« First « Previous Comments 49 - 88 of 262 Next » Last » Search these comments
If salaries go up, then housing prices will probably go up too.
But I'm not too sure about salaries going up.
Teslas are overpriced commuter cars.
You need to blast the car AC in Florida 4 months of the year.
That’s going to reduce the car’s range.
If salaries go up, then housing prices will probably go up too.I think that's called "wage push inflation", but I'm not sure. We had it in the 70's starting in 1974 when about every 18 months we'd get what was called a "blanket" raise where everyone in the company got about 8% or 9% increase to keep up with inflation. In 1976, I had a merit raise and a blanket raise come into effect on the same check and I thought, I'll never need a raise again. In three months a rent increase wiped it out. Employers have gotten wise, now, don't do many of those anymore.
Employers have gotten wise, now, don't do many of those anymore.
Yep, nowadays you pretty much need to jump ship for a raise.
Yep, nowadays you pretty much need to jump ship for a raise.
Patrick saysIf salaries go up, then housing prices will probably go up too.
But I'm not too sure about salaries going up.
If Biden kept paying for not working, employers have to bump up the pay to get workers.
... at the end of a long-term debt cycle, debt levels get so large relative to the size of the economy that it becomes impossible to deleverage them nominally without crashing the economy, so instead the denominators are increased: the monetary base, the broad money supply, and nominal GDP with a significant inflation component. The mechanism to do this involves large monetized fiscal deficits, accompanied by a central bank willing to hold rates well below the prevailing inflation rate for a while, which effectively inflates portions of the debt away.
The alternative to this process is a deflationary economic collapse, which is a route that the public and policymakers around the world rarely if ever choose. In other words, when push comes to shove and the system is pushed to its limits, policymakers invariably print.
High performers at successful companies get high boni, RSU's and nice pay raises.
Bitcoin saysHigh performers at successful companies get high boni, RSU's and nice pay raises.
You're a unicorn then. The owners don't pass on the inflation gains this early in the cycle
Annual Inflation Soars to 5 Percent in Biggest Jump Since 2008
BY TOM OZIMEK June 10, 2021
Inflation took a fresh swipe at American consumers in May, with the consumer price index surging by 5 percent over the past year, the biggest annual spike in the measure since 2008.
If we get even a small amount of hyper inflation how does that work with fixed payments like pensions and social security? I would think pensions get fucked because they are locked to past income.
value-us-dollar-since-1640/
Billionaire grocery CEO predicts 10-14% inflation on food by October 👀
Billionaire grocery CEO predicts 10-14% inflation on food by October 👀
Biden's America: American Wages Drop by Nearly 2% as Inflation Spirals Out of Control
..because the government doesn't count food (nor rent nor gas/diesel) prices in their bullshit inflation statistics.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2021 - 10:00
SHARE THIS:
Entrepreneurs avoiding negative interest by opening multiple bank accounts
Smaller entrepreneurs in the Netherlands are trying to avoid negative interest on savings by opening new accounts with different banks, Financieele Dagblad reported after speaking to Dutch banks. Various banks introduced negative interest rates on larger savings accounts over the past year
At most banks, savings accounts with balances above 100 thousand euros are charged negative interest. This means the account holder pays interest on their savings, instead of earning interest. For someone with 200 thousand euros in the bank, this could mean paying 500 euros in interest at the end of the year. To prevent this, entrepreneurs are now spreading their money over different accounts at different banks.
Producer Prices See Biggest Annual Surge on Record, Stoking Broader Inflation Concerns
BY TOM OZIMEK September 10, 2021
Producer prices rose at their highest annual pace on record in August and slightly above expectations, with the newest inflation-related datapoint likely to reinforce broader concerns about rising prices as higher production costs tend to trickle down to consumers.
Major Supermarket Chain Warns Inflation Is About to Impact More Americans
BY JACK PHILLIPS September 12, 2021
An executive of Kroger, one of the largest supermarket chains in the United States, warned grocery prices are about to become even higher this year as inflation sets in.
An executive of Kroger, one of the largest supermarket chains in the United States, warned grocery prices are about to become even higher this year as inflation sets in.
don't like to make money off it, but every time they pass one of these gargantuan bills, the stock market shoots up.
« First « Previous Comments 49 - 88 of 262 Next » Last » Search these comments
https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/blog/2021/04/12/pandemic-prices-assessing-inflation-in-the-months-and-years-ahead/