That is only looking at the saving side of the equation.
Now look at the income side. Suppose you take home $20,000 a year (or month if you are one of those). After 10 years of inflation, assuming you did not get a significant raise, you are now taking home half of the purchasing power.
Now look at this from a tax perspective. If you were lucky enough to find a way to double your take-home to $40,000, then you only stayed flat in terms of your purchasing power. However, that is now getting taxed at a much higher rate.
This is the hidden ceiling that stops most people from maintaining a reasonable quality of life. Just look around you and see how many people are driving worse cars, living in lesser homes, and they are working they asses off.
Really insightful post. Still wrapping my head around it.
One of the points you made is key, inflation a ceiling that stops people from maintaining a reasonably quality of life. Bitcoin is truly an incredible discovery.
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