• @Croquette
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    42 months ago

    Yeah and look 2 years back on your same graph and see the big 11% in one month.

    And let’s not forget that this is multiplicative. So these months/years with high inflation are still felt today even if the inflation is relatively normal.

    But you are disingenuous in your arguments, while accusing others of doing that same thing.

    So kindly fuck off

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      -12 months ago

      That’s in line with the inflation numbers. Food costs did not outpace inflation in any significant way

      • @Croquette
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        12 months ago

        If the food cost follows the inflation and the inflation is 20%, will you say that food prices are ok because they follow inflation?

        It would be fine if the wage followed the same inflation as food and housing, but the reality is that wage lag and stagnate behind inflation.

        So yeah, if your groceries cost you 20% and you haven’t received an equivalent wage increase, then your groceries cost significantly more in absolute term because you still have the same money as before, but your food cost more for the same grocery basket you bought before inflation.

        But again, you are disingenuous, so probably just a troll. I won’t respond anymore.

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          0
          edit-2
          2 months ago

          I would say you can’t use food as an argument for why 20% inflation is a wrong number

          Remember, the inflation-adjusted earnings also have to go up 20% just to stay the same. You don’t have the same money as before, your paycheck must increase by 20% for your real earnings to stay the same.

          If the graph says real earnings are up 1%, your paycheck went up 21%

          If your paycheck didn’t increase, then you can just say that it didn’t track the inflation numbers, food prices or whatever doesn’t matter since it’s the real earnings that are too low