation.com/why-is-infla...ces-173572
the US keeps printing money like no tmr for so many years
(11-12-2021, 02:09 PM)lvlrsSTI Wrote: [ -> ]the US keeps printing money like no tmr for so many years

They did it from 2008 to 2014 and restarted in 2020. Fortunately, there is China to produce cheap goods so that the world did not feel most of the impact. But China can only do so much as there are certain things that China cannot help stem the inflation such as properties and shares.
(11-12-2021, 02:13 PM)Levin Wrote: [ -> ]They did it from 2008 to 2014 and restarted in 2020. Fortunately, there is China to produce cheap goods so that the world will not feel most of the impact. But China can only do so much as there certain things that China cannot help stem the inflation such as properties and shares.

now they boycott Beijing Olympics, never appreciate what China did last time to save the world economy from collapsing.
SG reason for quietly increasing its gold stock pile is because USD value dropping?

https://www.bullionstar.com/blogs/ronan-...-reserves/
(11-12-2021, 02:36 PM)Tangsen Wrote: [ -> ]SG reason for quietly increasing its gold stock pile is because USD value dropping?

https://www.bullionstar.com/blogs/ronan-...-reserves/

USD is rising for the past year against SGD. From around 1.31 to around 1.36. Not as fast as RMB which is rising faster.
(11-12-2021, 02:43 PM)Levin Wrote: [ -> ]USD is rising for the past year against SGD. From around 1.31 to around 1.36. Not as fast as RMB which is rising faster.

Maybe MAS uses it USD stock pile go buy gold?
(11-12-2021, 02:43 PM)Levin Wrote: [ -> ]USD is rising for the past year against SGD. From around 1.31 to around 1.36. Not as fast as RMB which is rising faster.


[Image: 4118597-D-66-D6-4594-8-C8-E-934563-FF68-B8.jpg]
(11-12-2021, 02:46 PM)Tangsen Wrote: [ -> ]Maybe MAS uses it USD stock pile go buy gold?

Could be. I personally think it is a good move.
(11-12-2021, 02:48 PM)Levin Wrote: [ -> ]Could be. I personally think it is a good move.

Gold better than those USD banana paper