Yes, I understand the extreme anti-fiat view. I've heard it from radical goldbugs & Austrians for decades. It's not supported by even mainstream Austrians or fringe-but-reputable economists. Or evidence. It's moral outrage masquerading as empirical claims. https://twitter.com/paul_btc/status/1012769551002619904 …
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Sure, inflation is a morally questionable hidden tax that distorts the economy. That doesn't make it infinitely bad. Notice the loaded language "out of the charts" (tautologically false, just adjust chart scale), the exaggerated claim that not even one millennial can buy a house.
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This is right-wing virtue signaling, their equivalent of leftist moral outrage. Inflation=bad, so we must only talk about the bad things it does to bad people & good things to good people. To mention limits to it's badness is to defend badness which is heresy.
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Sorry "Currency Justice Warriors", but some of us have been sorting through fringe economic theories for 20 years. We don't take right-wing bluster any better than left-wing bluster. We use models and examine facts. We know outrage is the sign of an emotionally-driven position.
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Replying to @patrissimo @MimeticValue
20 years. Wow. Thats the time ago Nash started talking about an international ecurrency with a stable supply and how it will asymptotically force central banks to print inter-relationall stable money. Looks like you are the ignorant one.
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Umm...people have been talking about hard money & currency debasement for millennia. Austrian economics has had sophisticated critiques of inflation for 60+ yrs (with roots in 19th C). Man, kids these days think they invented everything...
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