I bought one of my daily papers yesterday at the news stand...bookstore.... and the price had jumped from $1.25 to $1.50. Now in the old days this would appear to be a 20% bump in price but now, thanks to Chris Martensen, I know I'm doing my part to ward off a recession.
Through the magic of hedonics, it's assumed I no longer buy a paper. Instead, I read the paper online, costing me nothing. (How good can it get) Plus the paper is more efficient. With a click of the mouse I can go directly to a section of the paper of my choice. No more time consuming turning of pages. (And that ink on the fingers problem. Forget about it.)
The bottom line? I'm way ahead, putting a serious dent in inflation. (I only hope Mish doesn't hear about this one) And I've done my part for the GDP. Who can put a number on that new-found efficiency? Okay, the government can. But what are we talking about? Millions of papers. It's got to be billions of $$$.
Through the magic of hedonics, it's assumed I no longer buy a paper. Instead, I read the paper online, costing me nothing. (How good can it get) Plus the paper is more efficient. With a click of the mouse I can go directly to a section of the paper of my choice. No more time consuming turning of pages. (And that ink on the fingers problem. Forget about it.)
The bottom line? I'm way ahead, putting a serious dent in inflation. (I only hope Mish doesn't hear about this one) And I've done my part for the GDP. Who can put a number on that new-found efficiency? Okay, the government can. But what are we talking about? Millions of papers. It's got to be billions of $$$.
Comment