this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2023
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United States | News & Politics

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[–] yogthos@lemmy.ml -5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Ok, but capitalists aren't the ones primarily consuming basic goods they raise the prices on. We're talking about consumer inflation here. An oligarch getting a big cash infusion and buying up land or hiring servers isn't affecting the prices of consumer goods.

Workers, and people selling land, and so on shifted from selling their time and resources to regular people, to serving oligarchs. They do this, because those oligarchs have more money now.

That still doesn't change the formula for inflation which is the relative cost of goods and services to salaries.

Then the money supply is inflated, and now $10 is circulating, but there’s still only 5 items for sale.

And who decides that it's now circulating for $10? The business owner decides that, which was my original point all along!

Meanwhile, your example is too simplistic because there isn't $10 circulating since economy isn't homogeneous. People consuming regular goods who are affected by inflation didn't get a chunk of the new money printed, so they have exact same spending power they did when there was $5 circulating.

If there’s more money, with the same supply of goods, price have to increase.

They don't have to increase, people who own businesses make a conscious decision to increase them. You're also conflating the amount of money in circulation with purchasing power here.

Printing money doesn’t magically let people buy more than exists.

We're in complete agreement here.