RE:RE:RE:RE:Here's a beautyNonCred, the article didn't do what was intended. Why? Because I had figured things out many years before this insignificant article was published. Somehow your sensitivities were that an article speaking to the effects of inflation on a major development is taboo and deemed enraging?
You are right, I don't know much about you but you have put forth little besides - oh well inflation just happened, we will have to live with what we have been delt with, who knew? That is exactly the type of rationale by Canadians that doesn't demand accountability but continues to vote in the Governments that are creating the dangerous environment for our state of affairs.
As for your example of consumers demanding the extra's in life I think we are all aware of that, right? It's really quite simple NonCred - government policy could have curbed that demand and avoided some of the excesses that we live with - and they should have kown that, no excuses. Keeping interest rates artificially low while increasing the money supply - allowed the excess to flourish as they thought is was a productive way to stimulate the economy.
The problem is the money was distributed and distorted sectors. For example, banks had access to almost endless available cash that they were willing to lend out to anyone with modest credit ratings. The more money is available in the economy, the more is available to allow for prices to increase, it's the enabling factor as well as artificially low interest rates. As you probably know if you went to the bank for a line of credit for $10 k the bank would say it we give you $30 k we can get you a better rate. This is one of the ways that directly contributes to inflation..You tighten the money supply, the banks have less to lend and it stems how much and at what rate they lend out and housing for example doesn't escallate as fast. The money available was so large that it enabled housing to became a speculative commodity. The housing crisis/decline of 2008 in the US is a perfect example, but here's the key - overall housing declined only 20-25% which would be considered a market corrective decline to rebalance the market and flush out the excesses. But is was amost lethal as the leverage on top of leverage on top of leverage by lenders, banks, people was so big it almost ended our free market economy.
The problem is the Genie is out of the bottle and debt it is now the biggest threat. Cedit has been lent out at record levels to Canadians, Governments at all levels, that are so highly leveraged that tightening the money supply can be exceptionally harsh as it increases the debt load. As usual the lower and middle class will suffer the most.
But the Government has a plan and the brilliant minds at work came up with a novel, unproven policy, that is demonstating its failure at real-time, that says - lets add a carbon tax to fossil fuels because we will be a stronger and more resiliant economy. I'd rather not dissuss this in length because let's just say the world in 2024 will consume a record amount of oil, gas coal ect. But the point is we both can agree that the carbon tax is inflationary right?
And where exactly was the genisis of this carbon taxation born that compounds the burden to society at the worst time? In the leftist, unelected halls of the UN and WEF that dictates to nations what policies to pass. Lap-dod and runt-pup are all in, enjoy their policies because as the saying goes - you deserve the Governement you elect.