When governments debase money, they almost never say “we’re reducing the value of your savings.”
They use technical terms instead.
You’ll hear phrases like:
• Quantitative easing
• Liquidity injections
• Balance sheet expansion
• Monetary accommodation
• Asset purchases
• Stimulus measures
• Emergency support
All of these describe the same core action:
creating new money without creating new goods or productivity.
From a technical perspective, the justification is usually framed as:
• preventing deflation
• supporting aggregate demand
• stabilising financial markets
• maintaining credit availability
These sound neutral. Even responsible.
But notice what’s missing from the language.
They almost never say:
• dilution of purchasing power
• transfer from savers to debtors
• erosion of real wages
• stealth taxation via inflation
Because those words describe the outcome, not the mechanism.
Money debasement works best when it’s gradual, indirect, and hard to explain.
That’s why it’s wrapped in technical jargon instead of plain language.
You still have the same number in your bank account.
It just buys less over time.
That’s not a bug in the system.
It’s the feature.
#MoneyDebasement #InflationExplained #FinancialLiteracy #MonetaryPolicy #WealthAwareness
