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(78 Likes) How does printing money cause inflation?
The invention of money was a good thing because it replaced a cumbersome barter system used in commerce. If you grew Jerusalem artichokes and wanted fish, you had to find a fisherman who wanted Jerusalem artichokes, and this was very laborious and the trade was slow. Somewhere our ancestors decided to accept gold in exchange for goods. Thus money was invented. Trade and commerce began by making civilizations richer. Why gold? It was a stable commodity and held its value relative to commodities. More importantly, unlike our paper money, it was not easily made. It worked pretty well for thousands of years. For a simple explanation of the evolution of money, see this: Money: A Semi-Fictional Tale. What you need to understand is that you have to produce something to make money. You had to offer your compatriots something of value, whether it was yams, fish, labor, or anything else other people wanted. Nobody gives free fish. But the foundation of our current monetary system today is literally just a beautiful piece of green paper. It is not production based and is not supported by anything. Central banks can print money at any time (possibly with the push of a button). That’s why we experience inflation. Yes, people want dollars…until they don’t. Today, central banks believe they can print money whenever they want, and like a small machine, the economy will respond and everything will be fine. Not like that. If we could create wealth simply by printing money, we could end poverty and Zimbabwe would be the richest country in the world. Why do prices go up when the government prints money? First, “Inflation” is when almost all prices rise in an economy. If there is a shortage of oil and gasoline prices rise, assuming the money supply is stable, the extra money spent on gas means you have less money to spend on other goods, and as gas prices rise, those prices fall. All prices rise because more money is created (supply) than people want (demand). Central banks and governments create new money, mainly by “printing” (quantitative expansion). They buy Treasury bills and notes from the big banks and pay for them with a few clicks of the button, which increases the bank deposits of the seller banks. They also create money by lowering interest rates, which makes borrowing more attractive to bank customers. Banks create money by lending their customers’ deposits. How? Because they only need to keep 10% of the deposit as reserves and they lend the remaining 90%. If I deposit $1,000 in my bank, he can loan one of his clients $900. If the borrower buys lumber for $900, the lumber dealer now has $900 in his account and a deposit of $900 in his bank. The bank can now lend $810 (90%) of its deposit to one of its customers. This borrower also buys $810 from someone and this seller has $810 in their account and their bank can loan 90% of the $810 or $729 to another customer and so on. There is a kind of geometric increase in the money supply. My $1,000 deposit could rise above $9,000 in the economy, and therefore money is created out of the blue. Let’s say a home developer decides that low interest rates are making his planned projects profitable now, and he takes out a bank loan. Banks want to give loans because they have all this new money. The developer is now removing resources (lumber, crafting, etc.) from other builders with new money offers, and here’s more competition for these scarce resources. The next builder realizes that he has to pay more for lumber. This competition for resources drives prices up. This may continue for a while as new money is constantly being pumped out. The sad thing is that the poor guy at the end of the line just sees the prices are already going up for him. The prices of everything start to rise as a result of the constant pressure of new money. As construction materials increase, housing prices increase. As people find housing loans cheap, the demand for housing increases. They begin to speculate that prices will continue to rise, so demand for more housing drives prices higher. While it’s just one example of how house prices go up, extend this concept to other manufactured goods and eventually all prices go up. If enough money is pumped, we experience a boom-bust cycle. A good example of this is the 2008 crisis. It is clear that the Fed pushed many, many billions of new money into the economy by lowering interest rates (from about 6% to 1%) in 2001-2004, which in turn lowered bank lending rates, which encouraged bank lending. And we’ve all seen what happened: house prices soared, stock markets soared, crazy investment vehicles skyrocketed. People went crazy because of inflation. Everything collapsed and ended in a crash until 2008, when the Fed took its foot off the money machine in 2006. What happened is that we ended up with homes that nobody wanted. So not only did prices rise, but the entire economy was disrupted by money printing. Some economists say that “inflation” isn’t just about rising prices, it’s actually the printing of money that’s “inflation” and the resultant market distortions and rising prices. This is nothing new. Rapid bearish cycles are always caused by central banks or governments printing too much money. History has shown that new money always flows somewhere and creates a frenzy. Mostly real estate or stocks, but sometimes tulips. The worst is the result of hyperinflation. Zimbabwe is one of the best examples of modern hyperinflation, where central bankers have no idea what they are doing because they don’t understand what money is. Just printed and printed. The government used the new bills to pay for supplies, and with no accompanying increase in production, prices rose geometrically and Zimbabweans soon realized that paper was worthless and got rid of paper as soon as possible because they knew prices would drop. higher the next day. As prices rose, he bought less dollars, and the result was the famous $100 trillion bill. Finally the goods disappeared f
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(24 Likes) How much do sex robots cost?
You think the products are made for the people who “need them the most”. This would be wrong. Products are met by people who both want and can buy them, their needs or perfect 10 love dolls Merit does not affect it at all. The solution to wanting to buy something but not having money is almost universal. Earn more money first, then
(47 Likes) Is it illegal to have a love doll who looks like she’s in high school? There are some wonderful babies out there.
the capacity to consent to the use of his or her copy for this purpose. So it becomes a matter of the government banning something that seems like it should be illegal, regardless of the First Amendment. perfect 10 love dolls outlaws, which essentially means a creative work. Another interesting topic on this topic