This is how I explained it to my parents (who are also
DVC owners):
Each resort
point chart has a total number of points - which is, the number required to book every room every day of the year. For years, that total number on the point chart has hovered very closely to the number of total declared points (the number of points that members own).
The POS (the legal documents which govern how DVC is run) states that any increase of points for a day or week needs to be met by a similar decrease elsewhere in the chart. Because the total number of points did not change much from year to year - DVC was following this requirement.
However, in 2022 - many weeks increased and were not offset by similar decreases. Some users here did some excellent analyses and noticed that the overall point totals increased at all resorts by a wider margin than ever before.
This is an issue because there are now more points in the charts than total declared (or the number of points that members own). At my home resort of PVB, these extra points can book 2 studios every day of the year. And this will be year after year after year.
So - if there are more points in the chart than members own, who benefits ? The consensus is not members (with the point inflation, your points don’t go as far). Disney will likely benefit as they can now rent the rooms that will sit empty for cash at the high rack rates they charge and pocket this money.
This is how I understand the issue but I am far from an expert so someone please correct me if any of this information is not accurate.