6) This doesn't accomplish anything, really: it's just a 1.5-for-1 stock split in the US Dollar. If a loaf of bread cost $4 before, it costs $6 now; everyone has 1.5x as many USD, and all prices go up 1.5x.
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16) And, in fact, since 2000, inflation has averaged ~2.3%/year.
So far, everything looks reasonable: the gov't keeps printing $, it causes ~2.5% inflation, it offsets the risk of investing, and scales up during recessions when risk is the highest.
So what's the worry?
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17) Well, let's return to the rate of monetary supply increase.
M2 has been about $20T. Also, recently monetary supply/debt/etc. have been increasing at about $3.5b/year--so roughly 17%/year.
That's up from 10% over the past decade, and 3% over the 2000's.
Uh oh?
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23) Some of this is the rich getting richer; some is _new_ people climbing higher than anyone from 2007.
But, one way or another, it's happening:
forbes.com/sites/isabelle
The richest people are worth 3x as much as 2007's richest.
But _median_ income has only grown ~33%.
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