• @glimse
    link
    English
    510 months ago

    “The economy” is a code word for “rich people’s money.” I’m in the first group you described and do not give a shit about “the economy” when everything is significantly more expensive than it needs to be because some assholes in a board room want their bank account to be even bigger

    There’s a side group of people (you, it seems) who can’t fathom that millions of people don’t have the ability to job hop like that and judge them for it. The inflation we’ve been experiencing is largely artificial and in many cases was created by the very people controlling their wages.

    • @Pohl
      link
      English
      010 months ago

      Job hopping is one thing. Moving on when the market rate for your work is 50% over your salary is another. Showing up for work to make 10$/hr when fast food restaurants are paying 17 to new hires is wild to me.

      Does it feel good when the new guy gets 1.5x your pay on their first day? Why put up with that bullshit? So you don’t make your boss uncomfortable? Fuck them, get paid.

      The fastest period of wage growth this country has experienced since the 50s. The UAW negotiated a monster contract last year, after decades of getting fucked. Baristas are forming unions successfully right now. There has not been a better time to be a working person in my lifetime. There probably never will be again.

      The party is going to end someday soon and if you are still making a 2019 wage, you are getting fucked. You could be angry at me and write a response, but, my brother I promise we are on the same side and I am begging you: go polish your resume and make some moves, time might be running out. The vibes might be bad, but the job market is very good.

      • @glimse
        link
        English
        110 months ago

        That doesn’t address that those $17/hr jobs aren’t available for a lot of people. It’s hard to give praise to the recent wage growth when it’s been stagnant for years. Like if the cost of living is the same as a full time $20/hr position, it’s not a bragging point to say that were at $17.

        You missed the part where I said I did switch jobs because I’m not in the category without options. I’m looking out for those people - not defending my own situation. Minimum wage should be enough to live on and nobody should have to work two jobs to get by

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      -1
      edit-2
      10 months ago

      I showed you a graph of production and nonsupervisory wages compared with inflation. That’s not “rich peoples’ money” — it’s just regular pay.

      Your personal situation might be different, say because you haven’t changed jobs and your boss thinks you won’t do so to get better wages.

      • @glimse
        link
        English
        210 months ago

        Inflation is apparently a bad indicator of actual cost of living because wages have not kept up with housing and food prices. Wages need to far exceed inflation to catch up to 90s

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          English
          110 months ago

          Inflation is based on a broad measure of all the things people buy.

          Food and housing are a big part of it.

          • @glimse
            link
            English
            210 months ago

            Right, but it’s not all of it. Inflation includes a ton of things that don’t affect people in the same capacity Last year inflation was like 7% but grocery prices were up 30%. Housing also far exceeded that, too

            • @[email protected]OP
              link
              fedilink
              English
              010 months ago

              No one thing is all of it because people don’t buy Only One Thing. Food prices did rise a lot, but people don’t buy only food. So the overall cost of living didn’t rise nearly so much.

              • @glimse
                link
                English
                210 months ago

                Right. But people buy a lot more of One Thing than the Other Thing so when the One Thing is 30% more expensive and the Other Thing is down in price, the average of the two doesn’t tell the whole story

                My expenses are mostly food and housing and I know for millions of people, it’s ONLY food and housing.