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It saw tremendous inflation, just less than the 70s and 80s, and this due to two different things.

First, companies just began making shitty products. Use glued and compressed pulp instead of wood, use fructose instead of glucose, use bleached and desiccated wheat, use chips instead of anything mechanical, use cheaper less pure and thinner metals, etc. in the realm of food there was also shrinkflation.

Second, the USA exported much of its inflation as dollar imperialism.

Today, making products of less quality is nearly impossible without sacrificing sales, and the USA has run out of countries to add to its empire while simultaneously having sanctioned enough countries that they’ve now formed their own trading bloque. All of this means that dollars are staying at home after printing and that dollars are starting to come home from the rest of the world. This follows after the government shutdown parts of the economy and concomitantly printed trillions. So, there’s now rather high inflation once again.

Deregulation actually played less important a part of all of the financialization of the economy than did the transition to debt-based economics. The inversion of time in money is a dance with the devil, and the devil usually wins that dance.




Wonder if anyone's written anything about the inevitability of the decline of profit.


They have, extensively, but it's not a story the Jedi would tell you.


Can you please share some authors or sources from the Empire that I can read?


You're not going to find many good critiques of the empire from within the empire.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_saving_glut

I may have exaggerated slightly, but it's a touchy subject because investment is the legitimate way by which rich people get paid for being rich, which is how class works in capitalist societies. The long term sustainability of investment supply / demand dynamics have deep implications for the legitimacy of this enterprise, its winners and losers, and the policies that prop them up (or don't).




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