Ahhh, those newspaper printing presses. They were made the same way horseshoes were made. A lot of press. A lot of...hey/hay. But unfortunately for the industry, cars came along. And so did the digital distribution of data. And iPads. And iPhones. And computer screens with bright colors. And it was pretty much the end for both of these now-relics. Their value deflated over time, until today, where they exist solely as museum pieces and one-offs for hobbyists. And farriers.
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Finance: What is Deflation?4 Views
Finance, a la shmoop. What is deflation? Alright well let's start with inflation [A football with a pump attached]
and here's the proverbial football we pump as prices go higher and higher [The football getting bigger and starts to shake]
until they can well go no more. But the real world doesn't have to be this [The football explodes]
dramatic in fact prices inflate and deflate in small pieces all the time. The [Graph showing historical inflation rate]
standard terminology for when pricing goes down relative to well everything [2 dollar price tag is replaced with a 1 dollar price tag]
else at least the indices in its past, well that term is deflation. There are
really two types of deflation economists drone on and on about and they come from [Students in class asleep]
very different places. Over here is simply monetary deflation that is the [Types of deflation written on a blackboard]
supply of money, think liquid cash sloshing around in the market places, [Tap running in a basin labelled marketplace]
that money supply declines in monetary deflation. All right so what does that [Money running out of the tap]
mean to the average Joe well it means that wages and money generally go
further in times of deflation like your dollar buys more than a dollar, at least [Someone putting money into their pocket]
what a dollar bought last month or last year. And that's the direct opposite of
what happens in an inflationary environment, got it? [Money disappearing]
So that's monetary deflation but the other flavor of deflation is price
deflation which implies that prices on the basics well are simply going down
driven usually by consumer fear of a bad moon on the horizon, where consumers [Girl looking scared and crying]
simply don't buy things and via lack of demand prices well they just sag into an [Someone putting a bottle of wine back onto a supermarket shelf]
overly supplied abyss and you know the saying life's abyss and then you die you [Price tag flies off a tag]
know that's where it came from. Well alternatively if productivity goes
way up well then consumer purchasing power also goes up with it and then we
likely get inflation, got all that? So this is supply and demand and there's
the graph and when demand goes down supply goes up and prices get weak [Supply and demand graph]
Wifi used to be expensive because the technology to deliver it was really hard [Picture of a complex circuit board]
to build and distribute and have actually work, but then tons of Wi-Fi [The circuit board starts smoking]
devices got out there i.e. there was tons of supply and well now there's Wi-Fi
everywhere and so pricing is cheap if not free pretty much well everywhere so [Wifi symbols popping up all over the world]
think about that as a supply driven deflation and you know Wi-Fi prices [Graph showing price of wifi falling]
they're going down and yeah that's really about it if you were hoping for
more elaborate explanation we're sorry to bust your balloon... [Balloon explodes]
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