Yacob's emphasis on reason as humanity's shared capacity suggests inflation solutions require dialogue and collective deliberation, not expert decree alone.
While Zera Yacob valued expertise and careful reasoning, he rejected the notion that truth emerges only from the few. He believed reason is humanity's common inheritance, that disciplined collective inquiry produces sounder judgments than isolated expertise. Applied to inflation, this principle suggests solutions should emerge from broad deliberation among affected groups: workers, savers, businesses, families. Rather than relying solely on technical economists, inclusive reasoning would weigh lived experience against models, explore unexpected connections, and surface assumptions hidden from single perspectives. Workers' understanding of wage erosion, small businesses' knowledge of supply constraints, and communities' experience of price increases offer reasoning that macroeconomists alone may miss. Yacob's framework suggests that societies addressing inflation through collective reasoning—wage councils, price transparency initiatives, broad policy forums—make sounder, more just decisions. This does not mean abandoning expertise but situating it within a broader deliberative process where reasonable people across society contribute their particular knowledge. Inflation becomes not a problem for experts to solve but a challenge for a reasoning community to address together.
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