How many decades has inflation been a problem for countries everywhere up to now? It hasn’t been eliminated from the past to the present, right? It really depends on a country’s leaders
on how they manage the nation they’re leading. For example, in our country we only found out the other day that we apparently have a president who’s an addict.
No wonder our country’s economy has been affected for years. He’s very incompetent and doesn’t care about the value of Bitcoin or cryptocurrency, or how it could help our local community.
On top of that, prices are extremely high, our stock exchange has crashed, and many foreign investors have pulled out their investments because they know the president is corrupt.
That’s why the crisis in our country is so severe right now.
I feel your post a lot, man. You are correct: inflation has never been absent. However, what you are talking about is not the normal inflation. It is the process of having corrupt, high, and busy people in power serving themselves rather than serving the country
You do not simply have the increase in prices. You have:
- a president nobody can trust
- investors running away
- a dead-looking stock market.
- leaders that do not even bother to find out what tools such as Bitcoin could offer to average people
It is fully understandable that you do not trust experts or authorities in that case. They told you "the system is stable", but you live the reality: high prices, low hope
To most of us, crypto does not mean making money quick. It is about not being under complete control of corrupt and careless people
From what you wrote, the trust problem in your country is not just with "experts" in general. It's with a whole political class that has been exposed as fake. And when people become aware of that, as you have just told us... it is very difficult to return to blind faith
When did you quit believing the experts? Was there a specific moment? And do you believe that trust will ever return? Or is it gone forever?
Am I wrong about this?
The real expert would talk about probability and won't say anything for certain. There were many experts that warned about the banks and the real estate before the crisis but people were so into the hype that most of them didn't cared to listen.
Nouriel Roubini in 2006 in an interview with IMF for the IMF Survey, mentioned about the upcoming housing bust.
https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/2006/101606.pdfMeredith Whitney warned about the bank credits in 2007
https://www.reuters.com/article/world/cibc-analyst-got-death-threats-on-citigroup-report-idUSN04195378The market and overall economy do have a trend and signals but its unpredictable and in some cases, its predictable but we can't control the outcome.
Take an example of the AI bubble, almost all agree on it being a bubble and everyone saying it would be worse if we don't control it sooner but yet the feeding of bubble is going on and even when we want to stop it, it can't be. People are still investing heavily for FOMO.
Another example is bitcoin, I don't think there are anyone who don't believe bitcoin would hit a new all time high but we've seen bitcoin going below 100k and we don't have much control over it. Its mostly related to the world politics and economics which don't look bright in the near future as well.
Yes, I hear you, but I believe this only makes my point darker. Yes, Roubini and Whitney warned us. And what happened? Whitney got death threats. Roubini was nicknamed "Dr. Doom" and treated like a crazy person. They were correct and the system punished them to be correct. In the meantime, the professionals who claimed that nothing was wrong (who were disastrously wrong) most of them still hold high offices. Still giving advice. And it is still considered credible
When you speak about the real experts, who discuss probability and uncertainty, I agree. Nevertheless, the system does not reward genuine professionals. It rewards the professionals who inform the people what they want to know
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These economists get it wrong when they try to solve current problems with outdated solutions. The failure to accept that these economic theories cannot be effective in this current economic reality is their undoing. They are too proud to accept that Bitcoin could solve some of the problems of the fiat monetary system.
I have totally lost confidence in my country's economic policymakers. When they told us to avoid cryptocurrency, it was the time we needed it as a hedge against inflation. They told us to keep fiat when the country is facing its highest inflation. My conclusion is that when the government says go left, in some cases going right might be safer. My reason is that most of their policies are designed to satisfy the elite. So they usually deceive the common man. When they told us to avoid cryptocurrencies, there were reports that top government officials were buying Bitcoin.
I do not believe that they are even trying to hide it at this point. They are simply gambling that the majority of the people will not see the difference or take action on it. Your example is ideal - authorities were purchasing Bitcoin and encouraging people not to do it. That is insider trading on national scale. They know something that we do not know, and they are making it work against us
And when their polices crash, WE are the ones paying. They put the blame on global forces or supply chains when inflation kills savings. Yet they are the people who printed the money. They are the ones who made interest rates zero several years. They made the choices. We suffer the consequences
You said these economic theories can't work in present reality. I'd go further: I think the theories DO work, just not for us. They are as designed to serve the people that designed them
Think about it. People suffer as a result of inflation. Who has savings? Regular people. Inflation assists those in debt and assets. Who has debt and assets? Governments. Corporations. The wealthy
So when they say "we need to fight inflation", what they mean is "we need to stop fighting it RIGHT before it starts hurting us instead of you"