• luciole (he/him)@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Oh look, another article about how the plebs are whiny for no good reason. Haven’t the masses heard? The numbers look good and Goldman Sachs said the hard part is over.

  • albsen@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    That’s what’s called gaming the statistics. Actual purchasing power has been declining at a significantly higher rate as wages increased the net result being you can buy less stuff for more money. Fluffy articles citing feel good statistics dont matter.

  • Pete Hahnloser@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Glad to see the Times still churning out utterly tone-deaf columns about kitchen-table economics.

    I don’t care about what the statistics say about the economy; what matters is that all these available jobs are entry-level. The rate of inflation is largely irrelevant when I’ve been losing purchasing power since 2003 anyway. The real problem is that when I entered the job market, you had to have 15 years of experience to make middle-class wages in journalism, and 13 years into my career, everyone with experience had taken buyouts or been laid off, with those of us stupid enough to think editing wouldn’t die being shipped off to centralized production facilities.

    Now, I can’t get a job paying a subsistence wage in any field. Either the algorithm finds me too old or data analysis and coding, which I understand to be in high demand, don’t count if done in a newsroom. I’m still supposed to have more than 20 years of career left and had to move into a vehicle because all the hard work one was supposed to do in one’s 20s for the later payout of a comfortable life with vacations and such just … doesn’t count.

    I don’t care what the Fed does or who’s in the White House; I care about being able to afford more than bologna sandwiches for every meal having already given up housing. That much should not be difficult to understand.

  • Onihikage@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Unemployment is low because potential workers have either given up and stopped looking for work or are working literally anything because they will starve if they don’t; neither option lends itself to satisfaction with the economy. Labor participation rates have only just barely gotten back to their pre-pandemic levels, but a lot of people burned any savings they had to keep their heads above water, so on the whole they’re still further behind than they were 4 years ago, and they know it, but Krugman never cared to ask a real person, so he has no clue.

    Low inflation is meaningless when economic mobility is lower than ever, with education and healthcare dropping in quality and availability while increasing in price much faster than the average. Most small businesses that went bankrupt due to pandemic half-measures have not reopened, because unlike billionaires, when regular people without an army of lawyers declare bankruptcy, they actually lose everything. In spite of all this, clueless clowns who barely know how to look at numbers on spreadsheets write articles wondering why regular people aren’t satisfied with such a great economy, and concludes a better outcome was impossible.

    His only mention of consumer prices is an aggregated consumer price index, which is a “mere” 19% increase over pre-pandemic levels, and from that he concludes people are dumb babies because wages rose by about the same amount. This take is particularly insulting because he has definitely seen this chart and the numbers it’s based on:

    If that’s a great economy, I’m a firebreathing dragon.

    • silence7@slrpnk.netOP
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      1 year ago

      Yep, goods went down in price, services and housing went up in price. Given what people actually buy…it’s been a few percent per year increase in overall prices, which is what your chart from a right-wing think-tank is designed to hide.