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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • I would also like to point out. It’s not always so one dimensional. Don’t forget fossil fuels is not only energy. Ammonia derived from gas is heavily used as fertiliser, which is incredibly important for food production.

    A lot of manufacturing requires fossils fuels to heat, melt and process materials.

    Oil is also used in manufacturing, lubrication, transportation. It’s also converted into plastics, lotions, medicine, electronics, you name it.

    Fossils fuels plays a very important part in everyday life. I feel people think it’s easily replaceable but it’s interwoven so deeply in everyone’s lives. Advocating to drop funding and fossile projects could have some serious knock on effects.






  • I guess it depends on how you define inflation. To me inflation is the ratio between goods and services and the money supply. Inflation isn’t rising prices. Price rising is a symptom of inflation. I just don’t think it’s beneficial to use inflation interchangeably with supply and demand and price rises, it just creates confusion. I very much favor the macroeconomics view of inflation because through that lens a lot things start making sense.

    Since this is your field, obviously you’d know that if you have more goods, you get deflation. And funnily enough when you look up the definition of deflation it’s very strongly tied to that ratio between goods and services and the money supply.

    I just feel that over time people have changed the definition of inflation. It’s no surprise that the term Greedflation has popped up because the topic surrounding it has been convoluted, confusing a lot of people.


  • Inflation is the devaluation of the currency. The definition has been muddied for a time now but ultimately inflation refers to the expansion of the money supply.

    As people/corporations borrow more and governments print more, prices increase. Not because those items have more value but because the money has lost its value needing more of it to pay for the same stuff.

    If tomorrow everyone’s wages would double. Prices would double as demand would increase and the market balances itself out.

    Greedflation is a term that shifts that narrative. You could argue that yes there are bad actors for sure. But the term greedflation is redefining inflation, making you focus more on corporations raising prices instead of the main contributor, an expanding money supply.


  • Yes it’s bad. Competing for market share should be balanced and free of government intervention. How does a company (small or large) hope to compete against a company that is being subsidised.

    Tesla can then undercut their competitors as they don’t need to make a profit. They’re subsidiesed.

    Then the government has also imposed regulations for car manufacturers, that if they don’t sell enough EVs in the year, they have to pay a penalty by buying carbon credits.

    Well Tesla sells those carbon credits. So they can undercut their competition, entice consumers with lower prices and recoup the losses through subsidies and selling these credits. All thanks to government intervention.

    Basically screwing competition and screwing you. As these have knock on effects.