Seriously?
fig96 said:You're right, we're obviously doing everything perfectly. That's why we're leading every other country in cases while most of the civilized western world has virtually eliminated new cases.Carnwellag2 said:Stupid post and statement not based factfig96 said:
, if people had been responsible all along we wouldn't have the case numbers we have.
fig96 said:
I have no desire to even bother to argue about this so I'll leave y'all to it. If you think we're doing a great job in general handling this situation I don't know what to tell you.
Total cases aren't necessarily the indicator to go by but still matter, this whole "but you didn't die" argument tries to make a non-binary discussion very binary.ORAggieFan said:Anyone arguing total cases really doesn't have a valid point and loses all credibility.fig96 said:
I have no desire to even bother to argue about this so I'll leave y'all to it. If you think we're doing a great job in general handling this situation I don't know what to tell you.
fig96 said:Total cases aren't necessarily the indicator to go by but still matter, this whole "but you didn't die" argument tries to make a non-binary discussion very binary.ORAggieFan said:Anyone arguing total cases really doesn't have a valid point and loses all credibility.fig96 said:
I have no desire to even bother to argue about this so I'll leave y'all to it. If you think we're doing a great job in general handling this situation I don't know what to tell you.
But feel free to pick another category we're leading the world in. Y'all are picking a weird hill to die on here.
fig96 said:
I don't understand why when we have 25% of the world's cases with 4% of the population and continue to add cases at 10-20x or more the rest of the western world it's controversial to say we aren't doing a very good job.
Should case counts be monitored? Yes. Are they a good indicator of how we are doing vs. other countries? Not really.fig96 said:
Total cases aren't necessarily the indicator to go by but still matter, this whole "but you didn't die" argument tries to make a non-binary discussion very binary.
RandyAg98 said:
You're right. Your virus is going to kill us all. Board up the windows! You watch too much Today Show. Their lead in yesterday was "On The Brink".
So because I said if we'd been responsible all along we'd be in much better shape with case numbers I now think we're all going to die.RandyAg98 said:
You're right. Your virus is going to kill us all. Board up the windows! You watch too much Today Show. Their lead in yesterday was "On The Brink".
Be careful drawing conclusions based on unemployment rates in the EU. Most of those countries made strong interventions to prevent that from rising, which cost a lot of government money.DadHammer said:
For Sweden - some economics.
Trading Economics projects a second-quarter GDP change of -4.2 percent (and a third-quarter growth of 2.4 percent). Depending on your preferred method of calculation, we could casually say that's 7.8 times better than what the U.S. saw last quarter.
As of June 18, Statista forecast a 2.6 percent drop in Sweden's employment rate for 2020. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, meanwhile, reported unemployment in the U.S. shot up 11.2 percentage points from 3.5 percent in February to 14.7 percent in April, before dropping a bit to 13.3 percent in May and 11.7 percent in June as parts of the economy reopened.
Yes, when the govt pays your employer so they pay your salary, it is still govt support of the worker, just magically doesn't count as unemployement.dragmagpuff said:Be careful drawing conclusions based on unemployment rates in the EU. Most of those countries made strong interventions to prevent that from rising, which cost a lot of government money.DadHammer said:
For Sweden - some economics.
Trading Economics projects a second-quarter GDP change of -4.2 percent (and a third-quarter growth of 2.4 percent). Depending on your preferred method of calculation, we could casually say that's 7.8 times better than what the U.S. saw last quarter.
As of June 18, Statista forecast a 2.6 percent drop in Sweden's employment rate for 2020. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, meanwhile, reported unemployment in the U.S. shot up 11.2 percentage points from 3.5 percent in February to 14.7 percent in April, before dropping a bit to 13.3 percent in May and 11.7 percent in June as parts of the economy reopened.
Here is the EU as a whole.
dragmagpuff said:Be careful drawing conclusions based on unemployment rates in the EU. Most of those countries made strong interventions to prevent that from rising, which cost a lot of government money.DadHammer said:
For Sweden - some economics.
Trading Economics projects a second-quarter GDP change of -4.2 percent (and a third-quarter growth of 2.4 percent). Depending on your preferred method of calculation, we could casually say that's 7.8 times better than what the U.S. saw last quarter.
As of June 18, Statista forecast a 2.6 percent drop in Sweden's employment rate for 2020. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, meanwhile, reported unemployment in the U.S. shot up 11.2 percentage points from 3.5 percent in February to 14.7 percent in April, before dropping a bit to 13.3 percent in May and 11.7 percent in June as parts of the economy reopened.
Here is the EU as a whole.
I agree. The EU approach to dealing with the economic damage of the pandemic was much smarter.SirLurksALot said:dragmagpuff said:Be careful drawing conclusions based on unemployment rates in the EU. Most of those countries made strong interventions to prevent that from rising, which cost a lot of government money.DadHammer said:
For Sweden - some economics.
Trading Economics projects a second-quarter GDP change of -4.2 percent (and a third-quarter growth of 2.4 percent). Depending on your preferred method of calculation, we could casually say that's 7.8 times better than what the U.S. saw last quarter.
As of June 18, Statista forecast a 2.6 percent drop in Sweden's employment rate for 2020. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, meanwhile, reported unemployment in the U.S. shot up 11.2 percentage points from 3.5 percent in February to 14.7 percent in April, before dropping a bit to 13.3 percent in May and 11.7 percent in June as parts of the economy reopened.
Here is the EU as a whole.
It also means that their recovery will occur much quicker. Our decision to push people onto unemployment has lead to a massive increase in permanent job losses. Our decision not to renew the $600 weekly plus up means that most of the Newly unemployed will be taking in about 50% of the income they were pre-covid. This is only going to make the economic situation worse in this country. We will likely end up spending more per capita, because it's going to take us much longer to recover.
I agree they are better, I just think the 7.8X better is not comparing like-to-like numbers.DadHammer said:
What about the better by far GDP numbers?
Yet to be determined. I could see where employers kept employees on while the govt was paying the bills, but demand destruction due to COVID could lead to layoffs and business closings once the govt checks stop.SirLurksALot said:dragmagpuff said:Be careful drawing conclusions based on unemployment rates in the EU. Most of those countries made strong interventions to prevent that from rising, which cost a lot of government money.DadHammer said:
For Sweden - some economics.
Trading Economics projects a second-quarter GDP change of -4.2 percent (and a third-quarter growth of 2.4 percent). Depending on your preferred method of calculation, we could casually say that's 7.8 times better than what the U.S. saw last quarter.
As of June 18, Statista forecast a 2.6 percent drop in Sweden's employment rate for 2020. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, meanwhile, reported unemployment in the U.S. shot up 11.2 percentage points from 3.5 percent in February to 14.7 percent in April, before dropping a bit to 13.3 percent in May and 11.7 percent in June as parts of the economy reopened.
Here is the EU as a whole.
It also means that their recovery will occur much quicker. Our decision to push people onto unemployment has lead to a massive increase in permanent job losses. Our decision not to renew the $600 weekly plus up means that most of the Newly unemployed will be taking in about 50% of the income they were pre-covid. This is only going to make the economic situation worse in this country. We will likely end up spending more per capita, because it's going to take us much longer to recover.
BiochemAg97 said:Yet to be determined. I could see where employers kept employees on while the govt was paying the bills, but demand destruction due to COVID could lead to layoffs and business closings once the govt checks stop.SirLurksALot said:dragmagpuff said:Be careful drawing conclusions based on unemployment rates in the EU. Most of those countries made strong interventions to prevent that from rising, which cost a lot of government money.DadHammer said:
For Sweden - some economics.
Trading Economics projects a second-quarter GDP change of -4.2 percent (and a third-quarter growth of 2.4 percent). Depending on your preferred method of calculation, we could casually say that's 7.8 times better than what the U.S. saw last quarter.
As of June 18, Statista forecast a 2.6 percent drop in Sweden's employment rate for 2020. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, meanwhile, reported unemployment in the U.S. shot up 11.2 percentage points from 3.5 percent in February to 14.7 percent in April, before dropping a bit to 13.3 percent in May and 11.7 percent in June as parts of the economy reopened.
Here is the EU as a whole.
It also means that their recovery will occur much quicker. Our decision to push people onto unemployment has lead to a massive increase in permanent job losses. Our decision not to renew the $600 weekly plus up means that most of the Newly unemployed will be taking in about 50% of the income they were pre-covid. This is only going to make the economic situation worse in this country. We will likely end up spending more per capita, because it's going to take us much longer to recover.
Also, part of the issue with the $600 weekly bonus unemployment was people not wanting to go back to work because they were getting more from unemployment. Obviously these were low income jobs to start with.
I have not idea what the better solution is, but I'm pretty sure the US trying a dozen different approaches instead of committing to one was not it.
fig96 said:So because I said if we'd been responsible all along we'd be in much better shape with case numbers I now think we're all going to die.RandyAg98 said:
You're right. Your virus is going to kill us all. Board up the windows! You watch too much Today Show. Their lead in yesterday was "On The Brink".
And y'all wonder why we can't have intelligent discussions about this.