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Supply and Demand Isn’t a Law of Physics

When high inflation creates a death spiral where prices never stabilize.

Taru Anniina Liikanen
4 min readAug 10, 2022
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash

You think you’re living with high inflation? Try living in Argentina.

Last month’s inflation in Buenos Aires was 7.7%. Just one month. We’re beyond Venezuelan levels now.

We’ve had inflation rates between 25 and 50% for over a decade. It’s lasted for such a long time that it’s now a characteristic of the system, not a deviation.

But it’s getting worse all the time, due to external pressures like rising gas prices and the war in Ukraine, as well as the government’s general ineptitude. The last 12 months’ inflation rate in the city of Buenos Aires has been closer to 70%, and people are talking about triple digits by the end of the year.

In my years in Argentina, I’ve sometimes thought inflation will inevitably need to stabilize at some point, because people will simply not have money to eat.

It’s supply and demand, right? The basic model of price setting, probably the first thing you’re taught in Economics 101. (And this is the point where I’d like to remind people I am not an economist, so I may misunderstand things when talking about this topic.)

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Taru Anniina Liikanen
Taru Anniina Liikanen

Written by Taru Anniina Liikanen

Stand-up comedian and recovering political ghostwriter. Finnish by birth, porteña at heart. Bad jokes frequent.

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