Damus
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Want to understand how inflation impacts your purchasing power?

Let's look at The New Yorker, which publishes the price of each copy right on the front of the magazine.

1925: 15 cents
2024: $8.99

What the heck happened to make The New Yorker so much more expensive?



It's important to understand that technology is naturally DEFLATIONARY.

Everything should be getting cheaper over time, including The New Yorker.

Think about it: printing, writing, & editing technology has improved tremendously since 1925.

So, why is the magazine more expensive now?

From 1925 to 1971, The New Yorker increased in price from 15 cents to 50 cents, an increase of 233.33%.

That's pretty dramatic, but not THAT bad...

But from 1971 to 2024, price increased from 50 cents to $8.99, an increase of 1698%.

So, WTF happened in 1971?

In 1971, Richard Nixon "temporarily" suspended the convertibility of dollars to gold, ending the Gold Standard.

This meant that the Federal Reserve could now print dollars out of thin air without restriction.

Increasing the money supply by creating new money out of thin air is literally "inflation."

"Prices rising" is the result of inflation.

When more monetary units are created, the purchasing power of the monetary units that already exist decreases.

When the government/central bank prints money out of thin air, they are STEALING your purchasing power.

Here's The New Yorker over a few decades:

1971: $0.50
1980: $1.00
1990: $1.75
2000: $3.00

The magazine did not become more valuable, our MONEY became LESS valuable.





By looking at this example of The New Yorker, which cost 15 cents in 1925 and costs $8.99 today, we see that the U.S. dollar has lost approximately 98.33% of its purchasing power in less than 100 years.

This is what happens when you print money out of thin air...

When money is controlled by the State, you are powerless to stop the destruction of your purchasing power.

Technology should be making everything LESS expensive over time, but even something as simple as a magazine gets more and more expensive over time.


So, what can you do to protect yourself from the government/central bank printing money out of thin air and destroying your purchasing power?

Study #Bitcoin with @THE Bitcoin Podcast

There will only ever be 21 million bitcoin and no government or central bank can print more.
1832❤️78🤙30🚀32❤️2🌱1
Corrado Alvaro · 80w
The New Yorker is way more expensive but way less valuable than years past.
TugaJoe · 80w
https://x.com/WallStreetSilv/status/1825577775778111528?t=a_bJ7QjGRvXzYAk2_LyZBw&s=19
Speedster · 80w
So somewhat counter intuitive is the inflation rate decreases over time. From 1925-1971 price increase is on average 7.9% per year compounded. From 1971-2000 price increase is 6.5% per year and from 1971-2024 it’s 6.0% per year on average.
Tom A · 80w
Great post! I assume sales volumes have dropped as with a lot of printed and paid media. The quality drops as they make up the short fall with more internal advertising, before long it’s 90% ads. I am not a reader, but I imagine the above phenomenon is also a reason for the price increase.
Pleb34 · 80w
The majority of money supply increase since 1925 is not through “printing”. It is through the process of loan creation by banks.
GrumpyGardener · 80w
Certainly not a demand issue.
OldmanCrypto · 80w
Great post making it clear that we need an anti deflationary means of exchange like Bitcoin
Гоце · 80w
Publishing/printing technology is just one small part of it. What matters is content quality. You need to find and pay high quality educated and tallented writers. In today's economy you can't pay them the salary from 100 years ago. So the point is valid, money are loosing value, it's just that tech...
Johntoshi Nashimoto · 80w
Especially when they can use AI instead of actual journalists.
KaliYuga · 80w
The New-Yorker example makes sense and I fully agree with the general idea of deflationary technology, but it can't be extended to every product and service. Technology by itself will not make everything cheaper. Just look at a car made in the 60s and compare it to a current car. Sure, there's a tr...
Kian Jer · 80w
Fully agreed. Posted a similar note too. Same thing for gold, real estate. Value increase yes, to a certain extent, but primarily driven by money supply increase. When I use the same line of argument for friends and family, they revert to "observational" counterarguments like "because wages are i...
Y⚡ · 78w
Thanks for sharing
fletch · 78w
Oddly enough, the facial expressions on the roller coaster should be reversed, no?
Ben Ewing · 78w
But if you didn’t have fixat currency you wouldn’t have been able to raise an army and instead it would now be the New Tokyoer