Crime Against Humanity: the Ripple Effect of Inflation, 2

Anything influencing the market, the society, the people’s lives out of an unbridgeable competitive advantage, and out of whichever of the above reasons is hardly going to influence them for the better, is it?
It has been called redistributive effect, and not only it transfers wealth from the society and the people, its producers and legitimate owners, to the thieves, but it then empowers the thieves to use that wealth against them.

And looking now more closely into it – hidden confiscation through inflation, redistributive effect and “fraudological” delay – we notice that all this acts as a ripple, producing a ripple effect.
The unbridgeable advantage gets extended, indeed, as a ripple: starting from the moneypulators that create the money and its purchasing power out of nothing, every time a part of that money passes from hand to hand, a proportional share of that advantage is extended to its receiver. On and on, at every passage the ripple advances, granting to the “chosen” an undue advantage made out of the disadvantage it creates to all the others.
Mechanically, it takes place through a series of well known economic dynamics: thanks to the undue extra purchasing power, a “chosen” economic entity, supply side, can secure a higher stake of supplies, and can secure them at lower, unchanged, or even higher unit prices, leaving to its competitors a lower share of supplies at higher unit prices anyway. At the same time, client side, it can sell at lower unit prices, if not even below cost, and secure a higher market share, leaving to competitors a lower market share at forcibly lower unit prices. Moreover, a “chosen” economic entity can harm as well those not in direct competition with it or even not in competition with it at all: for example, the more the television sector absorbs resources and market shares, not only the less people read, but the less people meet and talk to one another as well. Things like that, you get the idea. Either way, the ripple of stolen purchasing power is going to result in market distortion, stealing resources from ethical, needed, useful production to feed non−ethical, harmful, destructive production and monopolistic consolidation. In conclusion, whatever the mechanics and the prices, the advantage enables the “chosen” to acquire control and strangle the others; and the ripple effect is a tool used by moneypulators to lay the foundations of their oligo−monopolies.