I think you've got your cause/effect chain a little muddled. I would also assert that the system dynamics are neither linear nor singular in the way you frame it.
If you will please allow me an oversimplified example:
A restaurant is limited by the amount of food a person can eat in a meal. So this hypothetical restaurant can sell a $20 meal to 100 people (with $20 expendable income to spend,) and thus will generate $2,000 revenue for that meal service.
However, if fewer and fewer people have $20 expendable income, then obviously it becomes harder and harder for that restaurant to generate that same $2,000. Especially as the cost of bills, ingredients, and employee wages increase, for example.
So they are left with a dilemma of: 1) Raise prices knowing that there will be fewer customers with enough expendable income to buy the expensive food, or 2) Lower prices and hope that more customers will offset the lower prices (this usually does not happen.)
Also it's important to point out that 1 person with a lot of money won't come in and order 100 people's worth of meals. The human stomach doesn't scale in that way.
This example is obviously oversimplified for the sake of showing the point
> Increasing wealth inequality, drives prices inflation
How does increasing wealth inequality drive price increases?
A restaurant is limited by the amount of food a person can eat in a meal. So this hypothetical restaurant can sell a $20 meal to 100 people (with $20 expendable income to spend,) and thus will generate $2,000 revenue for that meal service.
However, if fewer and fewer people have $20 expendable income, then obviously it becomes harder and harder for that restaurant to generate that same $2,000. Especially as the cost of bills, ingredients, and employee wages increase, for example.
So they are left with a dilemma of: 1) Raise prices knowing that there will be fewer customers with enough expendable income to buy the expensive food, or 2) Lower prices and hope that more customers will offset the lower prices (this usually does not happen.)
Also it's important to point out that 1 person with a lot of money won't come in and order 100 people's worth of meals. The human stomach doesn't scale in that way.
This example is obviously oversimplified for the sake of showing the point