> Today you can buy a device a million times faster than 20 years ago for the same price.
And as you can see that massive deflation completely destroyed the computing industry, as everyone sat around waiting for next year's device that was faster and better for a similar price.
Wait, that didn't happen? People still buy things when there is deflation? No, that can't be, how else can I justify the morals of my money printer?
You joke but this is an actual factor that hardware companies have to proactively manage. Apple, for example, grants free replacements to people who bought laptops in the last few months before an upgrade is announced. Precisely because, otherwise, people will sit on their hands waiting for the new model.
But really, you can just look at bitcoin itself: it keeps appreciating on the upward swings, but people continue to not use it for everyday transactions - it's purely a speculation target. That's not what a currency should be for.
And as you can see that massive deflation completely destroyed the computing industry, as everyone sat around waiting for next year's device that was faster and better for a similar price.
Wait, that didn't happen? People still buy things when there is deflation? No, that can't be, how else can I justify the morals of my money printer?