Quote from scriabinop23:
You're out of touch, and all of your posts are dominated by your bias. Even if real unemployment numbers are closer to 20%, that means 80% still have jobs. On top of the falling demand for consumer credit, there is massive debt repayment ongoing. Another year or two of that and you have major seeds being sewn of pent up credit and goods demand.
The marginally weak in an economy going through structural changes are not going to drag the whole thing down. The totally 'tapped out jobless folk' you refer to are not the majority of people out there ... in fuzzy numbers, they are a marginal 15-25% . The rest as an aggregate have an enormous earnings capacity and aren't under this sort of stress. And just maybe the top 1% or top 5% will gain even more wealth from the lower 99% by the time this is cycle is over. Perhaps this is class dichotomy and redistribution of wealth, but it is nothing unusual for a capitalistic economy. Get some perspective ...
When I read everything you say, I take into account you are of the category of 'structurally unemployed (trader/gambler as a last resort?)' and just very upset about it, and generally are projecting. Not to say that isn't lousy, and I do feel for ya, but there are plenty of professions -not- left behind. Look at biotech, health care, gold mining, and countless others.
In the long run, those left behind and untrainable pass and new ones are born better inclined to do what modern society demands. Not the end of the world, just evolution of the labor force.
The reality is that technology has been and will continue to facilitate continuing massive productivity increases and lessening the demand for labor. The cycles make this all the more noticeable. The wealth gets redistributed to the top in this process, accentuating the pain for the masses. I see nothing wrong with Keynesian policy as a way to redistribute some of that wealth from the top back down (ie govt funded jobs) ... If we need to pay people to do nothing, it is a sign of our success and efficiency from technology gains. I'm all for redistributing work hours so everyone has some work...
when does government get too large? when does the spending create too much of a tax and inflationary burden. When is it that government paid workers are paid so well that the private sector can not handle the burden.
See California....
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