• @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    411 year ago

    Shit like this is why we had the layoffs we say at the beginning of the year. It was all hysteria made up by a bunch of idiots who want a recession for…. Reasons.

    The economy is strong, inflation is down overall (though still high), and unemployment has been below 4% for nearly 2 years, something we haven’t seen for more than 20 years.

    The recession we’ve seen this year is fake.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      181 year ago

      Not so much fake, as manufactured.

      The jobs market was doing well, unemployment was low. Many middle-class people had been working remotely for two years, and saved thousands in commuting costs. The housing market was leveling out, prices were reasonable, and interest rates were low.

      People were finally starting to feel an inkling of security and independence. They could afford to buy a house, change jobs, sell the second car, and put some money away for a rainy day.

      Which is a nightmare scenario for corporations that feed on a financially desperate populace.

      So corporations jacked up prices, blaming supply-chain issues, forced workers back into the office, and laid off thousands despite record profits.

      The Fed pitched in, hiking interest rates, and locking millions of Americans out of the housing market, and with it, their best path to financial independence, and vowed to keep those rates high until the unemployment rate was back at a level that the Corporate masters determined sufficiently punitive, and the working class had exhausted their savings.

      When the workers are acceptably cowed, and the wealthy are satisfied that they will no longer resist subjugation, they will declare the economy ‘back to normal’

    • @boywar3
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      151 year ago

      Just remember that low unemployment often means severe “underemployment” as people with degrees and other qualifications are forced to take jobs that pay significantly less.

        • @boywar3
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          11 year ago

          Yes, but it still is important to consider when “low unemployment” is touted as the sign of “good times.”