I am no big city economist, but it’s really annoying how deeply inflated everything is. We see regular inflation at the market, the mall (do people even go to those anymore?), and sadly in our rents. We even shrink-flation which I heard on NPR about how a beverage for example is smaller but higher price. It a really fuckin’ lame.
Whenever I say “ :improve-society: man I wish didn’t have to pay so much for XYZ” I often hear the classics like “supply and demand” , or “global supply chain”, or “you be happy you can afford XYZ” which got me thinking how would leftists solve this.
Off the top of my head I would imagine things like CEOs would have some pay cap, stopping C-levels from siphoning their profits up, stronger labor unions, and some other stuff but I really don’t know. Professor Wolff always talks about worker co-ops and I would imagine workers owning stuff is better (which it is of course) but how ideally would it look? :wolff-shining:
What do leftist thinkers say would curb inflation? How would even lightweight leftist economic policies help keep prices for stuff reasonable? I just curious as I would like to think about how leftist theory would address this real problem we all experience.
What have smarter leftist people than I said would fight inflation.
In the good old days of the Soviet Union the price of a bicycle was stamped directly into the frame of the bike. There wasn't any concern about the price changing because the labor inputs that went into it were all well-known.