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| Originally posted by Capitalizt I love how people who complain about monopolies always have a solution that involves giving more power and influence to the ultimate monopoly..the only entity with a true legal right to use coercion, force, fraud, and physical violence. |
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| For all your talk about competition, isn't a little hypocritical for you to disregard an obvious result of unregulated capitalism, allowing monopolies which crowd out all other competitors, raise prices, make unnatural profits, etc. |
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I love how people who complain about fraud or force have this immature notion that such issues are the domain of government alone. Business has never been known to exert force or to defraud the public!! Lols. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Modern example of a company doing all of these things? Wal-Mart seems to be the punching bag of many lefties who criticize monopolies...but you will notice they got where they are by offering LOW "cut-throat" prices that competitors can't match..and rather than raising prices after being dominant and attempting to "gouge" consumers, they maintain their dominance by keeping prices low. |
I'm actually not inclined to defend walmart pk..since they are intertwined with the govt in so many ways..but they do offer far lower prices than any major competitor in America. I can tell you from personal experience that they destroy mall department stores when it comes to clothing prices, and easily beat retailers like Target and K-mart when it comes to more general goods..and the prices of groceries are also around 10% lower than the biggest grocer in America, Kroger Co. I read some of that PBS article, and their stock replenishment system described by John Lehman is fascinating.. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/front...ets/inside.html Minutes after an item is sold, a replacement is sent, and it's back on shelves the following day.. I don't care how much you hate them..You must admit this is awesome! 
I had to buy a pair of dress pants a few weeks back and grabbed them "on sale" for $40 at Kohls dept store.. Stopping by Wal-Mart on the way home I found the EXACT same thing (brand and size) for $15...frakkin crazy. Now you can come back with the "personal experience doesn't prove shit yadda yadda" argument..but I beg to differ. Their profits are a culmination of the "personal experience" of millions of customers who have discovered the same thing I have..that their prices on everything from food to plasma TVs are simply unmatched.
Do some people pay a price for this? Yep! Does the bigness and efficiency of Wal-Mart crowd out small businesses who can't compete on their level? Yep! Does Wal-Mart's demand for rock bottom prices limit the profits of their suppliers? Yep! Is this a bad thing for consumers? Nope! 
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt I'm actually not inclined to defend walmart pk..since they are intertwined with the govt in so many ways..but they do offer far lower prices than any major competitor in America. I can tell you from personal experience that they destroy mall department stores when it comes to clothing prices, and easily beat retailers like Target and K-mart when it comes to more general goods..and the prices of groceries are also around 10% lower than the biggest grocer in America, Kroger Co. I read some of that PBS article, and their stock replenishment system described by John Lehman is fascinating.. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/front...ets/inside.html Minutes after an item is sold, a replacement is ordered and sent the way to the store..lol, awesome. ![]() I had to buy a pair of dress pants a few weeks back and grabbed them "on sale" for $40 at Kohls dept store.. Stopping by Wal-Mart on the way home I found the EXACT same thing (brand and size) for $15...frakkin crazy. Now you can come back with the "personal experience doesn't prove shit yadda yadda" argument..but I beg to differ. Their profits are a culmination of the "personal experience" of millions of customers who have discovered the same thing I have..that their prices on everything from food to plasma TVs are simply unmatched. Do some people pay a price for this? Yep! Does the bigness and efficiency of Wal-Mart crowd out small businesses who can't compete on their level? Yep! Does Wal-Mart's demand for rock bottom prices limit the profits of their suppliers? Yep! Is this a bad thing for consumers? Nope! |
Well jer, if you hold a utilitarian "greatest good for the greatest number" philosophy, you should be willing to overlook these drawbacks given the increased purchasing power they give to tens of millions of customers. But it is your prerogative if you want to boycott them. Every dollar spent is a sign of approval, and every dollar not spent is a vote of "no confidence".
Long live democracy.
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| Originally posted by jerZ07002 3 - paying employees so little that the employees can shop nowhere but walmart. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN lols! that's classic |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Do some people pay a price for this? Yep! Does the bigness and efficiency of Wal-Mart crowd out small businesses who can't compete on their level? Yep! Does Wal-Mart's demand for rock bottom prices limit the profits of their suppliers? Yep! Is this a bad thing for consumers? Nope! |
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Supermarkets have bulked up. These days they�re retail superpowers who make money not just when we eat or drink but increasingly when we fill the petrol tank, play pokies or buy a hammer from the local hardware � and they�re quietly stalking pharmacies, newsagents and florists. But food is their staple. Coles and Woolworth�s sell 70 per cent of the dry groceries and half the fresh food that Australians consume � among the highest concentrations of market power in the developed world. Last month the competition watchdog the ACCC officially ticked this arrangement, insisting the market is working. But the growth in supermarket muscle has come at a cost to many suppliers and small retailers. "Crippling" is how one industry analyst terms Coles� and Woolies� power over food producers; the regulator calls it "simply tough dealing". "It�s just eating my farm away, we�re just finished," says a despairing pumpkin grower whose produce retails for as much as 10 times the price he gets for it. He scoffs at the ACCC�s view that the gap between farm gate prices and the checkout isn�t growing. Don�t like pumpkin? How about an ice-cream story to illustrate supermarkets� throat-hold? Four Corners meets an ice-cream maker who buys a lot of milk � and bizarrely he gets it cheaper from his local supermarket than from the wholesale processor. Why? Because the wholesaler has to accept ultra low prices from the supermarket - and compensates by inflating his price to smaller buyers, says the ice-cream man. Or try sausage. One sausage-maker explains the choice he made when the supermarket told him he had to cut his supply price or get kicked off the shelf: "The only way we would do that was by using lesser quality meat product... and adding soy proteins and what some people might call 'fillings' to extend the product." He then volunteers to Four Corners that he wouldn�t even eat the product himself. Suppliers can reel off a list of punishing "rebates" � fees - that they must pay supermarkets for product promotions, to get paid on time, or just for the privilege and opportunity of supplying goods. But few are bold enough to do so publicly. Like suppliers to the big supermarkets, minnow retailers are fed up � but more outspoken. Small liquor merchants can get some beer and wine cheaper from supermarket-owned retail grog barns than they can from wholesalers. Some refuse to see this as competition: "In the 36 years I�ve been in our two shops I�ve had 12 armed hold-ups, 11 with a gun and one with a machete, and the biggest predator we face is this company here." While Coles� and Woolies� market clout can translate into cheap prices for consumers, there are fears it may threaten the survival of Australia�s food industry. As reporter Stephen Long reveals, these concerns are held by eminent people at the very top of the food chain. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN i fail to see the reasoning behind your support of one particular business, to the detriment of everyone else. http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/cont...08/s2348906.htm |
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| "It�s just eating my farm away, we�re just finished," says a despairing pumpkin grower |
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| Don�t like pumpkin? How about an ice-cream story to illustrate supermarkets� throat-hold? Four Corners meets an ice-cream maker who buys a lot of milk � and bizarrely he gets it cheaper from his local supermarket than from the wholesale processor. Why? Because the wholesaler has to accept ultra low prices from the supermarket |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt I'm not supporting any business philosophically pk. What I support is leaving people the freedom to choose what they want..the freedom to dispose of their money in whatever way they believe will bring them the greatest benefit and happiness. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt This is basically what I said and I'm not denying any of this.. Suppliers are squeezed by these big companies so they can get cheap prices. Does it suck for the suppliers? Absolutely..but the business model of these companies demands that they force prices down so they can sell more goods to the masses. I can sympathize with the suppliers, and in a perfect world they would make extravagant profits and customers would still pay ridiculously low prices..but the world doesn't work that way. It may be a cliche but you really can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs. Does the milk wholesaler make less money than he would like? Yes. Does this make life hard for his family? Probably...but his hardship enables thousands of other families to buy cheap milk products. And he is making some money off the transactions after all (even though he'd like more). Otherwise he wouldn't remain in business for long. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN yet you think businesses limiting the freedom of other businesses is somehow a good thing? |
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sorry mate but you're completely missing the point. i would have much less of an issue if these big companies were passing on the savings to the consumer. but the fact of the matter is that they're not. |
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| i have no problems with businesses making profits and doing all the wonderful things that businesses do. but it bothers me no end when businesses become so large and influential that the traditional rules of capitalism and free markets cease to apply. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt I actually found on a Wal-Mart hating site that their average wage last year for full time associates was $10.68/hr That's pretty damn good for an entry level job...$4/hr above federal minimum wage. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Well jer, if you hold a utilitarian "greatest good for the greatest number" philosophy, you should be willing to overlook these drawbacks given the increased purchasing power they give to tens of millions of customers. But it is your prerogative if you want to boycott them. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Every dollar spent is a sign of approval, and every dollar not spent is a vote of "no confidence". Long live democracy. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt I think businesses competing with other businesses..fighting over a limited number of resources, and striving to make a shitload of money by giving consumers what they want is a very messy and ugly process. It does have some unavoidable casualties..but in the end, yes it's a GREAT thing. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Well they certainly are passing it on to some extent, which is why they are such a popular shopping destination...but no they aren't going to pass on all of the savings. They are in business to maximize profit just like every other corporation on the planet and are going to charge as much as the market will bear. Could they sacrifice some profit to lower prices further? Sure..but what of it? Are you proposing we force them to pass on more of the savings to consumers? What would the implications of that be? Wouldn't it make their prices even MORE attractive and increase their monopoly power further? |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt The traditional rules of capitalism always apply, until the government intervenes. |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Modern example of a company doing all of these things? Wal-Mart seems to be the punching bag of many lefties who criticize monopolies...but you will notice they got where they are by offering LOW "cut-throat" prices that competitors can't match..and rather than raising prices after being dominant and attempting to "gouge" consumers, they maintain their dominance by keeping prices low. This is an example of mass buying power and a very efficient business model. I'm not denying they don't have the power to influence the market and "bully" wholesalers to give them what they want...but this is not a coercive power any way you look at it. The power of coercion resides solely with the state..and for that reason alone you should be much more suspicious of federal power than those who gain power by satisfying public demand. The market punishes irrationality krypt. If Walmart ceased offering people what they desired, their profits would drop. If they started jacking up prices to above market rates, they would invite people to seek alternatives at other stores and e-commerce sites like Amazon (who would be glad to take the business). It would mean a slow and painful death for the largest company on the planet. |
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| As for corporate personhood, I don't think you realize the implications of removing it krypt.. Do you understand the reason it began in the first place? Do you realize that without the ability to form separate entities, every shareholder in a given venture could be held personally liable if management makes a bad decision? This means every shareholder could be sued for damages. Every share of stock you own is a potential guillotine hanging over your head that could become a lien against your house/car and other assets. The risk premium would shoot up like a rocket without corporate personhood and capital investment (along with every world stock market) would collapse. If you want to ban companies from contributing to political campaigns, that's another issue. A particular law could be passed to prevent that, but to remove personhood entirely would be disastrous. |
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| Originally posted by ******** No they say how much the goods are worth, not how much the dollar is worth. Financers say how much the dollar is worth and also set interest rates. |
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| Originally posted by ******** While you can... it ain't easy. While you can set the price of goods, you can get access to them, and you can't get the raw resources unless you run into one of these big people. The common person is disempowered, and you know why.... Sure you can choose where that PPP (purchasing power parity) goes but some things are a given unless you are self sufficient. |
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| Originally posted by ******** oh ye of little faith. Peoples driving adapts to adverse road conditions, people drive responsibility. Fact is.. people break the road rules anyway. The difference is that now atleast people don't need to worry about the government clamping down on them when they break them, so they can live free from false regulation. You have no data to substantiate a world without road rules. The government should move to cushion and develope technology to meet the demands of the people, not push down and suppress the wishes of the people. Serve them, not repress them. |
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| yah cause that doesn't already exist. |
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| Not gonna happen, we came close to that wish Bush, but it could have been worse. (joke) - fact is there are rises and failures.. money doesn't exist.. it is all about materials. People who horde nothing(re: money) are the only ones to suffer, because they didn't contribute to the economy and instead sat on potential productivity - or there was no demand - which meant that prices should increase. Leading to inflation. Leading to interest rate hikes - or the banks accepting lowered profitability, and return on investments. |
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| sure, but the market is regulated, what if it wern't? Basically all it would mean that people could actually trick other people and not go to jail for it. Fact is, it is still happens, and not everyone goes to jail. If you don't trust someone why give them your money? |
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| I also suppport revolutions when government fails to provide for the people. That is the difference. If the government doesn't act to protect the people from corruption the people must act to protect the people. Fact is though. If "tycoons" don't provide for the people through philanthropy then they have a right to be upset, and they have a right to demand freedom if it is oppressed by a member of the public. We can be reasonable and we can support freedom. This is not to say the ultrarich are corrupt and selfish but rather to say monopolies are efficient and well managed. When they cease to be, that is grounds for competition, if you can do better than them. It drives better services. Fact is though I support natural resources to be government run, not private, so monopolization of raw means of production couldn't be monopolized - but product and techonology could if no one steps up to fill the void. Fact is though I don't support IP so it levels the playing field a bit. Price regulation of raw materials based on demand isn't out of the question for the government but price adjustment based on demand, and public need for the produce should be weighted into the governments sales... but the people should have some say in how public corporations are run, and what those values are. Not as far as socialism, but a role of oversight and a charter and mission that serves public interest, rather than a board serving solely the corporations interests, it should be more global in pursuit, and meet the peoples needs. Private corporations have every right to look out for their interests. but government is meant to be a corporation for the people, and frankly it is sad in the case of so many governments that it has turned into a private institution. |
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| I digress and reject that situation 1 trillion dollars becoming fluid will boost the economy, rather than have it locked in stasis.. and drain public resources. Let the private sector live and breath.. if it is so important to the well being of the people it should be a crown corporation / nationalized entity. National security intersts should be under the control of the apparatus.. not private industry for private individuals to reap profits at the expense of the tax payer. |
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| I think there is a stark divide between the people owning a means of production, and the people controling the means of their survival. I think the people should have that right. You describe it as a gun to the head, not a carrot dangling from the end of the stick. It is obvious that the government through the people should have a means of sustained operations, but private individuals shouldn't profit from puppetering and market manipulation, that isn't in the publics interst. |
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| That is how you view it. But frankly that is only in LAW, not in the actual political sense. Those are two stark differences. It means those "people" pay taxes, and can be sued. Fact is though that the whole sense is a abjuration, and really is very stupid. It is the board of directors that is personally responsible for the acts of people in a corporation. While I think it exists for a good reason, I think you are painting a picture that is far from reality. Corporations arn't people, they are legal entities forged by private contracts, and contracts with government. But not people, rather a set of interacting contracts and obligations. People are real, corporations are a placeholder for people, aslo know as head persons. If you didn't know corporation means incorporated within the government. meaning a corporation is the government but the rules are set and agreed how the government adminsiters it.. who is chosen to run it and how people get access to it, what its responsibilites are etc.. just like people in some cases are subjects of government, serving and legally responsible to act within the rules set out by government in their day to day life. There reward, they can have input into who tells them what to do.. but they may or may not get their way. While that isn't free, it is consensual enslavement to enact what might bring about freedom, if it works. |
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| Originally posted by ******** Not gonna happen, we came close to that wish Bush, but it could have been worse. (joke) - fact is there are rises and failures.. money doesn't exist.. it is all about materials. People who horde nothing(re: money) are the only ones to suffer, because they didn't contribute to the economy and instead sat on potential productivity - or there was no demand - which meant that prices should increase. Leading to inflation. Leading to interest rate hikes - or the banks accepting lowered profitability, and return on investments. |
holy crap..I'm having to respond to 5 posts here. I can't keep this up..lol
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| Originally posted by jerZ07002 [quote]unfortunately these issues are out of the control of the individuals who shop at walmart. They approve because they have no choice. Fortunately, I'm well situated as not to give a fuck about saving $400 a year by shopping at walmart. |
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| Originally posted by jerZ07002 10.68 is the AVERAGE full time associate salary, not the averge starting associate salary. 10.68 is not good if you've been on the job for 5 or 6 years. |
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| Originally posted by pkcRAISTLIN Lets stop talking in generalisations. We have some very specific examples in this thread. How is forcing farmers into bankruptcy to feather their own nests a good outcome for consumers? |
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| You seem to have ignored the important timeline. In the past walmart or coles or Woolworths may have provided the very best value for money available. But once market dominance occurs this ceases to be the case. |
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| They have already destroyed most competition, and now they use their dominance to (coerce if you will) increase their profit margins, not through competition of course but veiled threats of economic pressure. It ceases to be a good thing when suppliers do not have the choice to sell their wares elsewhere. |
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| Im not saying they can�t make a profit, im saying they shouldn�t be destroying businesses that provide them with goods without also providing such benefits to the consumer. |
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So you think uncompetitive behaviour due to market dominance is a natural, desirable outcome? How can you champion a �free� market when the activities of some in that market ensure its anything but free? |
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| Originally posted by Krypton Wal-Mart is not a monopoly. They compete against Best Buy, Target, Costco, etc. Wal-Mart is not the only retailer to buy from, therefore, there is no coercion in going to buy products from Wal-Mart. |
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| You know unrestricted capitalism will lead to coercive monopolies just like it did in your golden age (19th early 20th century), when steel, oil, and railroad monopolies, raped consumers to the hilt. This is really what you'r advocating. |
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| Personhood for corporations is ridiculous as it gives constitutional rights to corporations which were meant by the Framers to be for only natural persons. Additionally, who says personhood and liability protection go hand in hand? |
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt Tell that to pk plz. Kthx. |
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| lol..that wasn't exactly a golden age. |
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| I suggest you read more about the railroads and other "monopolies" of the time krypt. State laws were passed that prohibited competition with the 2 major railroads and they were also granted federal subsidies for every mile of track laid. The monopolies had a huge competitive advantage, but it was only achieved with the aid of government favoritism. And krypt, please find me a monopoly with the right to expropriate your property or force you to work against your will..then you can properly call it coercive. Until then the worst any company can do is politely PERSUADE customers to buy from them and workers to work for them. And the worst they can do to suppliers is to abstain from making a purchase above a desired price. Any way you look at it this does not constitute a use of force, fraud, or violence. |
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| Personhood was started to limit liability.. If you can lay the groundwork for an alternate system, I'm all for it.. |
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| but please don't talk about abolishing personhood with no plan in place. Global chaos would ensue. |
I just realized that ******** is partially agreeing with me on some of the issues above. I hereby retract my statements and swear allegiance to Karl Marx.
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| Originally posted by Capitalizt I just realized that ******** is partially agreeing with me on some of the issues above. I hereby retract my statements and swear allegiance to Karl Marx. |

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| Originally posted by ******** |
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| Originally posted by ******** Interest isn't only given on money you borrow but also money you give them, |
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| Originally posted by ******** likewise it effects monetary value, |
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| Originally posted by ******** and the safety of a currency based on how well you can maintain that currencies value. |
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| Originally posted by ******** Eg. interest rates get kept low... if inflation is higher then you won't get return on the value of the currency if it outstrips the valuation based on interest rating. |
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| Originally posted by ******** More currency in circulation lower currency value - meaning you need more of the new value to keep the old value. |
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| Originally posted by ******** It is simple math. |
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| Originally posted by ******** Say I now take that dollar and try to get some pesos.. it very much does effect me, and all without involving the banks. |
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| Originally posted by ******** Is there a reasons you don't fly. I understand austrailia is a little secluded but I don't see how flights to indonesia would really be that expensive. I geuss its all a matter of what you'd like to see. |
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