feeling brassic?
Moderator: Peak Moderation
feeling brassic?
This is a good explanation of the effects of inflation...
I listen to the argument between the deflationists and inflationists, however in all the essentials we are rapidly getting poorer..
http://www.tullettprebon.com/Announceme ... 130220.pdf
I listen to the argument between the deflationists and inflationists, however in all the essentials we are rapidly getting poorer..
http://www.tullettprebon.com/Announceme ... 130220.pdf
pɐɯ ǝuoƃ s,plɹoʍ ǝɥʇ
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- UndercoverElephant
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I don't think there's any doubt that our standard of living is being eroded rapidly from many different directions simultaneously. It's not just retail prices, but everything from pension security, the cost of a university education, the value and return people get on their savings and 101 other things.
Apart from the banks, there are very few winners out there at the moment. I suspect Aldi and Lidl are doing quite well though.
Apart from the banks, there are very few winners out there at the moment. I suspect Aldi and Lidl are doing quite well though.
"We fail to mandate economic sanity because our brains are addled by....compassion." (Garrett Hardin)
- UndercoverElephant
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Booze is hardly "essential" though is it?vtsnowedin wrote: I note that the only "essential" thing that tracks real wages is the price of booze.
EDIT: Nor is tobacco, which they've included in the analysis.
And since tax/duty hikes almost inevitably get put on them more than anything other than fuel, it seems it would distort the picture rather a lot.
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They didn't consult me as to what to include on the list of essentials and would not consider either booze or tobacco or pot essentials but many a cold house with no food in the fridge will have a half full bottle and a full ash tray.the_lyniezian wrote:Booze is hardly "essential" though is it?vtsnowedin wrote: I note that the only "essential" thing that tracks real wages is the price of booze.
EDIT: Nor is tobacco, which they've included in the analysis.
And since tax/duty hikes almost inevitably get put on them more than anything other than fuel, it seems it would distort the picture rather a lot.
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That's probably a fair proportion of the problem right there. Is it that we're feeling the squeeze beyond what is acceptable, or do some just have a misguided view of their spending priorities (let alone what really ought to constitute an acceptable standard of living)?vtsnowedin wrote:They didn't consult me as to what to include on the list of essentials and would not consider either booze or tobacco or pot essentials but many a cold house with no food in the fridge will have a half full bottle and a full ash tray.
Mind you given that (whilst on the dole) I waste enough money on non-essentials I needn't judge, but know I could live without them if I had to.
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That's pure unsupported conjecture.vtsnowedin wrote:They didn't consult me as to what to include on the list of essentials and would not consider either booze or tobacco or pot essentials but many a cold house with no food in the fridge will have a half full bottle and a full ash tray.the_lyniezian wrote:Booze is hardly "essential" though is it?vtsnowedin wrote: I note that the only "essential" thing that tracks real wages is the price of booze.
EDIT: Nor is tobacco, which they've included in the analysis.
And since tax/duty hikes almost inevitably get put on them more than anything other than fuel, it seems it would distort the picture rather a lot.
"Tea's a good drink - keeps you going"
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More like actual life experience. I know more then a few people that are poor and have spent a lot of my life one pay check away from being poor myself with the paychecks about half enough to make it a sure thing. Alcohol and tobacco are the entertainment the poor can afford most of the time but they are truly addictive and if the money stops coming in they are the last thing let go of. It is awfully easy to point out better courses of action for someone else but when it is your turn you will find it ain't so easy.featherstick wrote:That's pure unsupported conjecture.vtsnowedin wrote:They didn't consult me as to what to include on the list of essentials and would not consider either booze or tobacco or pot essentials but many a cold house with no food in the fridge will have a half full bottle and a full ash tray.the_lyniezian wrote: Booze is hardly "essential" though is it?
EDIT: Nor is tobacco, which they've included in the analysis.
And since tax/duty hikes almost inevitably get put on them more than anything other than fuel, it seems it would distort the picture rather a lot.
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Which is why, ironically, it is easier for them to resist the booze, at least in terms of it taking over their lives. If anyone doesn't understand why, they have never experienced real poverty. I don't just mean the immediate monetary kind and its immediate consequences. I mean the kind where you watch as your life slips out of view and the only things left are fighting, drinking and f***ingvtsnowedin wrote:Quite true of course but the upper classes don't ever have to choose between their booze and food for their children or the rent.UndercoverElephant wrote:Alcoholism does not respect class boundaries.