@pkrugman well ... and we substantially helped millions of Americans, right?
I get it's not the thrust of the piece.
Moderna is planning to charge $130 for its COVID vaccine, but the vaccine only costs $2.85 to make. Meanwhile, over the last two years, the company made over $19 billion in profits off the vaccine. Folks, this is what corporate greed looks like.
Krugman is wrong, fiscal spending didn't cause inflation except at the margins. Inflation has been a worldwide phenomenon caused by pandemic and the resulting fragile supply chains failures.
Sanders $6T plan would have meant universal HC (which would be deflationary, huge numbers if Insurance industry jobs would be lost.)
Corporations are reporting record profits while inflation rates are running at the fastest pace in decades. Small businesses and low-income workers, meanwhile, are bearing the brunt of the crisis even as access to safety net programs becomes increasingly tenuous. That was the assessment of a group of economists who joined Ethnic Media Services for a […]
@pkrugman
The thing I've been saying is that this wasn't typical inflation. Normally we get inflation because general supply can't meet general demand due to high demand.
But with all the "supply shocks" the pandemic caused, it seemed obvious to me that this was a situation caused by a lack of supply. Which has different characteristics and needs to be handled differently.
Blaming it on the stimulus and gov't spending seems maliciously obtuse.