Best economic inflation books according to redditors

We found 16 Reddit comments discussing the best economic inflation books. We ranked the 7 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

Next page

Top Reddit comments about Economic Inflation:

u/LRonPaul2012 · 8 pointsr/EnoughLibertarianSpam

You need a wikipedia account, or I would do it myself.

Here is some additional information, though:

> "Publisher: Monkey with a Pin (July 8, 2013)"

http://monkeywithapin.com/ is apparently a publishing company that is own by and which only produces books by Pete Comely.

> Pete has a Psychology degree and is a market researcher.

So in other words, he has no economic background.

u/HappierShibe · 2 pointsr/Artifact

> The deflation will depend on how many whales to f2p players there will be in the game.

No it won't. Thats the beauty of a deflationary system, it will deflate regardless of the cash input.

>But I dont thing valve will allow people to 'go infinite' in this game based on their matchmaking mechanic. Experienced players will be matched to experienced players.

I think you'll get a few people managing it anyway. Going infinite in mtgo was about 25% maintaining a solid winrate in draft, and 75% understanding how to effectively play the deflationary market. Basically, the better your winrate, the stronger an edge you had on the secondary market. It's not a matter of Valve allowing people to go infinite:

  1. Valve gets a cut on every transaction, so they win no matter what, they don't care if you've gone infinite and are remaining within their market ecosystem because in a deflationary model they are profiting off the ecosystems activity rather than discrete purchases.

  2. Valve can't actually stop anyone from going infinite. Again, it's mostly the market, and if you are aiming to go infinite, you probably aren't going to buy boosters anyway. As long as they keep tickets at a fixed cost the rise of an internal token economy is inevitable, and honestly, it's pretty clear they WANT that to happen.

    >this will slow down the deflation as if I consider 50-50 odds , going to 3 wins would be an exception.

    It's impossible to determine the speed of deflation but I would be surprised if it took more than 2-3 months, matchmaking isn't going to have much impact, as regardless of who wins or loses you get the same number of cards going into circulation, and the relatively flat rarity curve in this game is going to be a massive accelerant.
    MTGO hit full deflation inside of 12 months, and it only took that long because of the insane rarity their foil/mythic rarities introduced and because they did it entirely on accident.

    >So in expectation people would be losing money in the draft without cards entering in circulation.

    The additional draft cost is to compensate for the prizepacks entering the economy. Money is still being paid for those cards, it's just you paying for someone elses cards... unless you win, then it's someone else paying for your cards.
    The phantom draft complicates the hell out of the optics on this, but it's still adhering to a deflationary economic practice.

    If you are looking for more detail on the subject I can suggest a couple of books.:
    https://www.amazon.com/Deflation-What-Happens-When-Prices/dp/0060576456
    This is a good guideline for the sort of market behaviors to expect in the early months.

    https://www.amazon.com/Inflation-Stagflation-Relative-Imperfect-Information/dp/0521070848
    This one will be a bit dense if you aren't familiar with the finance, but stagflation is really the only other viable market state for the economy they are creating, and it isn't something that gets a lot of coverage in traditional finance circles. Artifacts economy will likely see alternation between stagflation and deflation with brief inflationary spiking whenever an expansion, re-launch, or marketing push brings in new players.

    I realize my excitement about this game as a brilliant participatory experiment in digital economics may be biasing me a little bit, but I don't think people are taking the time to understand whats really going on here... This is going to be an incredibly cheap game to play...
u/tableman · 2 pointsr/Libertarian
u/ArrestHillaryClinton · 2 pointsr/Anarcho_Capitalism

Yes, it's also common to refer to inflation as rising prices, but that's wrong.

Source:

https://www.amazon.com/Money-Inflation-France-Andrew-Dickson/dp/1611045010

The guy in charge of printing press (ben barnanke) conveniently changed the definition to make it seem like his actions are less severe then they actually are.

https://www.amazon.com/Macroeconomics-9th-Andrew-B-Abel/dp/0134167392/ref=sr_1_5?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1540475921&sr=1-5&keywords=ben+bernanke&dpID=51GS8ghM5uL&preST=_SX218_BO1,204,203,200_QL40_&dpSrc=srch

u/fastfwd · 2 pointsr/financialindependence

You are right about asset allocation being a good idea supported by historical data. That's also why index ETFs are such a good idea and why we even have a 4% rule.


"precious metals" are only worth something if everyone agrees that they are. Not hard to imagine a world where drinking water is worth more than gold. Bitcoins are arguably a better standard of controlled rarity than gold. I suggest you read Naked money; very good read.
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B011SG58WY/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1


Chances are the future will be much like the past and anyone with 4% will be fine. Then again decade long deflation happened in Japan and it could happen somewhere else. I'm not sure how having 20% bonds and starting out retirement would work in that case. Nobody saw the Japan thing coming and some different financial system troubles could happen.


I think the main thing to look out for are job automation and globalization. The average worker will have to face those challenges and surely this will have a major impact on the global financial system. I'm just not sure what exactly. Are we headed for not only older demographics without enough retirement savings but also working age workers unemployment due to automation? In this case the money would be even more concentrated to the 1% and would that lead to more socialism, revolutions, war?


Are we headed for a star trek world where people do what they are good at and nobody cares about money because all our basic needs are met? Or are we headed for future where the have and have not are in conflict?

u/helemaal · 1 pointr/Anarcho_Capitalism

I highly recommend the following book. It is a short read:

https://www.amazon.com/Money-Inflation-France-Andrew-Dickson/dp/1611045010

u/ExpensiveReporter · 0 pointsr/Libertarian

This assumes there is anyone telling us dangers we might be heading to politically, economically, or otherwise.

This book exists, but it's never taught in $200,000 history courses:

https://www.amazon.com/Money-Inflation-France-Andrew-Dickson/dp/1611045010

I spent $10 and I read it in my free time.

The universities would never teach students any important lessons from history, or risk being defunded by the state.