• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    83 months ago

    There are a handful of currencies backed by USD but most are not. I only know of Belize dollar, the Hong Kong dollar and the Dirham as backed by USD, as far as I know those are the only ones.

    Do you think stores look at the inflation and raise their prices accordingly or do they raise their prices and inflation is calculated based on that? One of those is correct.

    • @LibreHans
      link
      -33 months ago

      Stores don’t look at inflation, inflation makes the stuff they sell more expensive to buy, so they have to sell it for more money or make losses.

      Fed policies like interest rates directly affect almost all countries because they have USD debt.

      • @Passerby6497
        link
        English
        53 months ago

        Stores don’t look at inflation, inflation makes the stuff they sell more expensive to buy, so they have to sell it for more money or make losses.

        Oh wow, stores must suddenly be buying their materials much cheaper recently when they realized they need to charge less, right?

        Or did they just realize the market won’t bear what they’re charging, so they’re lowing their prices to get more business and lower the margin on their sales?

        Hint, it’s the second one. Because stores are raising prices to increase profits, not to make up for increased ingredient costs.

        • @LibreHans
          link
          -23 months ago

          Go look up net profit margins of retailers, they are going sideways.

          • @thejoker954
            link
            23 months ago

            Thats because of how they define profits.

            Every company wants ALL the money.

            They make enough to pay all their bills and expand reasonably.

            They are not happy with that.

            Its always more more more.

            • @LibreHans
              link
              -13 months ago

              Its always more more more.

              Obviously, because the money is always worth less less less.

          • @Passerby6497
            link
            English
            13 months ago

            And yet they can afford to advertise they’re dropping their prices 🤔

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        23 months ago

        So what makes the stuff stores buy more expensive? Like you can create a chain of price raising as far as you want but ultimately it’s just someone deciding to raise prices and that creating inflation.

        Again, only a handful of countries own US debt and I don’t even know how US debt interest rates are going to connect to inflation in other countries. Like China and Japan are the largest debt holders and their inflation is vastly different.

        • @LibreHans
          link
          -23 months ago

          Nobody said US debt, it’s USD debt, this is basic international economics knowledge.

          Inflation is the loss of purchasing power of money, not somebody raising prices. Inflating the money supply leads to loss of purchasing power.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            -1
            edit-2
            3 months ago

            Inflating money only loses purchasing power if it’s tied to the value of something else as I originally said. That was literally my original point.

            And what do you mean by USD debt?

            • @LibreHans
              link
              13 months ago

              Money is always tied to the value of things, so according to you inflating the money supply always leads to money losing purchasing power.

              Debt denominated in USD