• skellener
    link
    fedilink
    1251 year ago

    Who’s it getting better for? Wall Street? Prices on shit keeps fucking going up. My paycheck ain’t.

    • @gAlienLifeform
      link
      531 year ago

      Yeah, according to a Federal Reserve survey from earlier this year “only 63% of adults surveyed said they would cover an unexpected $400 expense using cash or its equivalent, down from 68% the year before. Many noted they would lean on credit cards or family members to manage such a bill. About 13% said they wouldn’t be able to cover such an expense by any means.”

      Upper middle class and above households have been doing great, but everyone else is in a bad way and getting worse.

    • @Telodzrum
      link
      English
      -381 year ago

      Real wages are up in the last two years the largest amount in nearly five decades. Rent costs are down year over year for two and a half years straight. Employment is up, new jobless claims are down, both while hours worked is down. Inflation continues to revert to the mean.

      If it doesn’t seem good for you, you’re either an extreme outlier or are just denying reality.

      • @derpysmilingcat
        link
        191 year ago

        Rent costs are down? Where??? What’s a “real wage”? Do you have anything to back any of this up or are we just guessing?

        • @1847953620
          link
          91 year ago

          Probably just cherry-picked data, tbh.

      • @rambaroo
        link
        11
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        The wage increases haven’t kept up with inflation so people aren’t feeling it.

      • @Techmaster
        link
        7
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Rent costs are down year over year for two and a half years straight

        You have no idea what you are talking about. Rent has more than doubled. I know people living in shitty 1 bedroom apartments who pay more than twice what I pay for my mortgage on a fairly average house.

        • @Telodzrum
          link
          English
          -71 year ago

          Data is data my dude. Get your head out of the sand.

          • @Techmaster
            link
            61 year ago

            You should try looking at it some time. An apartment that was $700 5 years ago is now around $2000 in my area. And this is a low cost of living area where people aren’t exactly desperate to live.

      • @dhork
        link
        English
        641 year ago

        A retirement account, stocks, or a pension are all just money on paper. Yeah, it’s nice to see that number go up, but you either have to wait years to see it, or have to pay taxes once you get there, or both.

        Not dismissing the effect that Biden has had on the economy, in spite of Republican fuckery. But it’s a mistake to point at the Stock Market and tell people who can’t pay their bills now that its all OK.

          • @dhork
            link
            English
            181 year ago

            Not at all, all I’m saying is that most people look at the money they make as “take-home pay”, where they don’t even see the taxes until it’s time to file. While when they look at their 401k nest egg, it’s the opposite: they will owe the money when they cash out, and it will be invisible until then.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        251 year ago

        Oh yeah, those stocks are going to really help me pay for my grocery bill which has nearly doubled, or the massive increases in rent that just keep going up.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            18
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            Maybe people can’t afford stocks when wages are suppressed and they’re struggling to pay for rent and food. Maybe stocks shouldn’t exist when their only purpose is to extract wealth from the working class. 🤷‍♀️

              • @[email protected]
                link
                fedilink
                English
                15
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                I’m sure it has nothing to do with the fact that wealthy parasites have been spending decades siphoning money away from the working class, suppression unions, and propagandizing working people against their interests. No, it’s because us poors choose to waste money on trying to stay alive instead of throwing it away by gambling it into the stock market. You nailed it, champ.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            151 year ago

            Once again, how is that helping me with rent and grocery bills? Once I sell the stocks I don’t have them anymore, yet expenses keep on going up.

      • queermunist she/her
        link
        fedilink
        5
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        I’ll never be able to retire. I’ll be taking out the 9mm plan when I’m too old to work.

          • skellener
            link
            fedilink
            131 year ago

            Nobody has money for that either. Our healthcare system is abysmal. Another thing corporations have robbed us of. Universal healthcare.

          • queermunist she/her
            link
            fedilink
            71 year ago

            I’m 31 with no degree and no retirement savings. I’m doomed and therapy isn’t going to help with that.

            • @stealthnerd
              link
              -21 year ago

              Lose the defeatist attitude . You’re only 31 years old. You’ve got over three decades to save for retirement and you don’t need a degree to get places in life. Start saving now, even if it’s a tiny amount. Just be consistent and increase contributions as you get raises or better opportunity. It adds up and having something is a lot better than having nothing. Don’t give up before you get started.

              • queermunist she/her
                link
                fedilink
                3
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                having something is a lot better than having nothing

                Eating cat food is better than starving, sure, but I’d rather just save myself the trouble with the 9mm retirement package.

                I can’t save money. I’m spinning my wheels paycheck-to-paycheck, I have no life, I have no friends, I almost fucking died when I collapsed at work from heat exhaustion, the climate is getting more extreme every damn year, everything is too expensive and only getting more expensive, I live in hell and I am sick and FUCKING tired of Dems telling me my shitty fucking life is worth living.

                Why the fuck can’t you ever acknowledge that life is hard for people? Why do you have to belittle our suffering and tell us we’re worried about nothing and that if we really tried we could make our lives worth living? Is this funny to you? Do you like to make me angry?

                Maybe I won’t make it to 65! Maybe they’ll make it illegal to be trans in my shithole state and I’ll be retiring early.

                • @stealthnerd
                  link
                  -31 year ago

                  Life is hard, it’s always been hard. Some of the problems we face today may be new but having to push forward and survive despite adversity is certainly not. Throwing in the towel and giving up because of the problems you face today and the problems you “might” face tomorrow is not the way to live.

                  You can overcome, you can save, you can improve your life and it can be worth living even if it feels absolutely impossible right now. People tell you this because it’s true, because they’ve been through hard times, they’ve battled depression, and they’ve come out the other side with an appreciation and love for life despite it all.

                  I encourage you to seek support, there are many people out there who are currently going through and have gone through similar struggles. I wish you the best of luck and hope you get through this and can share you story with others one day.

      • @dragonflyteaparty
        link
        21 year ago

        Those things are very important, but unless you have some significant dividends, I don’t think they help people with the level of price increase that we see right now.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
      link
      fedilink
      221 year ago

      Ding ding ding!

      If a company can extract more value out of its workers while paying them less, that means the company is doing good. If this happens across a bunch of companies, that means the economy is doing good. All because they’re getting more value from our labor than the crumbs they toss to us.

  • exohuman
    link
    fedilink
    781 year ago

    As others have already stated, the job market is fine, the stocks are fine, but the ability to afford living day to day is worse than I have ever remembered. Here in my cheaper state here are some random prices:

    • A bag of Doritos is over $7.
    • Beef shortage makes ground beef for a family of 4 $14
    • Gas prices are over $3.70
    • My grocery bill increased by nearly 50% overall and we are buying less on top of that
    • Car prices are through the roof, making it impossible for people like me to change cars (I’m hearing they are going to drop again soon)
    • Rent prices are soaring to the point where it isn’t sustainable
    • Interest rate keeps rising
    • @Not_Alec_Baldwin
      link
      261 year ago

      Yeah, “the economy” doesn’t mean anything.

      More commerce just means more money changing hands. Unemployment rate just measures jobs. None of this impacts the average person.

      Buying power is down and has been dropping for longer than I’ve been alive. This especially impacts the low and vanishing middle class Americans.

      • @1847953620
        link
        41 year ago

        Exactly. It all depends on which metrics you’re looking at, and some are not even being looked at, conveniently enough for those with more money.

        • @Not_Alec_Baldwin
          link
          01 year ago

          The way cpi is measured makes it a flawed indicator. It’s essentially been designed to minimize the appearance of inflation.

          https://www.brightworkresearch.com/how-accurate-is-shadowstats-on-the-understatement-of-us-inflation-with-the-new-cpi/

          Pick a period and do a median-to-median comparison of income to expense. Rent/home price, tuition, groceries, direct item-to-item is usually bad.

          Then consider the new expenses many people take on. A cell phone every few years, a laptop, the cost of recreation.

          Most people are in a horrible position compared to any period in the last century.

          Don’t get me wrong, many many things have improved. But economic outlook is NOT one of them.

          • @huge_clock
            link
            11 year ago

            I don’t agree with putting home prices in cpi, because a small number of home sales would dramatically swing inflation, so yeah while it’s a really critical number for people looking to buy a home it is not a good litmus test for the average purchasing power when there are better imputed metrics like “owner cost or equivalent rent”.

            • @Not_Alec_Baldwin
              link
              01 year ago

              Are you suggesting that the amount a person spends on housing doesn’t impact their purchasing power? No wonder you don’t think it’s declining.

              Rent has jumped by 100-200% every 20 years since the Great Depression.

              Companies have started shifting to shrinkflation because they realized that raising their prices was so unpopular with their consumers.

              All of these things need to be considered and don’t get measured by CPI.

              • @huge_clock
                link
                11 year ago

                Housing costs are included in CPI. What I’m saying is i agree with the current methodology. Do you know what the current methodology is? It does make sense.

  • @Desistance
    link
    771 year ago

    Groceries and gas is still inflated. Services are steadily raising rates and some people are still not being paid a living wage.

  • Arghblarg
    link
    fedilink
    711 year ago

    That’s because (yes, others here beat me to it) – the economy is not the stock market. People’s costs of living and wages aren’t getting better, they’re getting worse, even as giant corps have record profits and that is reflected on the stock tickers. If the average person was heavily invested early on in some of these corporate behemoths and could actually share in the rapacious profits, maybe things would be different… but that’s not the case.

    • @doppelgangmember
      link
      201 year ago

      Woah now!

      That’s starting to sound like Socialism and having public ownership

      • qprimed
        link
        fedilink
        English
        171 year ago

        a society with an economic underpinning that meaingfully lifts all boats with a rising tide?! that… would be un-american! gotta have winners and loosers to feed that zero-sum game they love so much.

        • @doppelgangmember
          link
          5
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          and dont even MENTION the Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund!

          Neoliberal heads would explode left and right!

        • @Techmaster
          link
          31 year ago

          If you need losers in order to have winners, we should all be doing really well right now thanks to Trump.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    571 year ago

    Been to a grocery store lately? Looked at rent prices? How about clothing? Gas? Basic necessities?

    People think the economy’s getting worse because it IS for consumers. I don’t really give a shit if a company is paying less for grain than they did a year ago if the prices they charge for the final product havn’t gone down!

    Until basic costs of living start decreasing, most people aren’t going to see any positive change.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      81 year ago

      Yeah, this kind of headline has no bearing on 99% of people’s lives, it’s just corporate gaslighting to try to keep the population sedated.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      61 year ago

      This is my thinking. I guess it’s good the economy is good but prices of housing and food are skyrocketing for me so I don’t feel it lol

  • @Etterra
    link
    561 year ago

    That’s because no matter how well stock prices are doing, it still costs substantially more to buy groceries than it did last year, by way of example. The average American is screwed just as hard with a good economy as a bad one, and the poorer you are, the rawer the screwing.

    • @huge_clock
      link
      -21 year ago

      No one measures the economy based on stock prices.

      Inflation is going down, real wages are going up, unemployment is down.

  • @PumpkinSkink
    link
    561 year ago

    When toxic “econimistism” comes home to roost. A “strong economy” as measured by stock markets and company profits, both owned primarily by the extremely wealthy is not the same as “working class people are doing well economically”, which is what should be meant by “a strong economy” if it were not for the neoliberal brain rot.

    • @swirle13
      link
      161 year ago

      Honestly. There needs to be (probably is and I’m unaware) an index that measures the Average Joe ™️ economy health. So not just like the big Mac index, but a measure of how have the average Americans in the lower to middle class have gained increased take-home pay, reduced debt, asset valuation appreciation, and more indicators that actually increase their day to day life and financial situation.

    • @4lan
      link
      121 year ago

      Yeah I got a 20% raise and my rent is going up 24%. Any progress I make is immediately thwarted.

      If I stay here I’ll be paying half my take home income on rent for a 1BR

      • @qarbone
        link
        English
        71 year ago

        That is literally the deal in Boston, MA. Where the going rate for a 1 bedroom apartment is in the ballpark of $2500 USD/month. Exactly half of my take-home income.

        Oh, that’s without factoring in utilities.

    • @huge_clock
      link
      31 year ago

      Pretty sure it’s measured by gdp

  • @Slagathor
    link
    391 year ago

    Guys, we just have to wait for it to trickle down! Don’t worry, any decade now and it will finally pay off…

  • GodlessCommie
    link
    361 year ago

    Months of gaslighting that they were doing great didn’t work out so well. Being told wages are up, inflation down, economy great while wondering how they are gonna pay rent contradicted the desired message.

    • @tacosplease
      link
      51 year ago

      Agreed. Yeah wages are up and inflation is down compared to last year. But so long as inflation is higher than wage growth then people will continue to lose ground financially.

  • @alienanimals
    link
    28
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Corporations and the 1% keep posting record profits.

    The rest of us keep having to pay higher prices.

    CNN: Why do many Americans think the economy is getting worse?? It’s working as designed.

  • Cornpop
    link
    English
    25
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    That’s because it is getting worse. No one believes the bullshit that it’s getting better. It’s fake news.

    • EnderWi99in
      link
      fedilink
      -91 year ago

      I mean, I do. The job market is probably the best it’s been in decades. The economy is doing extremely well. Food prices are high because two of the world’s largest grain producers are fighting a war with one another.

      • Cornpop
        link
        English
        41 year ago

        My business and everyone else in my area that I talk to have all said this year has been slow for them as well.

  • @Hazdaz
    link
    211 year ago

    That’s because our useless news media has been beating the drum of recession for literally years now because fear mongering is all they know how to do.

    • themeatbridge
      link
      411 year ago

      Also because wages are still stagnant and costs keep going up. On average, the economy is doing great, but that news to the people on the bottom is just an indicator of how much they are being exploited.

      • @Hazdaz
        link
        -171 year ago

        But that isn’t entirely true.

        “wages are still stagnant”

        Wages saw the biggest bump in decades just a couple of years back. The article is from late 2021, and while that feels like it was an eternity ago, the reality is that it was less than 2 years ago.

        https://apnews.com/article/business-wages-salaries-increase-8ce98ea3bcc14c4810eb5a1111e1df49

        “costs keep going up”

        US inflation is the lowest of almost all industrialized nations - down to 2.97% right now, compared to 3X that a year ago.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          91 year ago

          US inflation is the lowest of almost all industrialized nations - down to 2.97% right now, compared to 3X that a year ago.

          Tell me why I should give a shit when my grocery costs have more than doubled since 2020 and have yet to come down. Inflation rate is meaningless for those of us not in the top 1%. What good is it to me to hear the inflation rate was only 3% last month if a bag of cereal still costs $7? Should I simply be grateful that things aren’t getting worse, faster?

          • @huge_clock
            link
            21 year ago

            Your grocery costs have not doubled.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              51 year ago

              Wait, at the moment you are being severely downvoted for posting a link to the best statistical source we have for the US on this topic? WTF is wrong with people?

              • @Hazdaz
                link
                51 year ago

                Because people don’t want the truth, they just want to complain.

                And I get that.

                It’s a natural human reaction, but it is also annoying because some of these same people would demand a citation and I’ve given them exactly that.

                • @[email protected]
                  link
                  fedilink
                  31 year ago

                  Lately I’ve been telling people who ask for sources that they need to convince me they are asking in good faith. Real sincere responses will get a source, the real utility is it ends the conversation more quickly when it’s a disingenuous request. Best to save energy for the teachable.

            • @great_site_not
              link
              41 year ago

              I just looked over that page, and I couldn’t find any data on I_Has_A_Hat’s grocery costs between 2020 and now. Would you mind pointing it out for the benefit of me and other particularly dense people in the audience?

              • @Hazdaz
                link
                41 year ago

                The first column. Cookies, beef, chicken, milk, pasta… literally anything you’d buy at a grocery store.

        • @postmateDumbass
          link
          7
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Wages went up, now this is the counter attack.

          Can’t let the poors gain anything.

    • @TheKingBee
      link
      English
      39
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Rent is up, grocery prices are up, gas is up again, pay hasn’t kept up with inflation, corporate profits at all time highs and Powell at the Fed is literally trying to weaken labors negotiating power, but sure it’s the media brainwashing people…

  • artisanrox
    link
    fedilink
    20
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    The economy is fantastic for like the 10% of the country who owns 75% of the country’s junk