• BygoneNeutrino@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I don’t know, man. I-a single adult -recieved over $700 in food stamps for well over a year. I ran out of my saved food stamps in 2025. I was also diagnosed with COVID over the phone and received over $5000 in unemployment per month. Since this income wasn’t reflected in Medicaid’s income requirements, I got free insurance as well.

    Giving this much money to low-income workers has a disproportionate impact on inflation. The skyrocketing prices of frozen meals and gourmet animal products, for example, was a direct result of the food stamps.

    It helped both me and the shareholders, but it came with a long-term cost. Everyone who had a job during the pandemic paid the price.

    • Matty Roses@lemmy.today
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      7 days ago

      Giving this much money to low-income workers has a disproportionate impact on inflation

      That’s not what the data seemed to say - every actual study showed that inflation came from supply shocks, and then companies using that excuse to raise prices.

      What DID pose a problem was you saw people not scared to starve if they lost a job. And that was causing big worries for employers, and that’s what couldn’t continue.