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United States Government

White House Slams Bezos Criticism of Biden Tax Comments (axios.com) 306

The White House slammed Amazon founder Jeff Bezos on Monday after the billionaire accused President Biden of "misdirection" in his comments on inflation and corporate taxes. From a report: Biden tweeted Friday that the wealthiest corporations must "pay their fair share" to help bring down record-high inflation. Biden also recently met with Amazon labor organizers after their union victory. Bezos responded to Biden claiming inflation and corporate taxes aren't related. "Raising corp taxes is fine to discuss. Taming inflation is critical to discuss. Mushing them together is just misdirection," he tweeted.

"It doesn't require a huge leap to figure out why one of the wealthiest individuals on Earth opposes an economic agenda for the middle class that cuts some of the biggest costs families face, fights inflation for the long haul, and adds to the historic deficit reduction the President is achieving by asking the richest taxpayers and corporations to pay their fair share," deputy White House press secretary Andrew Bates said in a statement per the Washington Post. "It's also unsurprising that this tweet comes after the President met with labor organizers, including Amazon employees." Bezos fired back shortly after, saying the White House is trying to "muddy the topic." "They know inflation hurts the neediest the most. But unions aren't causing inflation and neither are wealthy people. Remember the Administration tried their best to add another $3.5 TRILLION to federal spending," he tweeted. "They failed, but if they had succeeded, inflation would be even higher than it is today, and inflation today is at a 40 year high."

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White House Slams Bezos Criticism of Biden Tax Comments

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  • Basic Economics (Score:3, Informative)

    by Asynchronously ( 7341348 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @10:38AM (#62542758)

    As the great Milton Friedman once explained, only the government can and does create inflation.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      The great Milton Friedman was wrong.

      Inflation occurred in the late middle ages and early modern era due to an influx of gold (and other metals) due to finding better mining locations and improved mining and seafaring technology. No matter how great, Milton Friedman cannot logic away reality.

      • Re:Basic Economics (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:05AM (#62542914) Homepage

        Inflation can occur from (A) more money, or (B) a shortage of goods/services, including (C) timing skews of demand for goods/services.

        While one can certainly argue that (A) is a contributor to the current inflationary situation, it's also hard to deny (B) and (C) as well.

        • Re:Basic Economics (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:10AM (#62542942) Homepage

          To present an example: assume war breaks out in the Middle East. Nobody changes monetary policy. What happens to oil prices? They rise (oil price inflation). And subsequently to a lesser extent, everything depends on oil inflates as well.

          Inflation doesn't require changes in monetary policy.

          We have a world where consumption - after having stagnated for years due to COVID - has surged. During a labour shortage. While China enforces its Zero-COVID policy. Shortly after honking truckers blocked the US's northern border. And a whole bunch of other things. Now we have a war as well with a massive, growing trade embargo. These are all things that cause inflation.

        • Re:Basic Economics (Score:5, Insightful)

          by molarmass192 ( 608071 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:49AM (#62543140) Homepage Journal

          You're right, (B) is the correct answer, this inflation event is primarily supply side driven. Since the primary issue we're dealing with is that supply remains constrained, the Fed has 1 of 2 options, increase supply or reduce demand. The Fed doesn't have effective tools to increase supply, though one could argue low rates could stimulate capital investment to eventually increase supply, so the Fed has chosen to pursue demand destruction via increased effective rates. Bezos may not be my idol, but he's right, inflation and wealth taxes are completely uncorrelated. The issue is the only tool available to fight inflation right now is to inflict intense financial pressure on lower / middle class consumers so they pull down the demand curve. Biden is dragging the wealthy into the discussion is a political move to make it appear they will "share the pain" which is complete nonsense. They will share the pain about as much as Putin is noticing how expensive groceries are in Russia. Confiscating the entire 4.5T in wealth from the 400 richest Americans would have virtually zero impact on this inflationary cycle.

          • If the US wanted to blame Bezos, and be right, they should do something unheard of. Raise taxes and use the collected funds to remove currency from circulation. The government can shred dollars. It just never does because it is seen politicians as a political waste. But if they want to be right ..
            • The government shreds dollars every time it pays off federal debt. Debt and its repayment is actually the only way that money is either created or destroyed. And raising taxes can actually reduce inflationary pressure even if debt isn't paid down, but only if the revenue is used to reduce the amount of new debt that is issued.
          • inflation and wealth taxes are completely uncorrelated

            No, they're not. Increasing taxes (without increasing government spending -- this is important!) reduces the money supply, which reduces inflation and could in theory even cause deflation (though that would be bad).

            I'm not saying that increased taxation is necessarily the right way to fight inflation, but it is one way. Modern Monetary Theory (which I think is dumb in many ways, but isn't completely wrong) suggests it should be the primary way.

            The issue is the only tool available to fight inflation right now is to inflict intense financial pressure on lower / middle class consumers so they pull down the demand curve.

            And wealth taxes on the rich would do that. This side of "tr

        • While one can certainly argue that (A) is a contributor to the current inflationary situation

          Yeah, printing an extra $2.2T will certainly be a "contributor" to the current inflationary situation.

          Remember boys and girls, "inflation" is NOT the same as "prices are going up". Prices can go up for a variety of reasons. But when whomever is in charge of controlling the money supply says words to the effect of "I don't have enough money to spend. Let's print more" that's a sure sign of both inflation and that

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by apoc.famine ( 621563 )

        And in this particular case he's 100% wrong. Go map out inflation and corporate profits over the last few years, and you'll find out exactly what's going on.

        It's not inflation, not in the least! It's almost 100% corporate price-gouging. You can account for almost 100% of our current "inflation" with corporate profit increases alone.

        It's actually pretty fucking dishonest for the media to keep talking about inflation, when that's not the root cause of the price increases we're all seeing. The cost of raw mate

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        The great Milton Friedman was wrong.

        Inflation occurred in the late middle ages and early modern era due to an influx of gold (and other metals) due to finding better mining locations and improved mining and seafaring technology. No matter how great, Milton Friedman cannot logic away reality.

        I'm sorry, what? Do you not understand Milton Friedman or do you not understand history? Because your argument actually supports Friedman's statement.

        In the Middle Ages, when everyone's currency was based on gold or some other precious metal, the mining of gold and the minting of coins and even the collection of taxes was entirely controlled by whatever state was in charge, either directly or through some franchise with very heavy authoritarian control. When using precious metals as the basis of curre

        • In the Middle Ages, when everyone's currency was based on gold or some other precious metal, the mining of gold and the minting of coins and even the collection of taxes was entirely controlled by whatever state was in charge, either directly or through some franchise with very heavy authoritarian control. When using precious metals as the basis of currency, mining new locations is the equivalent of printing money. Choosing to allow more gold to flow into the economy is the equivalent of increasing the pool

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        wowzers the Friedman fans have got a lot of modpoints today. Time to hit that "-1 disagree" button!

    • only the government can and does create inflation.

      That's nonsense. The government can cause inflation, but so can circumstances. The government regulates inflation, but that's not the same thing.

    • Re:Basic Economics (Score:4, Insightful)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:30AM (#62543062)

      It is mostly based on Supply and Demand. While the government can manage Supply and Demand it tries to let the markets do it thing until it really gets out of control.

      Pandemic hits, sometimes the Government (local, state, or federal) may force business to stop, however there are also a lot of employees of said businesses will quit vs continue to work in such a condition.
      That means there is less production. Causing a drop in supply (This raises prices)
      The drop in production, means the companies need to hire more people again, to attract them they will need to pay more, these new hires (and existing employees get a raise as well so they don't jump ship) So they are getting paid more, thus want to buy more things. Causing a rise in demand (This raises prices)

      Having a company with a lot of new hires, do not perform as well as established workers and can take a few years for them to get up to speed. So this will last a while until production improves, as well these workers will get caught up on getting stuff they wanted. So this could slow inflation in the future.... However if left unmanned, it could go into recession as a sudden drop of demand, means the companies will over produce, thus start laying off people...

      Taxing or not Taxing the rich will do little in terms of inflation. It will help manage the governments budgets which they could use it to help create safety nets, and or have regulations with insensitive for people to do things that won't cause a recession shortly after.
      Voters however, during good times, push the government to stop spending money on safety nets, when they have more money, and when things go bad, they demand their safety nets, when the governments are getting less tax income.

    • Re:Basic Economics (Score:5, Informative)

      by whitroth ( 9367 ) <whitroth@[ ]ent.us ['5-c' in gap]> on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @12:12PM (#62543230) Homepage

      Milton Friedman, who was *wrong*? Who invented "trickle-down economics", which is and always was bullshit?

      https://www.forbes.com/sites/s... [forbes.com]

  • Economist Anyone? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Arzaboa ( 2804779 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @10:51AM (#62542812)

    It was explained to me, a long time ago in my economics classes, inflation is typically caused by printing a lot of money and handing it out to people, ie: cheap money.

    Inflation came right after the government handed out Trillions of dollars, while at the same time reducing the capacity of the economy with lockdowns. In other words, when you increase wages, or decrease labor, prices for the masses tend to go up. Here, both happened simultaneously.

    While I agree that it would be a thing for rich guys to pay "their fair share," I don't seem to get the relationship between the two.

    Do we have an economist that can explain to us why the two are causally related?

    --
    The hardest thing to understand in the world is the income tax. - Albert Einstein

    • As per the standard slashdot reply, I will say: correlation does not equate causation.

      • Your statement is true on its face. But there are proven instances where correlation does reflect causation. In economics, printing money does indeed cause inflation.

    • It was explained to me, a long time ago in my economics classes, inflation is typically caused by printing a lot of money and handing it out to people, ie: cheap money.

      A decrease in supply can certainly contribute to inflation as well. Certainly that's a big factor with energy prices and Russia. Also the pandemic hitting supply chains and altering demand patterns all over the economy.

      Anyways, as to how soaking the rich might ease inflation - if you increase taxes without matching increases in governme

      • Anyways, as to how soaking the rich might ease inflation - if you increase taxes without matching increases in government spending you take money out of circulation and cool off the economy.

        Not exactly, inflation isn't based on how many bills or coins are in circulation, not since we left the "metals" standard. The mechanism at the Federal level is the National Debt; borrowing more is "printing" money, paying the debt down "removes" it. The Treasury effectively maintains a "zero balance" at least from the PoV that every $ it brings in has to get spent. If we actually paid off the National Debt then other mechanisms might have to be used to take money out of the economy if we needed to, but the

    • Re:Economist Anyone? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Brain-Fu ( 1274756 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:03AM (#62542898) Homepage Journal

      We are experiencing widespread price increases and calling it "inflation." But the price increases might have multiple contributing causes. For example: a shortage of labor supply (because everyone was staying home from pandemic) will naturally cause any stockpiles to be used-up, and then suddenly there will be a shortage of a desired commodity. Such a shortage will drive prices right up, whether or not any new money is printed. And such shortages can spill over into secondary products that consume the first as a production input, too.

      So, are we seeing food prices go up because farming yields have dropped, because farmers were staying home? I don't know if that was the cause or not, but if that is the cause, simply throwing more money at farmers won't do anything to fix it. Getting them back to the workload they had before will address it, but it will still take time (the food must grow, be harvested, be distributed, etc....the missing product must trickle through all the layers of usage before we will feel the prices dropping again).

      Or maybe we are seeing food prices go up because of a shift in demand. Some shortage in some other product resulted in a compensatory increase in demand for grain, or maybe an increase in demand for sugar cane which resulted in the planting of significantly less grain, or similar. If that's the case one thing that may help is if the USA stopped its policy of paying farmers to abstain from growing food (they do this to keep prices high enough that farmers can make a living off producing it....but if the prices have spiked anyway then it is safe to increase supply and the farmers will still be fine, though they would probably grumble). Something like this wouldn't cost taxpayers any money at all, but it again would take time to work its way through the layers needed to impact our prices.

      I CAN see a simple connection in the form of....the government is printing money that it wouldn't need to print if it could instead just take it from Jeff Bezos. So, that could reduce inflation by reducing the amount of money-printing going on. But I am unsure if numbers along those lines are actually very impactful.

      Oh and I am not an economist. I just play one on slashdot.

      • We are experiencing widespread price increases and calling it "inflation."

        Yeah, that's actually the definition of inflation, so that's why we call it that.

        But the price increases might have multiple contributing causes.

        Of course they do! Everything is complicated.

        For example: a shortage of labor supply (because everyone was staying home from pandemic) will naturally cause any stockpiles to be used-up

        What stockpiles? JIT inventory, baby!

      • We are experiencing widespread price increases and calling it "inflation." But the price increases might have multiple contributing causes.

        They might. But we should keep in mind the $2.2Trillion added to the money supply recently. Adding 10% or so to the money supply without bothering to add 10% to the supply of things to buy with money sounds like a pretty classic case on "inflation"....

      • by seth_hartbecke ( 27500 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:55AM (#62543174) Homepage

        The inflation in farming isnâ(TM)t being driven much by the farmers.

        The live in rural areas, in red states. They stopped caring much about Covid in the summer of 2020. Honestly, I live here, and work with farmers. That spring there was some attempt to social distance when buying parts and supplies.

        Also, most farmers live on their farms. So, they have been working from home forever. (Itâ(TM)s one of the reasons why farming as partially survived the green agenda. You might not like all the farming practices, but these people are literally raising their own kids in an industrial zone. They are highly motivated to both use the chemicals they need for yield, yet keep it out of the ground water their own kids are drinking).

        Weâ(TM)ve been dealing with a shortage of fertilizer since last fall. Nitrogen fertilizers are literally âoebuiltâ from consuming a large LARGE amount of natural gas. The spikes it pricing of natural gas due to ⦠not wanting to frack and build pipelines ⦠has considerably restricted the supply. And ESG isnâ(TM)t helping, even if you can get a license to drill, will a bank loan you the money? (ESG is political redlining)

        Labor shortages at animal processing facilities early in Covid also caused some issues in the pipeline. Because in summer 2020 plants were unable to take animals, farmers slowed down their breeding programs. Because you can only keep so many animals on site. So if you canâ(TM)t move out the full grown ones, you have to stop making new ones. The lack of breeding in 2020 is starting to finally show up as reduced animal heard sizes for sale now.

        Ukraine, also, is not helping. Many grains have an amount of âoesubstitutability.â So, Ukraine grows a lot of wheat. But you can feed a cow on corn or wheat. But you can only make bread from wheat. So, the cereal / bread companies are pushing up the price of wheat (for human consumption) which then makes things like beef production shift harder into corn and drive those prices up too. And this repeats across many MANY commodities and products.

          Also, the idea that US farmers should just grow more wheat is kinda non-starter. Most farmers have their seed ordered several months before they plant. The US market had their seed bought and plans set for 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine. There simply wasnâ(TM)t a lot of acres that were in a position to pivot.

        I could keep going ⦠but this seems like enough.

      • by dstwins ( 167742 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @02:38PM (#62543828) Homepage
        Lets also consider a few things as well.

        1: Prices GLOBALLY are rising.. in literally every corner of the globe.. so while its certainly fair to say "printing money" will impact inflation a little.. its not the root/primary cause.

        2: Prices were on the rise for a LONG time before the current "emergency".

        3: Many of these SAME companies are reporting record profits.. (again, nothing to do with inflation).

        So its not really muddying the water to discuss corporations (who are publicly via financial reports) netting record profits and corporate taxes while discussing inflation, since the government has to print money so that the standard of living doesn't drop.. The US has a middle class that for many exist at the very bottom edge of that "class" and can easily become poor (or possibly homeless).. so its cheaper for state/local/federal governments keeping them IN their homes and working than being on the streets.

        Also considering that these price rises are global, its an indication that more is at play than the US federal inflation level.. (COVID and related elements) are certainly going to impact things as some places have more strict rules (but the ones with the strictest set of rules also have provisions in place to keep people at home and at their current "income zone") the ones with the least rules ( looking at you US) typically had no such rules in place (which dragged things out far longer which meant a minor stockpile would quickly deplete.. causing prices to rise due to high demand and low inventory. Some of this again falls on US businesses since they outsourced a LOT of manufacturing and production elsewhere, which means during a global pandemic, supply chains are basically cut.

        But a lot of this is simple greed.. because CEO's and companies have the option of diluting the share price or taking pay cuts at the top to offset temporary losses at the bottom to maintain the company... which means prices WOULDN'T rise (or not rise as much as fast).. but they would prefer to pass those additional costs (goods, fuel, transportation, raw goods, etc...) on to the consumer which again circles back to the government needing to step in to stem the blood.

        In short, there is no silver bullet with these issues, they are often intertwined... but corporations paying their fair share has been a big concern for a LONG time.. The pandemic just ripped off the band-aid to make the wound worse and expose some additional issues but many of these problems have been there for a while.. just explained away or people too busy to really take a hard look.. but with the pandemic, far more people have more time to dive in and say "WTF????"
    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      It's not that hard. The government gave itself a huge loan to hand out that money. Now Biden wants to actually collect taxes from the wealthiest to pay that loan off. That is, to un-print all that money.

      Note that while a lot of small to medium businesses have taken a beating, a few very large corporations have made record profits but somehow have not paid record taxes.

    • The Fed held off on increasing interest rates to fight inflation mostly to the benefit of guys like Bezos. It also happens to help keep the overall economy from sputtering while trying to recover from the (still ongoing) pandemic, at the cost of a little extra inflation, but people like Bezos are the primary direct beneficiary through his high stock price. But recently the rich like Bezos have been complaining about the fed raising interest rates. It is *Bezos* who is trying to misdirect by pointing to g
  • He's not wrong. (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Inflation and corporate taxes don't have much to do with each other. However, inflation and the gross underpayment of low-end employees at mega-corporations like Amazon do go together.

    And while you're talking about that, it's fair to bring up the added tax burden that these employees pose by requiring government support because their job doesn't pay enough.

    And then while you're talking about taxes and mega-corporations, it's fair to bring up the corporate tax rate.

    It's like six degrees of Jeff-Bezos-should

    • Define "gross underpaying". What should a retail or warehouse employee be paid? Why?

      • You answer first.

        • Workers deserve the wage they agree to when they accept the job. If they are not offered enough they can negotiate for more or say no.

      • Re:He's not wrong. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:13AM (#62542960) Homepage Journal

        Define "gross underpaying". What should a retail or warehouse employee be paid? Why?

        They should be paid a living wage, plus whatever additional amount is necessary to induce them away from other potential employment which sucks less than warehouse work.

        All workers should be paid a living wage because anything less is unsustainable, and essentially Slavery Lite(tm). Permitting anyone to pay less than a living wage for any job only creates the motivation to treat people like they don't deserve to be alive.

        There you go, what and why.

      • Anyone working 40-50 hours a week should be paid enough to afford food, shelter, healthcare and utilities in the town or city where they are employed. That varies on the local costs of living but that's what the metric should be in my opinion.

        Everyone gets 168 hours a week to live, that's it, no getting around it.

        1/3 of ones life every week is enough to devote to work. Our economy can still grow and even thrive under that metric.

    • However, inflation and the gross underpayment of low-end employees at mega-corporations like Amazon

      Amazon revenue last twelve months is about $470 billion.

      Lets say you took that al. Just how much of the U.S. budget does that cover?

      Well out of 4.79 TRILLION dollars, that is 0.1%.

      So how again is a shift in what Amazon pays in taxes, or indeed a whole bunch of corps pay in taxes, going to do anything?

      Here's a question for you - if printing money is not a problem why should anyone pay any taxes?

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      There is no such thing as "hoarding money".

      Money is an IOU on goods and services, not the goods and services themselves. Production of goods and services tends to full capacity (and is considered a failure of policy if capacity is far from actual production). A person having money does not change the availability of goods and services to others. Quite the opposite - money is invested in companies, which they use to increase their capacity for producing goods and services.

      It is wealthy people spending their

      • There is no such thing as "hoarding money".

        Yes, there literally is. Corporations and individuals alike currently hold unprecedented amounts of actual cash money, not just liquid assets.

        A person having money does not change the availability of goods and services to others.

        Yes, it absolutely does. If a person has too much money and doesn't spend it, then money can't do the things you say it does.

        It is wealthy people spending their money - not simply owning it - that alters the supply of goods and services to everyone else.

        That is fundamentally incorrect. If wealthy people do not spend their money, nor invest it, then it negatively alters the supply of goods and services to everyone else. And that is happening with more and more of the currency in existence. Again

  • Idiots (Score:5, Insightful)

    by HEbGb ( 6544 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @10:57AM (#62542844)

    You don't add ~30% to the money supply and not get huge inflation. This is not difficult to understand and is really not arguable.

    So they're idiots, or they are intentionally pandering to their clueless constituents. Which is it?

    • You don't add ~30% to the money supply and not get huge inflation. This is not difficult to understand and is really not arguable.

      That's arguably true. So how much currency was destroyed over the same period? Was the net increase actually 30%? What if you extend the period?

    • Who's claiming otherwise? Increasing taxes on the wealthiest corporations helps recover that 30%, does it not?
  • Inflation consists of a lot of individual actors raising their prices, for whatever reason.

    Corporate taxation really has nothing to do with inflation, unless the entity decides to raise prices due to higher taxes.

    • Corporate taxation really has nothing to do with inflation, unless the entity decides to raise prices due to higher taxes.

      If you raise all corporate taxes, then all corporations will tend to raise prices. That's not a reason not to do it; a few corporations won't have to because they have superior business models, and the so-called invisible hand only "works" (makes the market freer) if they are rewarded (among lots of other things that have to happen.)

      • If you raise all corporate taxes, then all corporations will tend to raise prices.

        Taxes are due on a company's profits. Raising corporate taxes will have no effect on how profitable a company is unless that company deliberately sets out to not have profits so it doesn't pay taxes.
    • Gouging != inflation, but gouging can cause inflation, because any general and widespread increase in prices is called inflation.

      If the majority of stuff is made by a handful of conglomerates who all raise their prices, then it's inflation due to gouging... it's both things.

      I've seen estimates that anywhere from 20-60% of the inflation is due to gouging. I wonder if it's even possible to nail that down or if the system is too obfuscating.

      • Gotcha. My economics understanding is abysmal. The way I had understood it was that corporations are increasing prices to offset increase costs, but they are doing so at a rate that more than offsets their increased spending. I was thinking "how can there be inflation when profits are high?"
  • by Targon ( 17348 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:17AM (#62542994)
    I will note that Bezos is correct that tax rate for corporations or individuals are NOT responsible for most causes of inflation, and trying to directly link things together, rather than being elements of the overall financial situation is wrong, so the Biden administration is wrong here. Corporate tax rate hasn't been going up, corporations are increasingly profitable, yet they decide to increase prices on products due to inflation, when inflation is the fault of these corporations just randomly increasing prices, because they can. Corporate greed is the primary reason for higher prices for the most part. Claiming higher expenses when they are giving huge pay raises to executives is nonsense, so isn't a valid approach. Now, the Biden administration has a lot of tools at its disposal to help fight inflation, for example, we know that oil prices play a big part due to TRANSPORTATION costing more. Solution: Block oil companies from exporting oil that is gained within the USA to other countries. The USA produces 97 percent of the oil needed, so, there is no reason why it should go on the open market, and that also means that eliminating the whole, "What is the price for a barrel of oil" can be discarded if it isn't being sold on the open market. Cap any oil gained from federal lands, lease or deals gone, that oil is now $45/barrel. Bingo, the oil companies still make a huge amount of profit, but gas prices drop like a rock, and aren't subject to what OPEC or other nations try to do with production. Once oil/gas is under control for prices, that means transportation costs will drop, meaning the cost of goods will drop as it costs less to get them from place to place. Good businesses will increase wages based on the cost of living, so, reduce the cost of living, get the utility prices under control, and make sure that giving bonuses to executives while cutting services to consumers isn't allowed. These people making a huge amount of money in bonuses as executives are a big part of what is driving many corporations into the ground, because they don't even try to make the business do better, it's all about greed at the top. Short term profits that kill long-term health is bad, but these people get rewarded for it, rather than being condemned.
    • It's my understanding that the government can't legally tell corporations they can't sell to other countries without invoking the war powers act, a national defense excuse, or similar.

  • The business writes a tax check, but taxes are just another expense that gets passed along to the consumers in higher prices.

  • That would be a better headline. Yes, Bezos is a billionaire and perhaps also is Dr. Evil, but Biden trying to claim that raining taxes on wealthy people will somehow decrease inflation contradicts every economic theory that I have ever been aware of.
  • by endus ( 698588 ) on Tuesday May 17, 2022 @11:47AM (#62543126)

    While I tend to agree with Bezos, and think its insane for the Biden administration to just ignore the impact of printing tons of money and handing it out to people, the most important thing to remember here is that NONE of these people have the best interests of the poor and middle class in mind. They are fighting over who gets to dick the average person over and in what way, nothing more.

  • It's weird, how virtually every country on Earth is suffering from inflation, yet people choose to criticize domestic policies instead of solve the issues that are causing inflation - namely a supply change crisis exacerbated by COVID lock downs in China, and a war in Eastern Europe.

    Goods are increasing in price because of supply and demand - namely demand is increasing at a relatively constant rate and supply is going way, way down.

    Politicians and figureheads looking to capitalize on inflation are charlata

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