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American Consumers Finally about to Crack?
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I think that the most dramatic factor in the short term will be when student loan payments start coming due again. That's been a nice little holiday for alot of folks, stimulating their spending capacity. But when those payments start back up, it's gonna be a harsh reality check -- spending will almost certainly drop precipitously (and/or the various debt/obligation delinquencies will shoot up).
Of course all of the other factors mentioned will also play significant roles, albeit less visible. I don't want to sound all doom & gloom predicting a recession ... But as with the real estate discussion, some form of showdown is inevitable. It's just a question of exactly when & how severe.
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Originally posted by Jluke View PostI didn’t come up with this or fact check it but I saw online where someone showed how we are going through a Silent Depression, where things are actually worse than they were during the Great Depression.
While yes, we're in kind of a weird place economically, we're facing nothing remotely like the Great Depression. Anyone who tries to argue that we are is either very poorly informed or completely crazy. THAT would be the very essence of the "doom & gloom" mindset.
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Something different this time around is that I don't think those that want work will be out of work.
It will be more driven by ridiculous inflation where their dollars earned aren't going far enough.
A depression these days might mean you may have to cancel your internet service, drop the cable TV plan, quit eating out, go down to one car and pick up some side work.
Don't think you'll see bread lines.
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Originally posted by Jluke View PostI didn’t come up with this or fact check it but I saw online where someone showed how we are going through a Silent Depression, where things are actually worse than they were during the Great Depression.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Found what was presented, not checked
Stats.
Avg income:
1930- $4,800. Adjusted for inflation, that would be $84,000/yr.
2022- $56,000
Gas:
1930- 10 cents/gal. Inflation $1.73
2023- $3.55
New Car:
1930- $860. Inflation $15,000
2023- $48,000
New Home:
1930- $3,900. Inflation $70,000
2023- $416,000.
It’s actually costings American more to live today than the Great Depression. Americans are being squeezed like never before.
American make less and have to spend more compared to the Great Depression.
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Originally posted by Jluke View Post
American make less and have to spend more compared to the Great Depression.
I wasn’t around in 1930 but I don’t need to have been to know that life is far better and easier today than it was back then.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View Post
What an inane conclusion to make from those numbers. It’s bizarre how people come up with that crap. That’s why so many conspiracy theories circulate. People don’t know how to do any critical thinking. Where did you even find that?
I wasn’t around in 1930 but I don’t need to have been to know that life is far better and easier today than it was back then.
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View Post
actually the average consumer has tech but the lifestyle to be bought with the median income is probably much lower.
I don't know about the rest of you but I'll take 2023 lifestyle over 1930 any day.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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I don't fully buy the perspective in the article. I think we are arriving at a soft landing of sorts. Rather than impending doom, the soft landing does look like discretionary spending slows and things start to cool.
"About to crack" - This goes outside the territory of the article, but I feel this in a different way about people in general. People are stressed beyond belief and financially stretched within an inch of their last dollar. It's prevalent in how people in public act and treat each other, how they drive, and how they operate at work. I don't know how this resolves or the pressure lessens, but I wonder if there's some kind of reckoning coming.History will judge the complicit.
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