Gm nostriches.

Inflation moves into hyperinflation, not when taxes no longer meet government expenditure, nor when the government chooses to print their way to filling the gap.

Inflation moves into hyperinflation when faith is lost in a currently, and people begin by choosing other assets to store their value in and later look for people who will transact with them directly in their new store of value.

Hyperinflation is not something from the distant past nor distant lands, but happening all around us, now. Ever since we started buying houses to save for the future, the value of our currency started to crumble (I’m looking at your tricky Dicky).

What faith do you have in your local currency that you are using by decree (fiat) that is likely inflating at upwards of 10% a year, today ? Are you actively reducing your exposure to the hyperinflation?

When more people realise this, those running for the exits will transition from a trickle to a flood. Are you positioned? Will you be left to scramble? I’m now accepting I will have assets that will just have to jettison….. such as my house!!!! #bitcoin #grownostr

Rather dark image AI gave me for “hyperinflation in the uk”, is that what ai thinks uk women are like?!?!?

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GM 🔆 Rise 'n shine 🧡

GM Dug ☕ ☀️😀🌄

yes, specially after a night out. the shoes are usually being carried in their hand.

Ha ha ha, on point!

GA nostriches, Working on a revision to a paper and given I mention something that happened in the 80’s thought I’d see what happened in the 70’s and from the House of Lords library, found this part, and wondered how Britain’s current situation stacks up against it…..

3. Fiscal situation and the IMF bailout

The Labour Party returned to government in February 1974 (July 2024), just as the economy started to contract and inflation accelerated (was sort of stable/shit). It increased government spending sharply, in an attempt to mitigate the impact of the stagflation crisis on both industry and households (pay off junior doctors in the summer before riots broke out). In 1973/74, government spending as a share of GDP was 40.3%, before rising to 44.7% in 1974/75 and 46.5% in 1975/76 (44.4% in 2024 heading for the moon). Taxation did increase from the level it had been reduced to in 1972/73, but not enough to compensate for this (tax revenues are falling following increase of NI that came in, in April 2025). The public sector deficit therefore widened to 5.7% of GDP in 1974/75 and then to 6.3% of GDP in 1975/76, the highest it had been since 1946/47 (analysts suggest deficit could reach 5% by the end of 2025, I say don’t believe the numbers, there is no stopping this train). This increase in borrowing, combined with contracting GDP, saw the government’s debt to GDP ratio increase between 1973/74 (45.2%) and 1975/76 (49.3%), breaking a quarter-century long spell of annual reductions (In 2025, this figure is projected to be 96.9%, but 100% is in sight).

So peeps, when people throw around talk of an IMF bailout, I wouldn’t worry so much, there are other countries that may need failing out first as yields increase, and anyway, very much doubt the IMF will have enough money to do this, last time the bail out was about £2.3 billion, that’s about 10 days worth of interest payments.

Hyperinflation is coming, read #mandibles, stack bitcoin, manage your opsec and privacy. They will come hunting for anything they can get, if you’re in the public sector, prepare yourself and best not buy a second home (Angie R.).

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