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Old 12-01-2023, 04:30 PM
Rajoo's Avatar
Rajoo Rajoo is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Sierras
Posts: 15,280
Quote:
Originally Posted by whell View Post
Oh please. I'm insulted and lied about daily on this forum. The difference is I don't whine about it. I just expect it as part of the deal.

It's not me forecasting "doom and gloom", though I understand why you'd want to mischaracterize it that way. I'm posting information that competes with the folks here who what to focus on the trees and ignore the forest because they think it helps their chosen narrative.

Folks don't care about things like when the Fed's last rate hike was, or whether the GDP unexpectedly rose in a single calendar quarter. They care about the fact that they can afford less than last year because prices keep going up.

Here, this explains it pretty well:

Many Americans remain dour on the state of the economy, with the price of necessities like food and rent a lingering source of pain. Although it may seem like small consolation for cash-strapped consumers, economists have some good news. Really.

Forecasters predict that the steep drop in inflation since it peaked at more than 9% in June of 2022 will continue in 2024. David Kelly, JPMorgan Asset Management's chief global strategist, projects "a very steady decline in inflation throughout the next year." That could lead the Federal Reserve to cut its benchmark interest rate and push down borrowing costs for individuals and businesses.

Moderating inflation can be seen in recent government data, with the Consumer Price Index in September up 3.7% over the prior 12 months.

"This is not a one or two-month story — the economy is cooling, and that will put further downward pressure on prices," Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon, Ernst & Young, told CBS MoneyWatch.

To be sure, consumers don't experience the economy as annualized rates of change in prices. A gallon of gas or milk either costs more than it did a year go or less. With prices for some essential goods still significantly higher than when inflation began surging in early 2020, it may be no surprise that half of the respondents to a Bankrate survey this week described their financial situation as worsening since the last presidential election in 2020.

Worries about high prices also had one gauge of U.S. consumer confidence sinking to a five-month low in October, data released at the end of the month by the Conference Board showed.

"Consumers continued to be preoccupied with rising prices in general, and for grocery and gasoline prices in particular," Dana Peterson, chief economist at the Conference Board, said in a statement. "Consumers also expressed concerns about the political situation and higher interest rates."


That's why I'm saying that from most folks' perspective, this ain't over. And it won't be for a while.

That's also why I look at posts like this and just laugh:

https://www.politicalchat.org/showpo...&postcount=597

When y'all post crap like that, it just shows either just how out of touch with reality some of you are, or that you choose to ignore reality if you think it'll help you score a debate point. Most folks absolutely don't feel like today's economy is akin to a rocket blasting off. And if you think they do, you're as out of touch as the political cartoonist who created it.
I just highlighted a few of your points and they are not facts but peoples feelings. And you want to base the health and strength of peoples feelings?
Come on man, you should take up preaching, that's where you will find the really gullible fools, not here.
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