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posted by FatPhil on Tuesday August 22 2017, @01:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the Philosophers-Stone dept.

"Although today high levels of inequality in the United States remain a pressing concern for a large swath of the population, monetary policy and credit expansion are rarely mentioned as a likely source of rising wealth and income inequality. [...]

The rise in income inequality over the past 30 years has to a significant extent been the product of monetary policies fueling a series of asset price bubbles. Whenever the market booms, the share of income going to those at the very top increases.[...]

[F]inancial institutions benefit disproportionately from money creation, since they can purchase more goods, services, and assets for still relatively low prices. This conclusion is backed by numerous empirical illustrations. For instance, the financial sector contributed massively to the growth of billionaire's wealth"

Source: https://mises.org/library/how-central-banking-increased-inequality

I'll leave my comments as comments, but note that The Mises Institute is proudly, one might say almost by definition, Austrian School. Both the Institute and the School have had their fair share of criticism. Which of course doesn't mean that individual author is wrong on this particular matter. -- Ed.(FP)


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  • (Score: 2) by TheRaven on Tuesday August 22 2017, @03:35PM

    by TheRaven (270) on Tuesday August 22 2017, @03:35PM (#557534) Journal
    There is an economic benefit in having shops. If everyone needed to go and find the suppliers of the commodity that they want and negotiate individually then this would be a significant drain on everyone's productivity. The problem is that we have somehow been conditioned to believe that when the shops are selling other money, rather than other commodities, that they deserve some special treatment and huge salaries for the shopkeepers.
    --
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