Leisher wrote: ↑Sun Nov 10, 2024 7:05 pm
Yes, I know, "invisible hand", but as I mentioned, consumers have lost their power over the hand.
 
I feel like they gave a lot of their power up when the free money started rolling in.
They spent it.  All of it.  Much of it on nonessentials.  Created a huge demand, along with a supply shortage, etc.  Prices started going up, but they didn't care.  They were spending found money.
With this free money, many people quit their jobs.  They didn't need to work any more.
Created a labor shortage and people (greed) took advantage of it quitting and demanding more pay.  Driving costs up.
When the free money ran out, people liked this new lifestyle of excess.  They didn't go back to work and started living off of savings and credit cards.
People eventually started going back to work.  They lost their labor power and wages went back down (in many sectors).
Now the bill is due (credit cards) and they are scrambling to pay for stuff.  Plus, the prices they helped drive up are sticking cause 'fuck you, pay me' from the corporations.  People are still trying to buy the same stuff they used to, but the prices are higher, creating stress, etc.
They still have a hand in everything, but everyone is going to have to tighten their belts to pay off the mess they helped create.  But no one wants to.
Rich people feel it, it just doesn't hurt as much.  It's eating into their disposable income.  Poor people feel it cause they have zero disposable income unless they go back on Ramen noodles, which they don't want to do.
If people want prices to go back down, they must stop buying stuff.  We can't keep trying to be that farmer guy from earlier.  "I want the price of the stuff I sell to stay high.  But I want the prices of the stuff you sell, and I buy to be lower".