• @[email protected]
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    187 days ago

    He’s dead right.

    Humanist economics has a central pillar: abundance. Profit maximization requires scarcity, and geopolitical or other suppression of competition. In addition, higher interest rates prevent abundance, and funding of supply increases of farming production, and increase housing costs, insurance greed, and so affordability of other stuff.

    The war on Russia led to higher interest rates in order to ration oil use, and employment, again limiting production.

    Deflation is not even bad for the rich. Lower interest rates stabilize housing prices, and reduce government deficits, and improve financial asset values. Wages don’t generally go down, and they definitely don’t go down under policies of abundance.

    Abundance means more work is available. Prices are lower letting workers and others afford more stuff leading to more abundance. UBI is the most important anti-slavery (also humanist) and prosperity (also humanist) policy alternative. It is inflationary, but makes high paying work that outpaces inflation easy to find.

    The key about inflation vs deflation is how balanced income growth is relative to inflation. If it is only oligarchy making income/wealth gains, then you should address your complaints to that structure instead of the inflation.

    • @[email protected]
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      97 days ago

      The problem with deflation is that people end up hoarding all their cash because you get a return on it without doing anything with it.

      So large swathes of money start getting taken off the playing field. Investment dries up, growth slows, people get laid off, and this cycle continues, one thing causing the next, causing the next in a circle. It’s one of the most destructive forces possible to an economy.

      That’s why the central banks strive for around 2%. It’s enough to force people with cash lying around to invest it in something useful which will create jobs, etc, but not so high that it will make everyone panic and run the banks.

      • @[email protected]
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        107 days ago

        It’s a fair point, and typical thinking, but wrong. Deflation is better than inflation.

        First, in general asset inflation vs goods inflation is usually different. Then for goods inflation, there is no good measure. Substitute goods exist.

        Asset inflation definitely improves lives of the rich. Your “hoarding scare” can happen when savings/bond rates are higher than inflation. That is the genuine hoarding motivation. Lower interest rates supported by deflation supports more borrowing for more production/housing, with lower financing costs passed on to consumers. Either way, all money in the banking/financial system is hoarded money, and fractional reserve lends more the more demand for money there is. Deflation is better than inflation for this.

        For goods, electronics and now EVs are deflationary. Your phone from 2008 cost the same as one from this year while having 100x less power/apps/value. While it can make sense to wait on tech/value improvements, competition/innovation creates work, and the deflation is the cause of that innovation, and there is a replacement cycle. Energy, food, clothing deflation would allow for higher consumption and also more work, though rarely would there be expectation of continued sustained deflation. Deflation is always technology or imported/slave labour costs. Never domestic wage reductions, unless slavery pressures can be manifested. Tariffs can stop it though.

        Any economic competition creates a deflationary pressure. Deflation can be renamed value enhancement. When you favour inflation over deflation you are saying, “scarcity good, competition bad, innovation bad”

      • @[email protected]
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        87 days ago

        This excuse only affects fractional reserve banking and investments. It does nothing to non capital focused economies, and China’s economy is less than 40% capital.

        • @[email protected]
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          77 days ago

          That’s a pretty important caveat. I would take it one step further to say that it only matters in non-communist governments. Yes, maybe China can pull it off. But even losing a large chunk of 40% of the economy will be pretty bad and they’d have to switch to something pretty close to fully communist pretty quick to pick up the slack.

          • @[email protected]
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            57 days ago

            Which is the plan anyway, especially after the failure of allowing privatized luxury housing development.

            But more importantly, a country that doesn’t privatize any of the essentials has nothing to fear from the collapse of private markets; everyone will still be housed, fed, and cared for.

            • @[email protected]
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              26 days ago

              Basic utilities like electricity is privatized in most of the US. Are we cooked when inevitable degrowth occurs?

              • @[email protected]
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                16 days ago

                Well yeah, line must go up, electric company will make line go up or they’ll go bankrupt.

        • JackFrostNCola
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          06 days ago

          Im no economist but with negative inflation it drives consumers to put off that next purchase.
          Why buy the car you have been saving for, or put a bid on a house, upgrade your TV or get replacement running shoes if prices are staying the same or potentially going down? A way to make sure that people spend now and dont put it off is that they know the longer they wait the higher chance that the shoes are going to be $5 more in a months time or two.
          If people arent spending then conversely people arent selling, building, labouring, etc and then everything grinds to a halt. People get laid off, people cant pay rent or mortgages, things go to shit.

          At least this is the way i understand it, and like i said im no expert.

          • @[email protected]
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            56 days ago

            Consumers living paycheck to paycheck don’t have the time or energy to pay attention to inflation. If they can afford something they need then they buy it. If you need gas for your car then you buy it regardless of the price.

          • @kalleboo
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            6 days ago

            Cars and TVs are already deflationary - the same money will buy a better car or TV if you wait a year or two (or just wait a year and buy used)

      • @kalleboo
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        16 days ago

        On the flip side, we’ve seen with inflation that just amazing amounts of debt have been created, with consumers massively underwater spending way beyond their means, leading to things like house values blowing up completely unsustainably.

        So inflation is not automatically better, it’s just a different kind of bad.

  • Lad
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    177 days ago

    nooooo we need endless economic growth forever and ever

    • @scarabic
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      27 days ago

      Even more than most, China’s current reality is based entirely on explosive growth, which they’ve had plenty of in the last 20 years.

    • @Agent641
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      17 days ago

      I bet he never has to check his bank balance before he goes to the grocery store.

  • @[email protected]
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    78 days ago

    The main reason global markets aren’t absorbing the demand is sanction on chinese produced goods. But anyhow it will be interesting to see how the renewable energy boom picks up steam. Jupiter 1 hydrogen gas generator engine is a pretty huge milestone.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 days ago

      Fuck sanctions.

      If domestic producers want domestic buyers, they should lower their prices to be competitive and take less profit as a result. But they won’t do that if they can have the government step in to artificially raise the prices of competitors’ products.

      If they can’t do this while paying employees respectable wages, then it shouldn’t be up to the government to step in and bail them out.

      We’re literally letting the government force us to have worse deals so people richer than us can be even richer at our expense.

    • @[email protected]
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      47 days ago

      Jupiter 1 hydrogen gas generator engine

      https://newatlas.com/energy/worlds-largest-pure-hydrogen-electrical-generator/

      at 15kg per kw, this is 300x less efficient than a fuel cell for just electricity output. Distributed fuel cells can use waste heat for domestic hot water needs.

      A better use of combusting H2 for electrical power generation, is changing the input valves on electrical generating NG turbines. That is just 2x less efficient than a fuel cell.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 days ago

        Interesting but I’m skeptical that they would develop this if they could simply convert a NG turbine and it would only be 2x less efficient.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 days ago

          It’s more like the Jupiter 1 “fuel consumption” for 30mw output can be way overestimated.

          only be 2x less efficient.

          More technical description is combustion is 50% as efficient as a fuel cell. It is very significant difference.

  • @[email protected]
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    7 days ago

    Deflation is a great thing.

    The working class has been conditioned to think it’s “bad” and inflation is “inevitable” because inflation is how the ruling class recoups any gains the working class has made, with interest.

    Personally, I think it goes a bit deeper than this. Insecure people always want to feel they “know” everything, so they will often overreach and make claims about something they don’t understand just to look smart and fit in. For example, always using the word “consumer” instead of “customer.” They want to sound smart, like they went to school and learned about consumers, but they don’t realize how they’re acting without thinking. It’s all a show to avoid admitting they don’t really know what they’re talking about.

    Inflation is the same. Since it’s almost guaranteed to happen and it benefits the ruling class, the average worker has been conditioned to see it as beneficial. They are praised for going along with the narrative that inflation is necessary and it makes them “feel smart” even if they are incorrect.

    Saying “communism doesn’t work” is another example.

    • @nialv7
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      57 days ago

      aren’t you doing the thing you are criticizing? because to me you are trying to sound like you know everything as well.

      • @scarabic
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        7 days ago

        Yes that comment is 5% saying something and 95% shitting on unnamed people in an attempt to claim elite knowledge.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 days ago

        Nah. I’m not trying to fit in, which you seem to have conveniently ignored.

        I could be wrong, but the evidence points to inflation being a result of the working class having more spending power. It means that no matter what gains the working class makes, the ruling class will take them back with interest.

        If you think this is incorrect, feel free to say why.

        • @scarabic
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          7 days ago

          You’re making it sound like wage growth always perfectly balances with inflation. It doesn’t. Regular people get fucked when wage growth falls behind price growth, but they benefit if wage growth outpaces inflation, which it sometimes does. This means that inflation is not some ever present gotcha that always keeps the people down. It’s one factor in the equation.

          On another point, can you explain why you think inflation benefits the ruling class, and deflation benefits the working class? Because you never explained this which gives the appearance that it’s based entirely on “when prices go up, ruling class win,” which is not always the case.

        • @nialv7
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          7 days ago

          you should go to China and ask average Chinese people about how they feel about their “cheap groceries”.

          wealth inequality is a huge problem, and attribute it to inflation is naive. the rich has power in a capitalistic society, they will win no matter we are in an inflationary or deflationary economy. to think deflation will be good for the working people is very naive.

          • Cowbee [he/they]
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            117 days ago

            Wealth inequality exists in China, but is in most areas declining or rising at a slower rate than peer countries. The PRC relatively recently completed a decade-long poverty eradication campaign, to great results. China isn’t a wonderland, but it’s improving far more rapidly than practically anywhere else currently.

            • @nialv7
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              16 days ago

              sure, but that is because of rigorous government policies that came out of a herculean effort to eradicate poverty, not because of deflation like the comment i was replying to is trying to claim. if you look like China’s inflation rate, it hovered ~2% for the past decade which is comparable to the US.

            • @scarabic
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              -37 days ago

              “In most areas” is a very big cheat on this data though. With a great deal of wealth concentrated in the 1%, you can’t just leave out the 1% as an outlier and say that aside from them, things are pretty equal.

              China’s wealth inequality overall has skyrocketed and is staggering, both because of its growing number of explosively wealthy, and the utter impoverishment of a large part of the population.

              • Cowbee [he/they]
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                67 days ago

                You’re at least a decade out of date, extreme poverty has been eradicated even according to the world bank, and I am not excluding the 1% here. Working class salaries have risen dramatically, the disparity has risen but the real conditions for the overwhelming majority of people have dramatically improved. Disparity is a problem, yes, but it isn’t a simple one, I recommend the essay China Has Billionaires.

                Overall, though, your notions are heavily outdated and data reflects that.

                • @scarabic
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                  -37 days ago

                  While it’s good data to see, I’m always suspicious of celebrating the fact that people have gone from earning $2 per day to $5 per day as “eradicating poverty.”

          • @[email protected]
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            47 days ago

            you should go to China and ask average Chinese people about how they feel about their “cheap groceries”.

            Have you done this? What did they say?

            wealth inequality is a huge problem, and attribute it to inflation is naive. the rich has power in a capitalistic society, they will win no matter we are in an inflationary or deflationary economy. to think deflation will be good for the working people is very naive.

            You haven’t disproved my point about inflation being a tool for the ruling class to recoup the gains of the working class, which it is. You’ve just said “they will win no matter what and deflation is not good for working people” without explaining why.

            Can you elaborate on why deflation is bad? Do you think inflation isn’t a result of workers having more money to spend and businesses raising prices to maximize profit?

            • @scarabic
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              -37 days ago

              I have. It was rent, not groceries, but same conversation. Their feedback was consistent. “In the past, the government covered this entirely, but now we have to pay a part.”

              I asked how that works when they are employed by the government, technically. The government is how they earn money to pay for the thing the government used to pay for. How does this make sense?

              Their answer: “In the past, the government covered this entirely, but now we have to pay a part.”