I must ask what affects inflatio nrates in different countries sharing the same currency. For example why is Spain’s inflatio nrate teice France’s when they both use the Euro?
i wonder what the science is behind this because it feels like wishfull thinking.
Total fantasy. Maybe it won’t go straight up as it has been, but acting like it is going to be a caret shaped curve ^ is pretty optimistic.
Seems that most of these curves don’t have a first order derivative
Who actually believes this
Wrong flair, it’s not data because the right side of the chart didn’t happen (and I doubt it will).
Look at the graph and honestly say those lines are real projections – whatever that means – and not someone’s wish. Bloomberg, doesn’t help by titling the graph “Euro-area price pressures are **due to drop** from their late-2021 highs” as if this is a foregone conclusion and economists somehow have premonition.
8 comments
Source:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-01-17/euro-area-inflation-seen-slowing-to-2-at-the-end-of-2022-chart
This seems good.
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I must ask what affects inflatio nrates in different countries sharing the same currency. For example why is Spain’s inflatio nrate teice France’s when they both use the Euro?
i wonder what the science is behind this because it feels like wishfull thinking.
Total fantasy. Maybe it won’t go straight up as it has been, but acting like it is going to be a caret shaped curve ^ is pretty optimistic.
Seems that most of these curves don’t have a first order derivative
Who actually believes this
Wrong flair, it’s not data because the right side of the chart didn’t happen (and I doubt it will).
Look at the graph and honestly say those lines are real projections – whatever that means – and not someone’s wish. Bloomberg, doesn’t help by titling the graph “Euro-area price pressures are **due to drop** from their late-2021 highs” as if this is a foregone conclusion and economists somehow have premonition.