Why did we not see hyperinflation after the 08 crisis? In fact inflation stayed very low for years

Why did we not see hyperinflation after the 08 crisis? In fact inflation stayed very low for years.
How is this time different then?

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realagriculture.com/2018/02/u-s-dairy-subsidies-equal-73-percent-of-producer-returns-says-new-report/
youtube.com/watch?v=MpG-r9FnnXY
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

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Source on the female(male)?

because the world is so interconnected, every US crisis means a global crisis
an in a global crisis, everyone wants the dollar

the jews have finally figured out their perpetual motion printing machine

because obama was a BASED BLACK BVLL and trump is small cuck

Tranny faggot with yet another pointless thread

we won't have hyperinflation now either. Crypto-fags are just too stupid to understand basic-economics....

The one really concerning thing is that in '08 there wasn't a large loss of consumer transactions the way there is now. More of the losses were financial. Right now supply chains just aren't working.

As long as people need to dump inventory prices will fall, but after that they could rise depending on how people spend. Really it depends on how seriously people take isolation and for how long. If everybody still wants to buy TP when supplies run out we'll see inflation, but I think people have mostly stocked up on essentials.

There are arguments for both sides but personally I see the current situation as very deflationary, and so the fed intervention and stimulus probably won't do much damage. Demand has been hit extremely hard by distancing and fears of a depression. We'll just have to see which factor ends up being stronger.

Fut8nari

We saw it in fixed assets. Did you not notice houses are 4x even though a pint of milk isn’t?

increasing money supply and shrinking amount of products and services to buy. How is that not going to end in (Hyper)-Inflation.
Ignore the increasing default rates come next quarter that will require at least Deutsche to get a bail out with money coming right out of the printer.

it's not going to end in hyperinflation because the dollar is king. as long as the dollar is in demand (which it always is in a crisis, look at the charts and look at history), it doesn't really matter how much you print.

Because that extra money is taking up the downward market pressure. I highly doubt it will influence prices at the consumer level

This. Most of the inflation was confined to assets. I felt in in food prices as well.

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I remember buying chocolate for 0.30 eurocents. Its now closing in on 2 euros per bar

You did get inflation, only in stocks, real estate and bonds instead of pasta and toilet paper. All the gains since 2008 have essentially been inflation from printed Fed money.

damn nice areolae. not too big not too small

Outsourcing to China has hidden inflation by reducing the cost of manufactured goods. The prices for things that can't be outsourced such as housing and college tuition has skyrocketed since 2008. The rise in housing and tuition represent true inflation without outsourcing.

EU is fucked. Spain, Italy, Greece.
Automotive industry getting rekt as well so they can't just hand the bill over to france & germany. UK is already out. A healthcare crisis lasting as long as 18 months and a economic crisis at the same time. Interest rates already at a negative, so no more stimulus from the ECB.
I don't see how this does not spiral down into a full blown global economic crisis.

Ddin't you see that UK and Germany spent over 1 tn euros combined in fiscal stimulus?

yes, inevitably causing inflation in the near future

Asset inflation has been crazy since 09.
Nominal consumer price inflation has been low
REAL consumer price inflation has been VERY HIGH

Between 2013 to 2018, consumer debt spending only went up about 156%. However, net wealth went up over 1020%. Where did all of that wealth suddenly come from?

The Chinese middle class becoming a thing presumably
but mostly asset inflation

I was referring to America alone. The facts still stand.

You have to look at things from a labor standpoint, not a cash standpoint. People have to expend more time towards labor than they did before to buy things. Meaning, inflation. How much inflation? Well how much more time do they have to spend working for something they originally spent working x amount of hours for?

>you have to look at things from a labor standpoint
not unless I decide to become a Smithian, which I won't anytime soon. Labor theory is ok but not good enough.

I mean, isn't there other reasons for that?

realagriculture.com/2018/02/u-s-dairy-subsidies-equal-73-percent-of-producer-returns-says-new-report/

>Nominal consumer price inflation has been low
>REAL consumer price inflation has been VERY HIGH

Explain.

>even a woman has a bigger dick than me
feels pretty bad

Labor is not a theory. It is

Real producers trade labor for x. Nowadays it's FRNs. Back in the day it was for silver, gold, actual material goods, services.

Money is a commodity, and when it's value can be expanded or contracted, is when you have to ask, who is controlling the money, and how are they benefitting?

Why do I have to work more than people 50 years before, for the same thing? Where is all of this energy going to?

>because obama killed the velocity of money and turned on a perpetual printing press
>velocity has increased since

thats a man

If you think America can have hyperinflation you should kill yourself immediately

We saw it, not on everyday goods but on assets.

Because you not very smart? Houses saw inflation between 150%-1500% depending on market?
Medical has seen inflation anywhere from 100%-10000%?
New vehicle prices inflated?
College tuition inflated?
They have been funneling the money to assets like stocks to keep things like food and gas from going up. Are you kidding me inflation is running rampant at 5% or more a year.

they did the same in 2008-2009. Where did the inflation go?

You have the same mindset I had a couple months back. Wealth isnt finite like energy. Credit cycles allow the total wealth of the world to expand and contract. At least that's how I reconcile it.

Tricked again gosh dammit

useful stuff like food and housing prices went way up but consoomer electronics dropped like altcoins.

The labor theory of value is absolutely a theory. Labor-time itself doesn't account for all the variables in the price calculation.
I agree with you that most use-value comes from labor, but not enough exchange value comes from labor for it to definitively determine economic strength/growth.
You're flat wrong if you think that you're working more than people fifty years ago for the same thing. Imagine how much people in the 70s would pay for streaming.

I look at so much tranny porn that I know when every picture is a trap or not.

based

>dollar is in demand
2000s called, boomer. Petrodollar is dead, Russia and Iran are selling oil for Euros and Yuan. Not mentioning the demand for oil is at 50 years low.
Not mentioning US is surrendered to Taliban and didn't respond to multiple direct attacks on US military bases by Iranian forces. By now everyone has realized US is a has-been and no one takes the burgers or their green toilet paper seriously anymore.

Yas Forums understanding of inflation is non existant, people thing QE causes high inflation when in reality it simply slows down or stops disinflation

housing is a good example of what that guy is saying
how long and hard had boomers to work for their mcMansions compared to millenials for their cuck pods?

>disinflation
A faggot who doesn't know the word "deflation" is trying to lecture people.
How about you kill yourself, you smelly nigger?

I don't know who's trolling who or if we're all just retards.

Because suburbs didn't exist then and they needed to put the GIs somewhere
Now everybody wants a house in the middle of New York. It's irrational. I know what you guys mean but the postwar boom was a really weird distortion. There was a lot of strain in the 70s as a result of it.

We did. My house went 5x. 500% inflation in 10 years

Social media is affecting how people invest

The manly nose is a dead give away

look at the damn charts bro
dollar is in high demand, it's gaining against pretty much everything except the yen

Deflation and disinflation are two different things you stupid nigger.

>Why did we not see hyperinflation after the 08 crisis?
nigga look at the stock market for the last 10 years, up until coronachan. free money yo

lmao nice economics bro
god damn it i love this board

There was hyper inflation but it was localized
The average person just became significantly poorer as the value of their dollar was stipt
But since they didnt earn more dollars because the printing never reached them “inflationary” pressure was “low”.

Youll just have a few generations of really poor people who will never retire.

Blackpill. Millenials are 30 yet have no wealth

(((Credit cycles)))
What if business cycles were actually financial/economical manipulations?

I mean our currency and economy is quintessentially controlled. You mean to tell me private banks and others that shilled for such things don't have divided interests in this?

The Fed continues to help banks left and right, yet many Americans can't live beyond 2 months of expenses alone. Weird...
Money Masters 1996

We did, it all went into real estate.

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Prove it.

At the beginning I could make a house in a few months. Maybe even a year or two. Now most people have to spend 15 plus years to make something similar. Industrialization has been misused and exploited.

>fast food costs tripled
>car costs doubled
>housing costs tripled
>all in 10 years
Bro we DID have hyperinflation, just not in your pay.

If you still believe that labor or money can't be manipulated you may want to sit down and consider the following.

youtube.com/watch?v=MpG-r9FnnXY

This isn't something new either. It has been going on for who knows how long.
"There is nothing new under the sun".
It's our job to come to the light of it and remit it from existence.

Are you measuring by Fed numbers or CPI?

Inflation is a steady rise in prices. Increases in the money supply do not necessarily lead to a steady rise in prices.

Were making 90s wages with 2020 prices