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Inflation Beyond the Stars Thread for April 12


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2022 Apr 12, 12:49am   148,434 views  1,541 comments

by AmericanKulak   ➕follow (9)   💰tip   ignore  

Since we know the numbers are going to suck since Peppermint Patty is leading the Amen Corner Media to blame Putin for it:
https://patrick.net/post/1344548/2022-04-11-putin-s-price-hike-failing-administrati

Frankly, I prefer my spaceship to have big tits and not fake inflated ones.

EDIT - numbers drop:
America goes back to the 80s: Surging gas prices and higher rents push inflation to 41-year high of 8.5% as White House blames it on Putin invading Ukraine
The consumer price index rose 8.5% in March from a year ago, the fastest increase since December 1981
Housing costs, which make up about a third of the index, have escalated and show no signs of cooling
Gasoline prices soared 49% in March from a year ago as the war in Ukraine rocked energy markets
Biden's administration tried to get ahead of the dire inflation news by blaming Russian leader Vladimir Putin
But Republicans place the blame for soaring prices on 'Democrats' reckless spending and failed policies'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10711311/Inflation-soars-new-41-year-high-8-5.html?source=patrick.net

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976   AmericanKulak   2024 Apr 22, 9:11am  

zzyzzx says






HeadSet says


Remember when "right sizing" was code for layoffs?

Yep!

I think we need to "Right Size" our "Great Value Government".

We're paying way too much for 435 ounces of mostly soyfiller, corn starch, corn syrup, and lots of preservatives and antinutrients.

It's also full of artificially enriched (flour?). Still working on this joke.
977   AmericanKulak   2024 Apr 22, 9:13am  

I remember when losing some manufacturing would mean more high tech manfacturing - the jobs of the future, too. I remember Hakeem's Uncle, Leonard "Ice People" Jeffries and how the Left screamed "muh Free Speech" when he was canned for calling Europeans deady and destructive.
979   HeadSet   2024 Apr 22, 12:19pm  

clambo says

they think inflation is like the weather.

Or worse, it is "Greedy corporations overcharging."
982   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Apr 23, 8:50am  

HeadSet says


clambo says


they think inflation is like the weather.

Or worse, it is "Greedy corporations overcharging."



#MMT fluffers are getting younger and younger:

986   HeadSet   2024 Apr 24, 5:59pm  

Who is saying Biden inherited inflation? That is a brash a lie as "Nobody was forced to take the vaxx."
987   ForcedTQ   2024 Apr 24, 9:43pm  

zzyzzx says







So a 28% increase per pound in the price of dog food!!! And that’s on an already higher cost food, not the cheaper bargain bags…
990   zzyzzx   2024 Apr 25, 5:06am  

Now with less bristles:


991   zzyzzx   2024 Apr 25, 5:08am  

Not opened:


992   zzyzzx   2024 Apr 25, 5:08am  

Spare tire no longer included as standard:


996   zzyzzx   2024 Apr 26, 5:00am  

King sized:


999   AD   2024 Apr 26, 7:59pm  

.

https://www.bea.gov/data/personal-consumption-expenditures-price-index

I had a concern yesterday that the 10 Year Treasury was at 4.99% which makes federal debt service or payment even more difficult.

The PCE is now at a 6-month average of around 2.7% which is promising considering it peaked around 7% back in 2022. This should eventually assist with reducing interest rates from the 10 Year Treasury to the 30 year mortgage rate.

The Federal Reserve relies on PCE to monitor inflation, and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said he was looking at inflation to remain below 3% if he was to start considering reductions to the Federal Funds rate.

I think Powell would lower the Fed Funds rate from 5.5% to 5% if PCE remains below 3%, as that provides enough margin keeping the Fed Funds rate 2% above annual inflation.

.
1000   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Apr 26, 8:41pm  

AD says

I had a concern yesterday that the 10 Year Treasury was at 4.99% which makes federal debt service or payment even more difficult.


How so?

The Feds will ALWAYS be able to pay the debt.
1001   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Apr 26, 8:44pm  

AD says


The PCE is now at a 6-month average of around 2.7% which is promising considering it peaked around 7% back in 2022. This should eventually assist with reducing interest rates from the 10 Year Treasury to the 30 year mortgage rate.

The Federal Reserve relies on PCE to monitor inflation, and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said he was looking at inflation to remain below 3% if he was to start considering reductions to the Federal Funds rate.

I think Powell would lower the Fed Funds rate from 5.5% to 5% if PCE remains below 3%, as that provides enough margin keeping the Fed Funds rate 2% above annual inflation.



1002   AD   2024 Apr 26, 8:50pm  

UkraineIsTotallyFucked says

How so?

The Feds will ALWAYS be able to pay the debt.


Debt service or payment was 8% of total expenditures in 2022. What was it in 2023 and what will it be in 2024 ?
1003   DOGEWontAmountToShit   2024 Apr 27, 7:19am  

AD says

Debt service or payment was 8% of total expenditures in 2022. What was it in 2023 and what will it be in 2024 ?


Doesn't matter. Also, tax receipts are higher because of inflation.
1004   AD   2024 Apr 27, 1:17pm  

UkraineIsTotallyFucked says

AD says

Debt service or payment was 8% of total expenditures in 2022. What was it in 2023 and what will it be in 2024 ?

Doesn't matter. Also, tax receipts are higher because of inflation.


Yes inflation (not stagflation) will do that. But it sill matters as far as debt service being sustainable even if they try to inflate out of a debt crisis.

.
1005   Patrick   2024 Apr 27, 2:17pm  

A lot of recent inflation was due to the scamdemic and the following money printing. So it started in early 2020 when they were trying to destroy Trump's excellent economy. But it really got rolling after Biden cut off the Keystone pipeline and implemented other ways to make energy more expensive.


1007   clambo   2024 Apr 30, 7:12am  

What readers seem to forget is the owners of the US debt are not all in the USA.
Therefore, you go to work to pay taxes which pay interest on the debt owed to foreigners and foreign governments.
Today it's about 33% of the US debt.
This money is forever lost to the US economy.
Slowly, inevitably, Congress overspending is lowering our standard of living and making life more expensive.
1008   Eric Holder   2024 Apr 30, 1:47pm  

Patrick says


A lot of recent inflation was due to the scamdemic and the following money printing. So it started in early 2020 when they were trying to destroy Trump's excellent economy


"They"?

The Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act): This was a $2.2 trillion economic stimulus bill passed by the 116th U.S. Congress and signed into law by President Donald Trump on March 27, 2020, in response to the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States1. The spending primarily included $300 billion in one-time cash payments to individual Americans, $260 billion in increased unemployment benefits, the creation of the Paycheck Protection Program that provides forgivable loans to small businesses, $500 billion in loans for corporations, and $339.8 billion to state and local governments.

Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021: On December 27, 2020, President Donald Trump signed into law H.R. 133, a consolidated $2.3 trillion appropriations package, including provisions allocating approximately $900 billion for various economic relief programs to address hardships caused by the coronavirus pandemic.


"They" even wanted "their" name on the stimulus checks.

Pepperidge Farm doesn't have selective memory when it comes to inflation-creating moves.
1013   zzyzzx   2024 May 2, 7:03am  

Count them:


1015   zzyzzx   2024 May 3, 4:44am  

Main ingredient % reduced:


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