People like my family when I was growing up. We weren't filthy capitalist rich, but with my parents both being in medical we were well off enough that I didn't have a great grasp of cost vs spending power. Always had a well-stocked pantry of name-brand shit. Functionally we were aware when there was a price hike in X good, and might even comment on it, but it absolutely never affected what we bought. The bill was just higher. We would probably be excited about something like gas prices coming down but it ultimately didn't actually mean anything to us.
I couldn't possibly keep that lifestyle now (nor do I want to). I do reasonably well enough, but not to the extent that I can ignore the cost of things like food, and am always trying to save where I can, especially on food costs.
We would probably be excited about something like gas prices coming down but it ultimately didn't actually mean anything to us.
I definitely get that at some level, but the idea that you'd actively be celebrating a strong economy really implies that it does mean something to you.
Like, I can get landing a big salary bump or year end bonus at the end of a year and feeling celebratory. If it's 1999 and my earning for the year shot up 20% from the year before? Fucking awesome. Break out the fireworks.
But is that happening right now? I'm not seeing it.
People are more convinced that inflation will keep falling, and their outlook on their personal finances has also improved.
The rate of inflation fell ever so slightly, my 'outlook' on personal finances is still "work my body and joints to dust until 5 years before biological death" but hey, I can maybe retire to a lavish life of discount bulk pet food and a cardboard box apartment paid for with 70% of my Social Security income like 2 days earlier than previous, now. Pop the fucking corks!
The job market remains strong
Strong for who? Strong for fucking who? Try getting literally any god damn job as a blue collar these days. Nightmare mode if you have psychological issues. Just fucking try and you will see how swell it is. That one blissful year or so of companies hiring any warm body off the street during and immediately after the COVID19 outbreak is over, the 'getting a job' process has been back to business as usual for over two years now.
Plus massive layoffs in tech sector, UPS, etc etc. yeah the 'job market' is great, if you consider people on min wage with 2 hours a week pay actually 'employed'
I was just reading that story before I typed that, like yeah 50k more workers getting thrown like dirt to the wind, and that's just the planned layoffs reported thus far, because a gagglefuck of capitalist shitheads on Wall Street and their oracles are throwing tantrums about interest rates or whatever and the quarterly projections may not support the usual infinite growth on the workers' backs this year. In other words, it's been about 5-8 years so the working class is due for another squeeze in the ol' vice as per usual with capitalism.
I've been seeing what must be the effects of this crap in the job listings for my area. It's the most discouraging I've seen since like 2009. College degree or not, there's little to choose from and the competition for the scraps is undoubtedly high once again. What's also fun is I really don't want the job I have now but if I quit I am completely fucked and would be getting a much lower wage even if I did find something else.
Be sure to cut it up into many pieces, each with an eye. Plant it half way down in the pot, and make sure you can mound the dirt up around it as it grows to maximize the yield. You can harvest small potatoes after the flowers die, and then the largest ones once the plant dies.
look at this article and her other articles. She was real with people, but she left Vox this year and she didn't publish that many articles in thestreet before she left.
Look at the list of these articles.
https://www.vox.com/22946366/the-big-squeeze
She either has to get a paycheck from a paper but she can't criticize capitalism because her editors will fire her. So she shit this crap out and this is the crap that gets published.
I'm getting the impression this article is a test if the editor will actually publish this crap. That's where we are at now.
Listen, I'm not saying that all the good vibes Americans are suddenly feeling about the economy boil down to stocks, gas prices, and eggs.
The job market remains strong, inflation is coming down, consumer spending is solid, GDP growth continues, etc.
What improved America's economic vibes was basically three things: the soaring stock market, falling gas prices, and eggs.
Even for people who aren't investors — though, contrary to popular belief, most Americans hold stocks — good market news tends to be a mood booster across the board.
A woo-hoo out of Wall Street is a smidge contagious, thanks to the wealth effect and the number of positive headlines soaring stocks generate.
As Jordan Weissmann at Semafor notes, the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco's index that tracks economic-news sentiment — the vibes generated by media coverage of the economy — started to tick up around the same time the stock market did last fall.
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