But what you say depends on what’s causing such prices to rise, isn’t it?
Let’s say that suddenly the production of product X halts and the prices rise. You’d expect that once you start producing it en masse again, prices of that product would at least fall. But what we see in most of the world is that products didn’t get cheaper, arguably because of the phenomenon of price stickiness.
neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 days ago
I think what he is referring to is reports that companies were raising prices higher than the rate of inflation as a way to increase profits. They would then blame inflation even though inflation was lower than the rate that they raised prices.