
Inflation Is Over, Prices Aren't
The joke targets the gap between official economic victory laps and the public's everyday experience: inflation may have slowed statistically, but prices have settled into a punishing new plateau that benefits corporations more than consumers.
A supermarket is staged like a triumphant grand reopening. At center, a smiling government official in ceremonial scissors cuts a ribbon beneath a giant banner reading 'INFLATION DEFEATED.' Confetti falls and cameras flash. But the aisle itself tells the real story: staples like eggs, bread, milk, and a rent notice sit far above shoppers on an impossibly high shelf labeled 'NEW NORMAL,' each item dangling oversized price tags. Ordinary customers below crane their necks, clutch coupons, and stare in disbelief. The only way up is a sleek rolling ladder marked 'Record Profits,' currently occupied by suited corporate executives easily reaching the goods. The official celebrates the metric, while everyone else remains trapped in the lived reality of permanently elevated prices.
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