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songjianglin20

@songjianglin20

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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
I love my dog!!
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
I like my cat and share it with you!
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
the Nice Photo .it is beautiful !
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
ETH price!! https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/ethereum/
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
ETH price!! https://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/ethereum/
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
the Nice Photo .it is beautiful !
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shiqianc19
@shiqianc19
oney Supply Inflation refers to the devaluation of a currency due to the increase of the Money supply. Whereas, an increase in the Money Supply is exactly that, "when the total money supply increases". The former is an effect of the latter, and I wasn't referring to the latter.
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liuyuandui
@liuyuandui
So, 'something' worth BTC1 can 'deflate' in price to BTC0.5 if any or all of these market forces apply to it: 1. The currency exchange rate of whatever that 'something' is usually traded in doubles (BTC/USD increases from $1 to $2 per BTC) 2. That 'something' becomes cheaper to make (greater supply) or needs to stay competitive in price (weaker demand) Keeping in mind that the currency exchange rate or PRICE of Bitcoin (force 1), is determined by the value of the currency, which is the SUPPLY and DEMAND and so on and so forth as explained in the OP... Price inflation would be the opposite.
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liuyuandui
@liuyuandui
Sorry for the lack of specifics there! My point is: Price inflation is not only derived from the market price of whatever it is you're exchanging a currency for, but it is also derived from the value of the currency 'itself', meaning the rate of monetary inflation along with supply and demand of that currency. In other words, prices of good/services (price inflation/deflation) are reflective of the exchange rate due to FX trading and the Bitcoin generation rate due to mining (monetary inflation).
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maodongming18
@maodongming18
After just bashing the "keynesian" definition of inflation, you segue right into your own piss-poor definition. Money supply inflation is when the total money supply increases. No more, no less. It does not necessarily mean a change in the value, because if the money supply increases at the exact same rate as the increase in demand, there is no change in value.
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
Now to consequently address the demand argument... In any real economy, there is no guarantee that demand exists (maybe in the keynesian paradise, but that's about it). However, there is a guarantee that the Money Supply will increase. Money Supply Inflation (or inflation due to an increase in the money supply) exists regardless of demand, contributing to the devaluation of the currency. Demand simply helps to stabilize or increase the value and price. Sure, they can offset when they're equal, but that doesn't mean inflation due to an increase in the Money Supply doesn't exist.
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
Now to consequently address the demand argument... In any real economy, there is no guarantee that demand exists (maybe in the keynesian paradise, but that's about it). However, there is a guarantee that the Money Supply will increase. Money Supply Inflation (or inflation due to an increase in the money supply) exists regardless of demand, contributing to the devaluation of the currency. Demand simply helps to stabilize or increase the value and price. Sure, they can offset when they're equal, but that doesn't mean inflation due to an increase in the Money Supply doesn't exist.
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
But Kevin Hassett, an economic adviser to President Trump, has pushed back against those projecting this bleak outlook. In an interview with CNBC, Hassett said there were many reasons to be optimistic about the US economy and that that tariffs imposed on Canada, Mexico and China were already bringing manufacturing and jobs to the United States.
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
But Kevin Hassett, an economic adviser to President Trump, has pushed back against those projecting this bleak outlook. In an interview with CNBC, Hassett said there were many reasons to be optimistic about the US economy and that that tariffs imposed on Canada, Mexico and China were already bringing manufacturing and jobs to the United States.
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Sara Phillips
@saraphillips
yesterday i posted on x that people are nicer on warpcast and then x shut down i think they want this information suppressed!!!
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huiminzhu22
@huiminzhu22
She said investors were reacting to Trump's policies - but also selling tech stocks they felt were overvalued. Lindsay James, an investment strategist at Quilter Investors, said the drop in Tesla share price "comes down to hard numbers" with new orders halving in Europe and China over the past year.
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
thanks
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songjianglin20
@songjianglin20
He said the recent falls in the stock market, which started last week, reflect the adjustment of those bets. "It's a complete change in what the market expected," he added, noting that investors are also responding to signs that businesses and households are starting to hold off on spending due to uncertainty, which could hurt economic growth.
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liuyuandui
@liuyuandui
The court ruling came after multiple Christian groups filed police complaints against Ms Thalisa for blasphemy. The sentence has been condemned by human rights groups, including Amnesty International, who described it as "a shocking attack on Ratu Thalisa's freedom of expression" and called for it to be quashed. "The Indonesian authorities should not use the country's Electronic Information and Transactions (EIT) law to punish people for comments made on social media," Amnesty International Indonesia's Executive Director Usman Hamid said in a statement.
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songjianglin20
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More than 80% of USAID programmes 'officially ending' Bourbon is out, patriotism is in - How Canadians are facing Trump threats head on Ontario says it will slap a 25% surcharge on US-bound electricity Economist Mohamed El-Erian said investors were initially optimistic about Trump's plans for de-regulation and lower taxes, while under-estimating the likelihood of a trade war.
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