Is very low interest rate the norm?

There have been lots of claims along these lines over the years but they've all turned out to be silly in hindsight - e.g. John Williams and his preposterous claim that US GDP has been steadily contracting since 2000, due to an understated deflator.

Granted that any measurement of "inflation" involves lots of guesswork and subjectivity when it comes to hedonic adjustments, but the numbers just can't be dramatically off-base. If they were then weird effects would show up elsewhere, e.g. in productivity figures or corporate earnings, and the USD would also presumably be steadily declining.

All you gotta do is look at the cost increases in the "things" you buy. The REAL inflation rate is closer to 10% than the BS story we get from the government and Fed.
 
All you gotta do is look at the cost increases in the "things" you buy. The REAL inflation rate is closer to 10% than the BS story we get from the government and Fed.

In the UK, TV's where getting cheaper and they included those in the calculation, so average cost per week was based upon 4 litres of milk, assorted food and 2 x 42" TV's.

No cheap stuff out of China will push prices higher.

UK Brexit 1 - 35% import tax next year.
 
In the UK, TV's where getting cheaper and they included those in the calculation, so average cost per week was based upon 4 litres of milk, assorted food and 2 x 42" TV's.

No cheap stuff out of China will push prices higher.

UK Brexit 1 - 35% import tax next year.

Government/Fed notorious for "measuring inflation" with an index of "fluid" components.. to make inflation look lower than it is... electronics, cars... whatever else with declining costs over time.... and substitutions, like "If you substitute hot dogs for steak, the cost of MEAT isn't rising".... sort of thing.
 
(I had a cousin who was a junior bank executive that got brain cancer. In his final months, the ran up a bill of >$100k on his credit cards.... partying and buying "rounds for the house". When I asked him about that, the said, "Fuck 'em! Credit card banks have lots of money." Where do you go from there?)

Bottom Line... debt ALWAYS gets accounted for. Often, it's a loss absorbed by somebody other than he who spent the money. Nothing righteous in that.


:(

Found the boomer. Say @Scataphagos how many kneepads and lube do you go through while worshiping your morality dildo?
 
Mythology

Turkey... I took this from Wikipedia..

The following are based on yearly averages:

  • 1960s – 1 U.S. dollar = 9 Turkish lira
  • 1970 – 1 U.S. dollar = 11.3 Turkish lira
  • 1975 – 1 U.S. dollar = 14.4 Turkish lira
  • 1980 – 1 U.S. dollar = 80 Turkish lira
  • 1985 – 1 U.S. dollar = 500 Turkish lira
  • 1990 – 1 U.S. dollar = 2,500 Turkish lira
  • 1995 – 1 U.S. dollar = 43,000 Turkish lira
  • 2000 – 1 U.S. dollar = 620,000 Turkish lira
  • 2005 – 1 U.S. dollar = 1,350,000 Turkish lira[7][8]
From 1980-2005, the Turkey stock market went up > 2 MILLION percent! And if you'd been invested for that entire ride, you still would have lost 98% of the buying power of your money when the Trukish government devalued the currency overnight by 1:1,000,000. They literally "lopped off 6 zeros"!

[/QUOTE]

From this chart, the exchange rate was devalued to 1.35:1 vs USD in 2005. Today it's 6.05:1.

The Turkish government has deficit spent/inflated the currency to lose another ~80% of its value since the last devaluation*.

Unfortunately, that's what governments do.

*presuming, of course that there wasn't yet another devaluation since 2005

:(
 
It's going to run and run and run... until the entire financial system collapses and is forced to reset... bankrupting nearly everyone.

Have a nice day.

:)
upload_2020-2-15_9-41-9.jpeg
 
All you gotta do is look at the cost increases in the "things" you buy. The REAL inflation rate is closer to 10% than the BS story we get from the government and Fed.
Yeah I don't know where they get this BS from.

Now granted one can go into Krogers and get chicken leg-quarters on sale for about the same damn price they were decades ago... $0.48/lb

But take a look at people's #1 expense. And this is Fed data!

There's a 50%+ increase since 2010 alone. $210K to $324K
wtf?

upload_2020-2-15_9-55-42.png


As I've said many times here... you Millennial's would be smart to gtfo of the stock market and start buying as much multi-family real-estate as you can possibly accumulate if you want to retire young with a lifetime of steady income. Yeah it has its headaches too, but nothing worthwhile is easy.
 
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