Originally posted by BrilloPad
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UK inflation posts unexpected rise in March
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Interesting that the Beeb chose to air a program on the '70s this week.
Are we being softened up for an anticipated rerun of the inflation / industrial unrest cycle of those days?
Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ hereComment
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Which can be printed. The big losers from inflation are savers.Originally posted by AtW View PostPublic sector and pensions would require more money to compensate for real inflation ...Comment
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Aren't they getting away with it because they don't have to worry to much about annoying creditors, because these are either savers, pensioners, future generations or the government itself courtesy of the printing press.Comment
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Article in Telegraph here Why you can't inflate away the eurozone's troubles – Telegraph Blogs
But it is totally false. What caused WW2 was not deflation. It was Versailles treaty and the USA calling in loans following the wall street crash ( Weimar Republic and the Great Depression ).
I am still trying work out what the downside of inflation is. Unless you are a saver it is not clear. To me anyway.Comment
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I don't understand how banks are making money on 1.5% interest mortgages when inflation is 10%, or whatever the real non-ipod-fiddled inflation rate is.Comment
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Quite right too.Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostWhy can't they just admit that the real inflation target is as high as possible to inflate the debt away?Comment
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Their public main objective. Their real objective was different I think.Originally posted by AtW View PostBadly, but that's not because they are idiots - they are very smart people who know exactly what they do but they've used all their experience and authority to keep rates down and print money whilst completely disregarding their main objective - keep inflation within the range.
Still, it was good while it lasted.
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Aren't they borrowing the money from the BoE at 0.5%?Originally posted by TimberWolf View PostI don't understand how banks are making money on 1.5% interest mortgages when inflation is 10%, or whatever the real non-ipod-fiddled inflation rate is.
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See the news tonight?
Looks like BoE finally moved on from just a blip to expect inflation to remain high.Comment
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