Modern Day Hyperinflation

Is hyperinflation coming to the US in the next 8 years?

  • Yes

    Votes: 6 35.3%
  • No

    Votes: 10 58.8%
  • ET goes behind a firewall and charges people

    Votes: 2 11.8%

  • Total voters
    17
You don't think people live better than 30 year ago ?. Give yourself a reality check.
Not really,no. Not when I see the homeless rate rising every year. People struggle to pay for even the basic necessities in life,like rent. Inflation got rolling about 25 years ago and has snowballed ever since. I remember bitching about having to pay .35 for a Snickers bar. Now they're well over a dollar.Shrinklation is just an insidious form of inflation.
 
No way would the US be able to handle such a situation as hyperinflation, a cpi at 5 6 7% was impossible for most in the US to handle....

Hey the fed magically got cpi down from 9% to 3% in a handful of months, no need to worry as they would work even more magic if we encountered hyperinflation mode. So no need to panic
...sheesh
 
Not really,no. Not when I see the homeless rate rising every year. People struggle to pay for even the basic necessities in life,like rent. Inflation got rolling about 25 years ago and has snowballed ever since. I remember bitching about having to pay .35 for a Snickers bar. Now they're well over a dollar.Shrinklation is just an insidious form of inflation.


Shrinkflatiom has been around for a long long long time. I noticed this well before the term went mainstream, I do shop and look at details and numbers and prices, unlike the soccer moms who haven't a clue on what anything cost, who buy $238 bucks or 3 bags of food on their husband's dime....
 
re: Venezuela
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  1. You can’t save money, so you live day by day. Your big savings are in US Dollars.
  2. The second you have some money in your hand you look for ways to buy foreign currency. In this case: the US dollar.
  3. The government tries to stop hyperinflation by imposing Price Controls. The problem is that if an item is underpriced, it flies off the shelves and the shelves are always empty. You can’t find the things you want to buy.
  4. Producers can’t make money because their products are price-controlled. Thus there is no point investing in anything. This makes shortages even worse.
  5. The scarcity also means there are huge lines for simple things. People will stand in line for hours for powdered milk. Imagine Black Friday-type lanes because there is chicken at the store.
  6. Since lines are an embarrassment for the government, they made it illegal to form lines in front of supermarkets. Therefore, people form lines behind the stores where it is less visible.
  7. Another measure to shorten the lines is that you can only shop on certain days of the week depending on your ID number. Imagine if people with social security numbers ending in 1–2 can only shop on Monday, 2–3 on Tuesday, etc.
  8. Big, expensive things such as cars or real estate are priced in foreign currencies. To buy them, you have to figure out a way to pay sellers in US Dollars, often via wire transfers to bank accounts outside the country. Needless to say, this is something only a few people have access to.
  9. The government will blame foreigners, merchants, homosexuals, even aliens for the hyperinflation, any minority will do just fine. They would never ever recognize that they are printing too much money. They will just pretend to cover the sun with one finger. Having a minority as a common enemy is a classical political tactic to get support from the majority.
  10. If you find some good, you buy as much of it as you can even if you don’t need it. You often end up sharing it with your friends and family, and they will do the same.
  11. There is a thriving informal economy (a.k.a. Black Markets). People buy price-controlled items, and then resell them outside the store for a real, black market price. It sounds like a scam, but in reality, if it wasn’t for these people it would be impossible to find some goods sometimes. They are keeping the economy alive. Black market merchants are locally known as “Bachaqueros” which translates to something like “ant men”.
  12. Some scarce goods are sold in ridiculously low amounts. Someone in a building
  1. might be selling 1 squeeze of toothpaste to their neighbors. Cigarettes are sold individually.
  2. Poor people still think the government is the one that will save them, and they blame producers and merchants and call them greedy.
  3. People get creative. You would be surprised how many things you can do with a coat hanger.
  4. Right now, the Venezuelan Bolivar had a 50% drop in 2 weeks. Banks just don’t have enough bills, so you can only withdraw about $5-$10 worth from your bank account per day. To fix it, the government will just print more money with higher denomination, which will just continue the hyperinflation.
  5. The government uses the crisis to justify ever bigger power grabs. There was supposed to be a recall vote this year against President Nicolás Maduro, but they simply stopped it. The more difficult the situation is, the more power the government has.
  6. Every few years, the government removes some zeroes from the currency. There are high hopes for the new currency to be stable, and it does stay stable for a while until the government prints too much of it and the hyperinflation continues.

isn't some form of economic genocide against Venezuela by USA? Sanctions for misbehaviour?
 
Some items are suffering from Hyper deflation
eg
corn
soya
Natural gas

The manufacturers / suppliers are sweating blood.
 
isn't some form of economic genocide against Venezuela by USA? Sanctions for misbehaviour?
Sanctions is not economic genocide, Are you an apologist for the Maduro dictatorship of VE? Do you believe the Israelis are committing genocide in Gaza. Speak up so we can understand your politics/economics?
 
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Dude, that's roughly (72/30) 2.4% inflation. That's perfectly fine cause your salary most certainly grew by more.
I would venture to guess that 2.4 far outpaced annual salary growth for that same period. My salary damn sure didn't see that kind of growth and I bet a lot of other Americans didn't either.
 
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