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I'd apply it to everything, but that's probably not what you really want to know.
What I'm more familiar with are labor regulations. There are a ton of rules about working conditions, benefits, who can be hired, who can be fired and all of those things cause companies to spend money making sure they're compliant with the rules.
They also don't hire everyone they would otherwise want to and they don't fire everyone they otherwise would. Both of those reduce productivity. That's also inflationary (in the price sense).
On the production side, there are innumerable environmental and safety regulations that make everything more expensive. That should all be replaced by manufacturer liability.
So that means that industry is part of the inflation problem, does that mean that it plays an important role in the inflation that the United States currently has?
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Everything in the economy goes into price formation. More requirements on producers makes prices higher. More spending from consumers also drives prices up.
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So what would stabilize both the market and inflation? Measures that the government should take, but we know that the bureaucracy would not allow it? Or could it?
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The best thing for the government to do is go away. Markets sort themselves out.
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That would be great, but I think it is a great utopia to believe that the government or state will disappear. Human beings by nature need someone to blame for everything (inflation, poverty, crime, etc.), which reminds us that the system and its money are a fallacy.
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