On the bright side we are up against the Euro! Time to travel!kingj3 said:
We're building back better man!
Just look up the chart for how much value the USD has lost since the year 2000.
It's a big club, and we ain't in it.
On the bright side we are up against the Euro! Time to travel!kingj3 said:
We're building back better man!
Just look up the chart for how much value the USD has lost since the year 2000.
It's a big club, and we ain't in it.
Definitely seeing this creep into the reality of the typical old millennial suburban moms lives. Being a throwaway leftist is oh so cool at little Ayden and Brynslee's PTA meetings, the ice cream social at the leftist Presbolutheran "church", and in her social media circles. But its now glaringly obvious that leftist policies mean she's either going to have to (1) get back into the workforce or (2) give up things like vacations, private dance lessons, select soccer, and the expensive SUV in exchange for a minivan.DTP02 said:Suburban soccer moms buy groceries. They see it.Bonfire1996 said:Houstonag said:
I hope those yellow belly liberals and suburban soccer moms and dads are happy now. With the mail in ballots and election fraud we got exactly what was being predicted .
The DC swamp will still get paid and have little effect on their lives. America when are you going to wake up about democrats?
I can assure you that 99% of soccer moms can't tell you why inflation is bad
"I don't think it's bad! My house is worth more and Costco is less crowded LOL."
It's causing a cognitive dissonance between all of the SJW stuff and leftist propaganda they see on social media and their HEB receipt grounded realities.
So...inflation is very...very...goodrocky the dog said:
Manhattan said:
ITT: people who don't work in supply chain and understand that this is the result of failed leadership in 2020.
Inflation just makes things more out of reach for you to attaincrowman2010 said:So...inflation is very...very...goodrocky the dog said:
Now do stagflation and deflationaggiebrad94 said:Inflation just makes things more out of reach for you to attaincrowman2010 said:So...inflation is very...very...goodrocky the dog said:
Is this true? Seeing the dollar pegged to passage of time is a new angle. Does this argue against savings?Quote:
Under the Carter era definition, that is almost 20%. At this rate, a dollar I earn today is worthless in 5 years!
will25u said:INFLATION
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) July 13, 2022
Dec '20: 1.4% (Trump's last full month in office)
Feb '21: 1.7%
Apr '21: 4.2%
June '21: 5.4%
Aug '21: 5.3%
Oct '21: 6.2%
Dec '21: 7.0%
Feb '22 : 7.9% (Putin invades Ukraine)
Apr '22: 8.3%
May'22: 8.6%
TODAY: 9.1% pic.twitter.com/aMrJswygBK
It's so poorly worded I'm not even sure what he's saying....Ol_Ag_02 said:Manhattan said:
ITT: people who don't work in supply chain and understand that this is the result of failed leadership in 2020.
This may the dumbest thing I've seen written this week.
So lets just take one example of the **** show Biden emcees: Tell me how gas prices are the result of failed leadership in 2020. Can't wait for your coming amount of spin, gonna get dizzy I'm sure.
Best hedge against inflation is real estate and commodities. Just make sure you can service your debt on the real estate.titan said:Is this true? Seeing the dollar pegged to passage of time is a new angle. Does this argue against savings?Quote:
Under the Carter era definition, that is almost 20%. At this rate, a dollar I earn today is worthless in 5 years!
Manhattan said:
ITT: people who don't work in supply chain and understand that this is the result of failed leadership in 2020.
FriscoKid said:Manhattan said:
ITT: people who don't work in supply chain and understand that this is the result of failed leadership in 2020.
Republican governors wanted to cut off the money supply and force people back to work. You and your friends cried about it.
Ag87H2O said:
Please. It's the result of failed leadership alright, but it started on April 21, 2021.
The Trump administration owns this, lock, stock, and barrel.
aginlakeway said:
So how is this Trump's fault?
SouthTex99 said:
Fed is going to go 100 basis points at July meeting. Hell they might go 125.
CDUB98 said:
I've said it before, and I'll say it again, EVERY president owns this starting with GWB. The spending simply got worse with each successive president, and Biden's spending finally tipped the boat over and we're all drowning.
aggrad02 said:
We need true fiscal conservative leadership. Starting with this election, we need republicans to focus on cutting spending and reigning in the Fed where they can.
Then we need need a true fiscal conservative in 2024. Not a fiscal liberal like Trump.
It's fair to hit Trump for spending deficits as he has been no better than the dems.aggrad02 said:aginlakeway said:
So how is this Trump's fault?
Look at 2020 deficits (a record) and monetary expansion (a record). That's Trump right there.
REAL AVERAGE HOURLY EARNINGS HIT A NEW ALL-TIME LOW pic.twitter.com/8mbfRrPXOB
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) July 13, 2022
No, we know who you really picked.Ags77 said:
What did I win ? I picked Roger Maris
Quote:
ShadowStats hasn't updated for May yet, but if current trends hold and probably they will only worsen May's annualized inflation rate will be just north of 17 percent. As a reminder, the worst of Jimmy Carter's stagflation era topped out at 14.5 percent. /12
This year we'll soon see Americans' losing 20 percent of the value of their paycheck through inflation alone. That's a horrible shock to Main St., and unfortunately there's no reason for optimism. The Fed continues suppressing … 13/
… interest rates and was still printing money last month. The crisis will only abate once Congress drastically slashes spending and the Fed jacks up interest rates to unforeseen levels, the effects of which will be a huge recession. 14/
The Biden Admin doesn't want a recession on their watch, so will likely try papering over the crisis with more handouts, which as we all now only makes things worse, while pushing off the actual reckoning further into the future. 15/
The worst part about this? Inflation always punishes the poor hardest. 16/
will25u said:REAL AVERAGE HOURLY EARNINGS HIT A NEW ALL-TIME LOW pic.twitter.com/8mbfRrPXOB
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) July 13, 2022
Yikes! This is what I was looking for the other day. Thanks for posting!will25u said:REAL AVERAGE HOURLY EARNINGS HIT A NEW ALL-TIME LOW pic.twitter.com/8mbfRrPXOB
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) July 13, 2022
Clown Baby said:aggrad02 said:
We need true fiscal conservative leadership. Starting with this election, we need republicans to focus on cutting spending and reigning in the Fed where they can.
Then we need need a true fiscal conservative in 2024. Not a fiscal liberal like Trump.
Outside of Rand Paul, this person literally doesn't not exist on the federal level. The two party system, as it's currently constructed, has no incentive whatsoever to fix spending. Republican or Democrat. More people need to start waking up this this, and quick.
Plus I have learned recently that inflation is actually good for the economy and the American people. So it is more gooder for everybody.Gigemags382 said:
But this is out of date by a few days so it's completely meaningless. And anyways it's transitory. At this point what different does it make? Depends on what the definition of is is.
Bringing the real data.nortex97 said:
15% using 1994 methodology.
**** Joe Biden and anyone who voted for any democrat in 2020.
Quote:
Under the Carter era definition, that is almost 20%. At this rate, a dollar I earn today is worthless in 5 years!
3 Toed Pete said:It's fair to hit Trump for spending deficits as he has been no better than the dems.aggrad02 said:aginlakeway said:
So how is this Trump's fault?
Look at 2020 deficits (a record) and monetary expansion (a record). That's Trump right there.
But explain what the President has to do with monetary policy (I guess other than Fed appointments). How is Trump responsible for monetary expansion?
aggrad02 said:Clown Baby said:aggrad02 said:
We need true fiscal conservative leadership. Starting with this election, we need republicans to focus on cutting spending and reigning in the Fed where they can.
Then we need need a true fiscal conservative in 2024. Not a fiscal liberal like Trump.
Outside of Rand Paul, this person literally doesn't not exist on the federal level. The two party system, as it's currently constructed, has no incentive whatsoever to fix spending. Republican or Democrat. More people need to start waking up this this, and quick.
I'll take Rand 1000%. I fought my face off for Ron in 2008, and supported Rand in 2016. I'll do it again.
Drop back another 8 years while you are at it...aggrad02 said:FriscoKid said:Manhattan said:
ITT: people who don't work in supply chain and understand that this is the result of failed leadership in 2020.
Republican governors wanted to cut off the money supply and force people back to work. You and your friends cried about it.
Governors have nothing to do with federal spending or Fed monetary policy.
This is Trump's deficits and Trump's Fed followed by Biden's just as bad policies, but if you think Trump would have made everything peachy your not thinking clearly. Trump was afraid of losing the election in the face of Covid, so he tried to buy the election with stimulus which is the cause of this inflation. Even before that he was running up deficits and expanding the money supply to pump the economy. It wasn't sound economy policies it was inflationary policies that Trump was running from the get go.
I wonder where this inflation is coming from:
https://datalab.usaspending.gov/americas-finance-guide/deficit/trends/
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WM2NS
Clearly Trump 2020 plus Biden 2021.
Quote:
Barack Obama
President Obama added about $8.6 trillion, about a 74% increase, to the national debt at the end of President Bush's last budget in 2009.
- FY 2017: $671 billion
- FY 2016: $1.42 trillion
- FY 2015: $326 billion
- FY 2014: $1.09 trillion
- FY 2013: $672 billion
- FY 2012: $1.28 trillion
- FY 2011: $1.23 trillion
- FY 2010: $1.65 trillion
- FY 2009: $253 billion (Congress passed the Economic Stimulus Act, which spent $253 billion)11