Exactly. Believing in a higher power? That's cool. Believing in the god, etc. of the bible? [IMG] reminds me of a hold up problem I used to...
[IMG]
think that was when David was Hoff the Wagon. [IMG]
big gov ain’t an insult to libs ‘Ike it is to you Obama conservatives
I was on a cross country ski course with him in the late 90s. He’s hard to miss out there. He lived for a while in the 4 corners area & coached a...
can you use a bigger font?
expectations of higher future prices increases demand now to avoid those higher future prices which all else equals increases prices. This is why...
I still think you & everyone else is discounting the role that expected inflation has on demand, &, hence, inflation. expecting inflation can be a...
If people are using GDP as a proxy for agg. demand, that's problematic. It seems a better proxy for quantity demanded (or, even more accurately...
of course not necessarily. But it is certainly a common way in which prices increase at a greater clip than costs; a simple increase in demand can...
the article which is the subject of this thread sez: "Analysis of the financial accounts of many of the UK’s biggest businesses found that...
prices that a seller tries to charge are irrelevant. Asking ain't getting. The prices at which goods are exchanged are what matters & that...
What do you find unappealing about an increase in demand causing prices & profits to increase? You seem to think only 1 side of the mkt matters.
well, there is empirical evidence & typically this a a major reason why folks advocate for anti-trust enforcement. 2nd, doesn't common sense tell...
But, you are ignoring the role of expected inf on demand. That was 1 of the FEDs biggest concerns just months ago, & probably still is. Pretty...
That could be, but it seems there is lower hanging behavioral fruit. If you think prices will be higher in the future, what are going to do now?
Since the greedflationists are incapable of constructing an arg, I'll help you. One of the costs of a more concentrated industry is that collusion...
You've been hammering the supply side story of over a year now. BTW, the article is making a supply & demand argument. The supply curve is a cost...
That article sez nothing. has no definition for excess profits except that price increases exceeded cost increases. What typically causes that? Oh...
I'll take things that addicts say for $1230*. * thanks Biden