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Inflation


NDIS has been a cash surge in some gyms, I think we will be seeing a few stories of gross exploitation of NDIS funding coming thru the media in Australia's near future.
 
NDIS has been a cash surge in some gyms, I think we will be seeing a few stories of gross exploitation of NDIS funding coming thru the media in Australia's near future.
i notice the local gym has clients who are probably NDIS recipients , that has not been a totally bad thing as such clients allowed then to continue business despite restrictions in other nearby businesses

gross exploitation , that is just human nature ( for some ) just as is ineffective supervision of such schemes , and of course when news is slow ( and a real journalist is still employed )
 
not so apparent at the local gym , lots of walking frames and wheelchairs ( but maybe they are the mules ) some folks trying to lose the 'pear' in their shape , but maybe the folks you are talking about show up early in the morning or after mid-day

maybe if times get tougher , there will be some prescription medication trading , the crowd there ( including me ) are on some fairly exotic meds
 
One of the better articles that I have read on inflation, government, the mob ( us ) and money is by Theodore Dalrymple a link to which I leave below. It is from Taki's Magazine a rightist rag with some surprisingly sensible articles at times, particularly from TD.

He quotes Dickens via Mr.Micawber on personal expenditure. This was before Centrelink. Yes. Such a time existed.

For those unfamiliar with pounds, shillings and pence, there were 20 shillings to a pound and 12 pence to a shilling. (and btw for info only 21 shillings to a guinea)

Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen nineteen and six, result happiness.
Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds ought and six, result misery.

sense-on-the-dollar

gg
 

^^^ 12:30 min - Retail Sales & Inflation
^^^ 17:30 min - Inventories

If the USA sneezes, Australia catches a cold. Still true today.

 
Germany has joined the queue of nation states that are experiencing runaway inflation.
From Zero Hedge
Mick
 
I don't know anything about the cost structure of running a gym
15 year gym rat here:

After rent (which any business will pay unless it owns the floorspace), it's air conditioning. Gyms have virtually no ongoing expenses other than the cleaning crew that run the vacuum cleaners through the place each day. Dependent on the climate obviously, gyms are actually very energy intensive. It takes a lot of power to cool dozens of people exercising flat out. I've spotted a couple of ENORMOUS solar panel arrays lately that I'll try to get a picture of sometime to show you what I mean.

If you think of a gym like a giant cool room/cold storage but with hundreds of (large amounts of) heat producing bodies passing through it each day you can obviously pretty quickly start to understand how they actually work.

As I keep pointing out, if energy goes up then the more energy intensive something is the more it's going to go up too. I've locked my gym membership fees in

Hence why, say, wheat is at record highs but rice has barely moved.
 

They should put generators on the treadmills and cycles, and then hook it all up to the grid
 
regarding rice , SO FAR , can see the potential for rice consumption to increase ( but not to rocket-ship proportions )

rice tends to store better , so would expect stackers ( like me ) to have a few months supply ( in the pantry )

gyms , during the recent virus thingy , i notice the local gym has a 'hygienist ' ( or whatever her job title is ) comes by maybe two-hourly , to 'wipe ' ( i am guessing an alcohol-based solution ) on the machines frequently used ( probably wise considering the number of 'rehab' members that i see ) , also i note certain machines appear to need increased maintenance/repairs ( the treadmills and rowing machines , principally )
 





As I said a few pages back, it's a "not yet":



Hungary and poland are holding it up. Russia's responding with gas and grain.
 
'shrinkflation' observed as early as November last year , so i reduced my 'stock-piling' of those lines ( the shrinking , ones ) by April those lines were no longer stocked at the local super-market

but this is nothing new to those that grew up in the 1970's
 
Yes, they do this with the data too: Change the stuff in the "basket of goods" to cheaper/crappier/etc stuff because "Once it gets too expensive people just won't buy it any more".
 
From Todays Australian
So the cits and the govt are still out there spending., but not as much as they were earlier.
The big jump in export value may be due more to inflationary increases in the cost of goods rather than an increase in volume.
Mick
 
newscomau usually copy and paste their articles and/or splice a few chunks into 1 article without proof reading it so they probably forgot to replace aud with inflation.
 
Wednesday, Jun 1, 2022
Dear Stockhouse Member,
It was a choppy day for Canada's main stock index after the Bank of Canada said it was prepared to hike interest rates aggressively to combat surging inflation. The mining, industrials, financials, and energy sectors moved higher on Wednesday, with the latter raking in higher oil prices after E.U. leaders agreed to a partial and phased ban on Russian oil and as China ended its COVID-19 lockdown in Shanghai. Canadian manufacturing activity expanded at a faster pace in May with higher output meeting demand and inflation pressures showing some signs of easing.