2.3% in Germany, 2.1% in France.
Greece is in a recession, unemployment is rising, money is being scraped everywhere
to pay off debts... if anything I'd expect deflation.
Where is her inflation coming from? Who is buying... and what?
One can say that ECB's policies are inflationary in the medium or long run (just like the
FED's), but I can't see by which mechanism that'd be materializing in Greece now. The
government does get money from abroad, but that's mostly to repay debt. The population
is not crazy to go into debt now of all times, so banks probably are not expanding either.
Since inflation is always a case of too much money chasing too few goods, and as I said
I can't see why the money supply would be increasing in Greece, can this then be a case
of goods getting fewer? That's also silly, but I'm a bit confused here...
Greece is in a recession, unemployment is rising, money is being scraped everywhere
to pay off debts... if anything I'd expect deflation.
Where is her inflation coming from? Who is buying... and what?
One can say that ECB's policies are inflationary in the medium or long run (just like the
FED's), but I can't see by which mechanism that'd be materializing in Greece now. The
government does get money from abroad, but that's mostly to repay debt. The population
is not crazy to go into debt now of all times, so banks probably are not expanding either.
Since inflation is always a case of too much money chasing too few goods, and as I said
I can't see why the money supply would be increasing in Greece, can this then be a case
of goods getting fewer? That's also silly, but I'm a bit confused here...
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