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Whenever money feels insufficient, the first thought many people get is:
“Why can’t the government just print more money?”
This question may seem simple, but the answer is deeply connected to inflation, value of money, market behavior, and economic stability. Let’s break it down in the simplest possible way.
Before understanding inflation, we must understand what money really is.
Money derives its value from:
Earlier, we used a barter system:
But barter was inconvenient. That’s why currency was introduced as a convenient form of money.
Because:
Without trust, currency is just paper.
Imagine this:
Everyone in India wakes up tomorrow and receives ₹50,000 for free from the government.
Sounds good?
Actually, it will cause disaster.
Result?
This is exactly why printing extra money does NOT increase wealth,
it only increases prices.
Government decides every citizen should have a smartphone.
So it prints extra money and distributes ₹5,000 to everyone.
What happens next?
More money in people’s hands without increasing production leads to higher prices, not prosperity.
The most famous example of “printing money gone wrong” happened in Zimbabwe.
This is why printing money is dangerous.
Money’s value depends on:
If money supply increases faster than goods, its value falls.
This is the root cause of inflation.
Too much money + same amount of goods = price rise
✔ Money gets value from trust and government backing
✔ Printing excess money leads to inflation
✔ Inflation makes products costlier
✔ Extreme money printing leads to hyperinflation
✔ Zimbabwe is the world’s clearest warning
✔ Real growth comes by increasing production, not printing money
Money may seem like something that governments can print freely, but the economy doesn’t work that way.
If a government prints excessive money:
To avoid poverty and inflation, governments must balance:
