Many investors had high hopes going into 2024. The market’s robust first-quarter rally still managed to surprise them. Read more about how the S&P 500 is poised for its best start to a year since 2019: on.wsj.com/4abYnau
Average Joe doesn't give a fig about the S&P 500, employment statistics, and how many percentages of growth have happened. They care about food, shelter, transportation ... all of which exploded under Biden. And the astute investors know that the economy would have been in a recession if not for trillions of dollars of printing over the past 1.5yrs. So what part of this is good ?
This video is misleading. You're using the average income, not the mean income. The average income is skewed astronomically higher due to the mega wealthy. You have to take Wall Street out of your statistics if you want them to speak to the problems on Main Street. Income doesn't matter. Cost of living doesn't matter. What people care about if purchasing power parity (PPP) of their disposable income, and also if that percentage of disposable income goes up or down. And disposable income takes into account everything - taxes, Healthcare, food, utilities, fuel. Everything. WSJ, you should decide how relevant you wish to become.
Employment rate and GDP does not mean that the average person is living a good economic life. It just means that people are working and wealth is being created. But how much is that job paying? And where is that wealth going?
The average American bases the “economy” on the groceries they buy regularly, which is undoubtedly higher and likely to stay high. That’s why Americans are unhappy with the current economy. Simple.
Simple family budget pains: 25% increase in food prices in the past 4 years, 25% increase in rent in the past 4 years, mortgage rates increased from 3 to 8%
Has the average wage gone up 25% in 4 years? That would be about 6% a year. Lots of people with bachelor or even masters degrees cannot find a bwtter job than retail, warehouse, call center, custommer service etc. The market has an over supply of highly educated people like history, communications and biology. Heard some hospital lab jobs even pay $20 an hour. You cannot survive on that in most cities unless you live in your car.
Wrong. fact is, average food and other products have gone up: 6%, and wages have gone up 8%, in the past 3 years. Mortgage rates went up to control inflation, and are now coming down, back to 5%, where they should be.
@@thijsjong There are over 11 million open jobs, right now, there's NO saturation in the market for highly education workers, you need to look at the facts, not radical-right news propaganda.
Every body's experience is obviously going to be different, but to deny or explain away the numbers and data because some people 'said so' probably isn't the hill you probably want to die on.
@@johnhandcock8193 It's not "people said so". GDP is an aggregate measure. What does a blue collar or hospitality worker care that tech had a great quarter? What does one region care that another region is growing. It's possible that growth is limited to a section of society, while the rest took a hit during COVID and never recovered. Telling them "look at the numbers" is pointless, heck it's lying through statistics.
That's because the average person views the news and social media posts that constantly bag on the economy. Negative news is more powerful than positive, so that's what news media does. The economy is BOOMING, and Biden's done a great job, he'll get elected again in November over a seditious criminal.
They’re essential for living. They should matter most. An economy where only big corporations and the wealthy are thriving is not “strong” or “healthy” like they would have us believe.
For real. Biden supporters trying to lecture normal everyday families about how well the stock market is doing doesn't move the needle whatsoever. In fact its just likely to make them go more in the opposite direction when voting.
It's quite simple. The measuring tool for a "strong economy" is detached from the reality of people. The strength of companies isn't translating to more money for consumers. Companies are hoarding cash instead of raising wages.
Exactly! Just because someone has a job, doesn't mean that job's pay is keeping up with inflation. Or they didn't take a lower paying job just so they have a job. The unemployment rate tells us about how corporations are doing, but not how the worker is doing.
Just because a company has a higher stock price doesn't mean they have cash to spend. The shareholders are the ones benefitting from that higher value, and they're not employers. That's the key problem of asset inflation.
Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Wall Street pitched so-called quality stocks with high profitability and low debt, as a kind of insurance against whatever the economy might throw at you. Quality stocks have underperformed the S&P500 this year, My $200k portfolio is down by approximately 20 %, any recommendations to scale up my returns on investment
Nobody knows anything You need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Exactly why i enjoy market decisions being guided by a pro , seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk management and market experience , been using a portfolio-coach for over 2years+ and I've netted over $3million in that time frame.
'Carol Vivian Constable, a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and serves as a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.
@@spacetoast7783 But that ONLY happens normally if the worker increases skills and increase productivity. Inflation is immoral even as you prefer because it means the richest get all the new money and buy all the assets before the prices go up, and the workers all suffer higher prices for a year before they get wages to increase based on the counterfeited dollar's fake value.
@@daifunka7062 You are correct. Inflation falls during recessions because people aren't spending money, and it rises when people have money to burn. The real question is always whether the economy and wages are beating inflation in the long run.
Wages are too low, having a full time job and not being able to make rent and buy groceries is offensive. That's why people don't care about what economists think.
If wages are rising and outpacing inflation, then they must feel great because they are being paid more. But this video article demonstrates and explains that people use historic numbers to judge the current costs. So as the man said, the cost of a can of coke was 25 cents but is now much higher. It doesn't matter that his salary has quintupled, he rates his comfort level on history. It would be nice to be able to do something about it, but as long as people vote Republican, nothing will change. Vote blue!! 💙💙
The economy (stock market and businesses) are doing well now. But home prices, rents and car prices have shot up well past inflation. And it turns out rent, home and car prices are what the average person cares about most.
@@jake1110 The stock market *is* important, just not as important as housing to the average person. If you have a 401k, the stock market doing poorly will effect your retirement.
@@WoodEe-zq6qv This story talked about wage growth out pacing inflation. But that data completely ignores what classes experienced that wage growth. If you include every worker including the ultra wealthy, I can see how they get a number like this that wages are growing faster than inflation. Our utility company PG&E's CEO made 2 million in 2022, and 250 million last year, while raising prices 38% just this year alone by the time it's over. The rich can be huge outliars that skew averages like the average wage growth. IF the rich see huge gains, but the middle and lower class actually did not experience wage growth higher than inflation, I think that would explain why people feel the way they do, and I thick this is the case. Income inequality is getting worse at an exponential rate.
@@heyaisdabomb This doesen't really bare out in the data. Inequality has been coming down recently, income growth is highest among low wage earners and real income is falling for the upper quintile.
Its morbidly funny to watch these little graphs tell me the economy is great while everyone I know is drowning under food price increases, rent or the inability to buy a house.
The voters don't agree because the economy is not strong. The economists can't seem to understand that their models are not correct; there are too many things missing in them, and the weight given to what is present is unbalanced. The voters do not experience the economy the way the experts measure. Decades ago, Harry Truman famously said "line up a group of economists and they'll still point in every direction". Some things have not changed, or at least they haven't straightened themselves out.
It is true even for us though. I own a home, I am happy when home prices go up. People who don’t own a home want prices to go down. So which one is better ? Going up or down ? If I own a rental property I want rents to go up, but people renting want rents to go down. Which is good ? I own a home and locked down interest rate @ low rates, I don’t care about high interest rates, but people who wants to buy home wants lower rates. It depends on who you ask, people will point in different directions.
The economy IS strong -- in macroeconomic terms. A significant problem is that the economic strength is not evenly distributed with the wealthy benefitting enormously and those lower down the ladder not so much. Wealth inequality, the rich not paying their fair share, etc is the real issue. As JFK stated, a rising economy lifts all boats. The problem now being that the water is rising in singular pools for the wealthy, and the rest of us only get some of the spillage. And who is stopping the reforms to allow for the middle class and the poor to benefit more? The Republicans, the GOP. Vote accordingly.
@@KevinAdams26 I am not a moron, I will be voting Republican, but then, I also understand economics. The economy isn't strong and only gov't paid economists are spewing such lies. I find it sad that most Americans are ignorant of economics and so naive that they believe everything politicians spew. VOTE REPUBLICAN FOR SANITY
As a base citizen living in the US see this: Groceries - HIGH Gas - HIGH Housing - HIGH 3 common important things that make a person. Ofc we complain 😂
Housing cost will go down by the end of the year but everyone is going to have to be patient if you want to get a mortgage for a home wait till the fed lowers interest rates then do it you will save your self a bunch of money
@@plasmaboy2265 Trouble is that it will make no difference because the interest will be so high as to drive the payments up to where they were when houses were priced high and interest low.
I'll tell you a secret... people are tired of income inequality. They know that they are not getting properly compensated for the work they do. So the real question is: who benefits from a "strong economy"? Not the average person.
The government benefits, it controls the narrative and spins the stories. There is no strong economy. The world is dedollarizing because the threat of devaluation is massive. The US dollar has lost 17% of it's value since 2021. We have to shed at least 45 trillion dollars before our economy can work properly. The US "leadership" found that forcing cross border trade in approved currency, have OPEC sell oil only in dollars, and sanction any nation that doesn't follow our orders to the letter led to a "strong economy" and got votes. Well, like legit economists have been saying for decades, printing and borrowing money is extremely damaging to the economy in the guise of INFLATION.
Because a lot of my friends are getting laid off, and my company has been on a hiring freeze for over a year. "Strong" economies don't have tons of corporate layoffs and hiring freezes. Yes, there are tons of $15 an hour burrito making and rideshare jobs, but if you want to make any kind of money, you're not getting hired right now.
Because GDP is not a good indicator or the median income growth for the middle class. The growth in the economy disproportionately goes to the wealthy.
Our economy is like a flailing fish, fighting for its life. The normal state of the U.S. economy is actually very bad. Because of this it goes into convulsive spasms fighting to grow any way it can out of desperation. Tricks, gimmicks, rule changes try to stimulate the economy and prevent it from falling but they only bring temporary relief to people since, when you factor in inflation we are declining.
People believe their currency has the worth it does because they have no other option. Even in a hyperinflationary environment, individuals must continue to use their hyperinflationary currency since they likely have minimal access to other currencies or gold/silver coins.
Inflation is gradually going to become part of us and due to that fact any money you keep in cash or in a low-interest account declines in value each year. Investing is the only way to make your money grow and unless you have an exceptionally high income, investing is the only way most people will ever have enough money to retire.
I've tried investing in the stock market several times but always got discouraged by fluctuations of stock value. I would be happy if you could advise me based on how you went about yours, as I am ready to go the passive income path.!!
‘Sharon Ann Meny ’ is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
If you can't afford it, stay home. There are lots of good meals you can prepare that don't cost that much : Spaghetti, grilled cheese sandwiches, hot dogs, hamburgers, salads, etc.
Good for the elite. The quality of life for the average citizen has gone down the toilet. I understand now why people indulge in criminal acts. This government encourages it.
Voters dont care about the macro. They care about the micro. It is their own wage. Their own rent. Their own bills. Their own job prospects. (discouraged jobseekers) These macro indicators are not a good aggregate for all the micro economy problems. The median is a much better presentaion. And you have to look at cohorts. Top quarter earners may be doing great while the bottom quarter earners could be slammed.
Missed the key point: The income gap has widened significantly during the Biden Administration. Most people are worse off regardless of what GDP says as the driver for the last 4 years has been monetary policy rather than fiscal policy. This results in a disproportionate amount of wealth being generated by asset price appreciation rather than the real economy (other than the tech sector). Whilst those that own a multi-million stock and/or real estate portfolios have gotten tremendously richer, the middle and working classes have gotten increasingly squeezed...there are a lot more of the latter.
I agree completely! Notice how the ones that say the economy is doing great are either super wealthy. Or are stuck behind a screen looking at numbers and get paid to say the economy is doing great..
My thoughts exactly. All the wealth increase is in corporations and stock markets. Most people feel their wealth in their spending power, which has shrunk dramatically.
If Wall Street is strong they say economy is doing good, but those companies can layoff thousands of workers and see their stock prices go up while those people just had their lives turned upside down but we still care more about how well WS is doing all the time.
Although constantly harping on the "strong economy" talking points, it didn't stop my liberal Trump-hating friend from feeling she had to move from CA to Texas to survive economically.
The one thing these videos always gets wrong is saying that people feel like their income has not kept up with inflation that's wrong they want the prices to come down more than they want their income to go up
I have savings of $1,000,000 and I'm ready for retirement, only concerned about the soaring inflation. Is this enough to retire comfortably, or do I need some sort of money management?
The quickest route to financial freedom is by investing. It's never too late to begin planning for a stable financial future because investment generates money.
I just googled her and I'm really impressed with her credentials; I reached out to her since I need all the assistance I can get. I just scheduled a caII.
It’s interesting. I’m in Canada. The grocery stores are under investigation for processing gouging due to public pressure. In the last few weeks, the prices on groceries has gone down DRAMATICALLY. One example- ground beef has gone from $15/kg to $9/kg.
Why don't voters agree? Have you ever been to the store lately or paid any bills? The price increases from the past 4/5 years has been absolutely insane!
Elections can significantly shift market dynamics and investor sentiment. It's essential for us as investors to stay informed and adapt our strategies accordingly. Historically, certain sectors thrive depending on election outcomes-think green energy vs. fossil fuels. Keeping a close eye on the candidates' policies could provide valuable insights for making smart investment choices.
Definitely! With the potential shifts in the economy due to election outcomes, having an adviser can provide invaluable insights. They can help us interpret the implications of new policies and guide our investment decisions in a rapidly changing landscape.
The economy is strong, most people just can’t afford to live as well as they did their entire lives before Biden became President. People are broke and financially hopeless, but everything is great. Thanks!
Botton line, my life isn't better than it was in 2019! We(my wife and I) make more money than ever but we can't afford the same lifestyle! Our standard of living is slipping.
I hear and read so much chatter about how this economy is, "Smokingly hot, never been one like it before, we're the envy of the world," etc. This chatter is just the 1% talking amongst themselves.
Bingo. Corporate media and those who consume it are doing just fine. They're the people riding around manhattan in a black car moving between high end restaurants and cocktail bars. They don't get it. They won't get it.
You know I feel like my "feelings" are affected by groceries going up 22% the past 4 years and housing prices doubling, I'd say I DON'T FEELA so geat about that.
A dozen eggs are now costing over $4. How long will it take for the Labor Department to wake up and add it to the inflation rate. When was the last time that the price of a basket of goods and services consumed by households been changed to accurately measure what Americans are buying and what the true measure of inflation is?
There is a disconnect between people and economists, Businesses, Corporations. Economists want to use GDP, unemployment rate, labor participation rate, stock market as indicators. But people care about median wages, inflation, purchasing power, retirement savings, healthcare costs.
The reason is because how well the Economy is doing doesn’t matter to people. People care more about what they end up paying at the register . Not to mention the negative affects of the pandemic on the economy already done it’s damage , so while the economy is doing much better , things still won’t go back to being how much they costed pre pandemic.
@@dementedchicken1 They haven't kept up with inflation though. When home prices spike and interest rates rise, it makes it even more difficult for most to buy.
@@dementedchicken1 I don't agree. It's people sleeping in cars and storages units. Some people have to pick up two to three jobs and barely getting by....
Hey buddy, There’s nothing “well balanced” about a $2000 + a month average RENTAL housing cost, and the cost of food being so high that it’s no longer affordable to start a family. We have a real problem, starting with housing.
They are pawns for the top dogs. They tell us what to think, we think it, we vote it into power, then we suffer like sheep heading to the slaughter house.
Feels like everything went up to twice the price, the portions also got smaller/ are lower quality, we now have an immigration crisis driving up the demand for more products making things more expensive, we’re sending all our money to Ukraine and Israel, and it feels like people are trying to add more expenses like the New York driving tolls or things like everyone in your family having to have a Netflix account
These expert people are way out of touch when basic necessities or as we call the “basket of goods” cost a lot more compared to purchasing power. Inflation is still happening. I went to Aldi yesterday and saw they raised the cheapest bottle of wine price 15%. And 6 months before that it went up another 15%. Now apply that to all other food & drinks and fast food/restaurants & housing. Most people are not receiving 15-30% raises in a year.
Yes, because it is the most recent example I encountered, literally yesterday. I'm not implying wine is a necessity, but it is definitely an example that inflation is not over when it jumps 30% in a year.@@warpfire052
They're really out here trying to tell us it isn't bad but what they really mean is debt slavery is on its way and there's nothing the elite want or care to do for us. Soon big grocery stores will offer their own credit card and you'll have to take out a loan just to buy food.
There are two economies in the USA right now. The wealth gap is huge so you got half the country hurting hard from inflation and is in a hard recession while the other half is booming.
Contributing factors; A) political instability and polarization. B) High levels of Asset Inflation. C) High levels of wealth inequality. D) High Interest Rates and Decreased Social Security Spending. These are the factors I've identified that contribute to the vibecession. It doesn't matter if the economy is good if the benifactors of the economy are wealthy asset holders.
That's odd, it's as if people said, I wonder how much longer this awful cost of living, inflation, zero good job opportunity, etc. and saw that the government has very little interest in making any of that better and lost faith. So weird. If only the people with their own money saw things as clearly as "expert economists" that have plenty of it
Nobody is happy in this economy. It's a win for corporations and a big loss for workers. We now all have to work more to afford the rising prices. The rich are getting wealthier.
Inflation has been bad, and wages for the working class have failed to keep up. Most people are still struggling. Working two or three jobs at once is also a way of struggling. If you are a rich person, you never see this or feel this.
I’ve been looking for an entry level engineer position for 4 months, entry level and I barely get any interviews. I’m tired of these companies telling us everything is fine.
It is utter nonsense, what jobs are they talking about, the minimum pay jobs ? The people are getting minimum pay jobs because they can’t afford to survive these high prices just by depending on one income. I’m SWE a lot of people have been laid off, and now all of the jobs require a Bachelor’s. This is Nuts, the inflation is thru the roof,household on two income streams are finding it hard to survive.
I'm full of hearing that the economy is "strong." Strong for who? Maybe if economists asked people how they feel about rampant inflation, increasing housing costs, and daycare, restaurants, college, healthcare costs, etc, they would stop thinking that everyone is benefitting from this supposedly good economy
While high housing prices suck for people who don’t have home… it’s a boom for people like me who have owned one for years. With my 2.5% 30yr interest rate and my raises that have kept above pace with inflation the past few years, housing costs have shrunk for me dramatically, enabling me to have way more money to spend, save, and invest. 66% of americans own their homes. So while in the headlines it might appear everyone’s complaining about not being able to afford one… there’s twice as many people in a situation like mine. 🎉
yea your rich on paper but what good is having all that equity and you can't sell cause your gonna triple your housing costs getting out of your current loan
If you get transferred, you won't be able to replace that house because interest rates are much higher. Home ownership has dropped to 55% per the banking industry and the realtor industry. You've forgotten the wave of repossessions that have been happening in the US coupled with the amount of housing purchased by foreign and domestic businesses.
I know no one who is happy about their household economy, taxes are too much of their budget, food prices are too expensive, everyone are working more than they want, and not getting enough for their money. Certain things are cheaper, pot is cheaper than five years ago, but most people in my age group have stopped smoking for health reasons.
That real personal income is the average... What does it look like if we are talking about the medium income? That's a LOT more important because it isn't being pulled by outliers.
This one is pretty easy. Businesses are doing well because they don't live in overpriced housing or eat overpriced food. People do. When your making not enough to cover the rent or buy food it really doesn't matter what the DOW or NYSE is doing at the moment.
In truth, the “economy” is not a monolithic entity; it has many sub-parts. For large businesses and the wealthy, the financial present is rosy. For those living below the income average, it is not so good. For small businesses, it is downright awful. The government statistics (a) ignore the sub-markets; (b) often report only partial data; and (c) are often wrong (as evidenced by the many later corrections to the data). The effects of the rampant inflation caused by the current Administration’s money printing and over-spending hurt the bottom half of society more than the top half. Some voters have been in a mild recession for over a year, and they are angry -- as the November election will reflect.
@@spacetoast7783 16% of the budget goes to servicing debt almost $500bl a year, Not even paying it off just paying interest and adding trillions a year
The answer is because the stats of the economy don’t make their way to the average American. Wages have not increased for decades to where they need to be when adjusted for inflation over decades. On top of this as well but most jobs that are being created are not high paying jobs. Also as touched on but the cost of many important things like groceries, electricity, and many other inflexible expenses have gone up overall and stay up. To add a cherry on top most people have not the faintest clue on how macro or micro economics works. So the blame gets put on Biden even though he has very little control over the economy. Then of course we have an irresponsible congress constantly making a clown show. Deflation would be its own bad can of worms for other reasons but this economy is fake strong. It’s heavily propped up right now by government spending and much of that growth is going into the hands of the few worsening the divide between income brackets
@@alexts94 thanks for the kind words. I don’t know if you celebrate Easter but if you do I wish you a happy one and I hope that things can get better for everyone who reads this
Low levels of deflation are good for working people, bad for Wall Street. Wall Street is the economy now, hence you can't point to the "good economy" and expect people to care at all.
All everyone, inside and outside of the US, hears is "I can't afford to live", "I can't afford rent", "It's too expensive to live". The GDP isn't the end all be all indicator of how well off people are.
The economy is good for people that have a mortgage or own a home. People without that equity or that are trying to buy their first home are left behind.
The economy can be as great as you want. If the average person struggles with monthly expenses while some billionaires get richer, they won't feel like things are going great.
I don't understand why all these news people need articles and studies it's very clear why people don't feel the economy is great you can ask just about any normal person.
Many investors had high hopes going into 2024. The market’s robust first-quarter rally still managed to surprise them.
Read more about how the S&P 500 is poised for its best start to a year since 2019: on.wsj.com/4abYnau
You don't seem very bright. McDonalds seems like a better choice for you.
Good for investors. Us regular folk are struggling
Average Joe doesn't give a fig about the S&P 500, employment statistics, and how many percentages of growth have happened.
They care about food, shelter, transportation ... all of which exploded under Biden.
And the astute investors know that the economy would have been in a recession if not for trillions of dollars of printing over the past 1.5yrs.
So what part of this is good ?
This video is misleading. You're using the average income, not the mean income. The average income is skewed astronomically higher due to the mega wealthy. You have to take Wall Street out of your statistics if you want them to speak to the problems on Main Street.
Income doesn't matter. Cost of living doesn't matter. What people care about if purchasing power parity (PPP) of their disposable income, and also if that percentage of disposable income goes up or down. And disposable income takes into account everything - taxes, Healthcare, food, utilities, fuel. Everything.
WSJ, you should decide how relevant you wish to become.
Employment rate and GDP does not mean that the average person is living a good economic life. It just means that people are working and wealth is being created. But how much is that job paying? And where is that wealth going?
The average American bases the “economy” on the groceries they buy regularly, which is undoubtedly higher and likely to stay high.
That’s why Americans are unhappy with the current economy.
Simple.
Inflation decreased tho
@@RacoonFighteryeah but it still 3% so prices will continue to rise
@@minebros190 2-3% is pretty healthy, normal and also what has been going on before everybody complained
@@RacoonFighter it doesnt matter. My pays the same as its been and prices are slowly rising. My life is still slowly getting more difficult
@@CYBERUS212 That might be the case, but that's not a problem created by the economy lol
Simple family budget pains: 25% increase in food prices in the past 4 years, 25% increase in rent in the past 4 years, mortgage rates increased from 3 to 8%
Has the average wage gone up 25% in 4 years?
That would be about 6% a year.
Lots of people with bachelor or even masters degrees cannot find a bwtter job than retail, warehouse, call center, custommer service etc. The market has an over supply of highly educated people like history, communications and biology.
Heard some hospital lab jobs even pay $20 an hour. You cannot survive on that in most cities unless you live in your car.
Wrong. fact is, average food and other products have gone up: 6%, and wages have gone up 8%, in the past 3 years. Mortgage rates went up to control inflation, and are now coming down, back to 5%, where they should be.
@@thijsjong There are over 11 million open jobs, right now, there's NO saturation in the market for highly education workers, you need to look at the facts, not radical-right news propaganda.
I like your version of reality
@@RussellFineArt😂
on paper the economy is doing excellent.. but talk to the average American & its a different story.
Every body's experience is obviously going to be different, but to deny or explain away the numbers and data because some people 'said so' probably isn't the hill you probably want to die on.
@@johnhandcock8193instead of blaming the masses you better call out number fudging done by your rulers
It's doing great if you're rich
@@johnhandcock8193 It's not "people said so". GDP is an aggregate measure. What does a blue collar or hospitality worker care that tech had a great quarter? What does one region care that another region is growing. It's possible that growth is limited to a section of society, while the rest took a hit during COVID and never recovered. Telling them "look at the numbers" is pointless, heck it's lying through statistics.
That's because the average person views the news and social media posts that constantly bag on the economy. Negative news is more powerful than positive, so that's what news media does. The economy is BOOMING, and Biden's done a great job, he'll get elected again in November over a seditious criminal.
It’s because housing costs and food costs are very high, which is the main two things everyone cares about the most.
They’re essential for living. They should matter most. An economy where only big corporations and the wealthy are thriving is not “strong” or “healthy” like they would have us believe.
I feel like it has become gamefied due to tech algorithms in so many sectors.
For real. Biden supporters trying to lecture normal everyday families about how well the stock market is doing doesn't move the needle whatsoever. In fact its just likely to make them go more in the opposite direction when voting.
Exactly
It's quite simple. The measuring tool for a "strong economy" is detached from the reality of people. The strength of companies isn't translating to more money for consumers. Companies are hoarding cash instead of raising wages.
Exactly! Just because someone has a job, doesn't mean that job's pay is keeping up with inflation. Or they didn't take a lower paying job just so they have a job. The unemployment rate tells us about how corporations are doing, but not how the worker is doing.
Just because a company has a higher stock price doesn't mean they have cash to spend. The shareholders are the ones benefitting from that higher value, and they're not employers. That's the key problem of asset inflation.
Why would companies hoard cash during an inflationary period? Your argument falls apart in the last sentence
@@toxiccan175Hoarding as in using it for their purpose; reinvestment, stocks and C suite bonuses rather than for the bottom line
@@toxiccan175to try to close the gap between future expenditures and the unknown amount of money/sales they'll be making in the future.
Protecting your capital is much more important than making money. Basically because if you lose your capital, making money is much harder. ''Missing the train'' vs. ''losing your money''. There are a lot of trains, but if your money is gone, it's over.
Wall Street pitched so-called quality stocks with high profitability and low debt, as a kind of insurance against whatever the economy might throw at you. Quality stocks have underperformed the S&P500 this year, My $200k portfolio is down by approximately 20 %, any recommendations to scale up my returns on investment
Nobody knows anything You need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.
Exactly why i enjoy market decisions being guided by a pro , seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk management and market experience , been using a portfolio-coach for over 2years+ and I've netted over $3million in that time frame.
Do you mind sharing info on the adviser who assisted you? I'm 39 now and would love to grow my stock portfolio and plan my retirement
'Carol Vivian Constable, a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and serves as a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.
That’s what inflation does. Economy isn’t strong when there’s no price stability
Inflation is fine when most people are seeing their wages go up faster than their inflation.
@@spacetoast7783 But that ONLY happens normally if the worker increases skills and increase productivity. Inflation is immoral even as you prefer because it means the richest get all the new money and buy all the assets before the prices go up, and the workers all suffer higher prices for a year before they get wages to increase based on the counterfeited dollar's fake value.
When economy is strong inflation happens
@@daifunka7062 You are correct. Inflation falls during recessions because people aren't spending money, and it rises when people have money to burn. The real question is always whether the economy and wages are beating inflation in the long run.
@@spacetoast7783 Exactly!
Wages are too low, having a full time job and not being able to make rent and buy groceries is offensive. That's why people don't care about what economists think.
Isn't that a running theme since the 90s?
Then you must favor a cost-of-living increase in the minimum wage, right?
Economists get their data by asking people how they're doing and what wages they're earning 🤷
If wages are rising and outpacing inflation, then they must feel great because they are being paid more. But this video article demonstrates and explains that people use historic numbers to judge the current costs. So as the man said, the cost of a can of coke was 25 cents but is now much higher. It doesn't matter that his salary has quintupled, he rates his comfort level on history.
It would be nice to be able to do something about it, but as long as people vote Republican, nothing will change. Vote blue!!
💙💙
No matter how much you made, it will never be enough if people are stealing from you through inflation and taxation.
the 2020 dollar is worth 85 cents now. No one has gotten enough pay increase to make their paychecks the same buying power as they had in 2020.
On average yes. But for the Most people Not
@@lucaskohl1037 do you know what an average is?
@@spartacoolcodycool yeah, do you?
No. I had a Series 2020 dollar bill in my wallet and the cashier at the convenience store agreed that it is still worth one dollar.
@@lucaskohl1037for the median it also has increased above the inflation rate, so your assessment is also misleading
The economy (stock market and businesses) are doing well now.
But home prices, rents and car prices have shot up well past inflation.
And it turns out rent, home and car prices are what the average person cares about most.
Yeah, but wealthy people care about the stock market because it takes money to make money. Glad everyone at the top is doing well! /s
@@jake1110 The stock market *is* important, just not as important as housing to the average person. If you have a 401k, the stock market doing poorly will effect your retirement.
@@WoodEe-zq6qv This story talked about wage growth out pacing inflation. But that data completely ignores what classes experienced that wage growth. If you include every worker including the ultra wealthy, I can see how they get a number like this that wages are growing faster than inflation. Our utility company PG&E's CEO made 2 million in 2022, and 250 million last year, while raising prices 38% just this year alone by the time it's over. The rich can be huge outliars that skew averages like the average wage growth. IF the rich see huge gains, but the middle and lower class actually did not experience wage growth higher than inflation, I think that would explain why people feel the way they do, and I thick this is the case. Income inequality is getting worse at an exponential rate.
@@heyaisdabomb Measuring outliars is a good point, but income inequality isn't. There is no negative economic externality to income inequality.
@@heyaisdabomb This doesen't really bare out in the data. Inequality has been coming down recently, income growth is highest among low wage earners and real income is falling for the upper quintile.
Its morbidly funny to watch these little graphs tell me the economy is great while everyone I know is drowning under food price increases, rent or the inability to buy a house.
Anecdotal evidence is the dumbest argument ever
I actually know very few people whose wages are not matching their cost of living increases. Maybe it’s a city by city problem?
@@dementedchicken1 It's an anecdotal evidence problem
Inflation and employment rates are both lower than 4%. What is the problem?
They literally explained that as well
The voters don't agree because the economy is not strong. The economists can't seem to understand that their models are not correct; there are too many things missing in them, and the weight given to what is present is unbalanced. The voters do not experience the economy the way the experts measure. Decades ago, Harry Truman famously said "line up a group of economists and they'll still point in every direction". Some things have not changed, or at least they haven't straightened themselves out.
It is true even for us though.
I own a home, I am happy when home prices go up.
People who don’t own a home want prices to go down.
So which one is better ? Going up or down ?
If I own a rental property I want rents to go up, but people renting want rents to go down.
Which is good ?
I own a home and locked down interest rate @ low rates, I don’t care about high interest rates, but people who wants to buy home wants lower rates.
It depends on who you ask, people will point in different directions.
The economy IS strong -- in macroeconomic terms. A significant problem is that the economic strength is not evenly distributed with the wealthy benefitting enormously and those lower down the ladder not so much. Wealth inequality, the rich not paying their fair share, etc is the real issue. As JFK stated, a rising economy lifts all boats. The problem now being that the water is rising in singular pools for the wealthy, and the rest of us only get some of the spillage. And who is stopping the reforms to allow for the middle class and the poor to benefit more? The Republicans, the GOP. Vote accordingly.
@@gund89123 depends on the majority. majority of people are renters so obviously rent going down is better
@@KevinAdams26 I am not a moron, I will be voting Republican, but then, I also understand economics. The economy isn't strong and only gov't paid economists are spewing such lies. I find it sad that most Americans are ignorant of economics and so naive that they believe everything politicians spew. VOTE REPUBLICAN FOR SANITY
@@KevinAdams26 Bruh, stop telling people to voted Democrat when it's Democrat policies that lead to this problem. I'm NOT voting for Biden.
As a base citizen living in the US see this:
Groceries - HIGH
Gas - HIGH
Housing - HIGH
3 common important things that make a person. Ofc we complain 😂
Cars - HIGH
Housing cost will go down by the end of the year but everyone is going to have to be patient if you want to get a mortgage for a home wait till the fed lowers interest rates then do it you will save your self a bunch of money
@@plasmaboy2265 Trouble is that it will make no difference because the interest will be so high as to drive the payments up to where they were when houses were priced high and interest low.
Welcome to the Silent Depression.
Ive seen this term used in the past 2 decades, but for the first time, I think it's true. I felt it worst at 2022.
I'll tell you a secret... people are tired of income inequality. They know that they are not getting properly compensated for the work they do.
So the real question is: who benefits from a "strong economy"? Not the average person.
The government benefits, it controls the narrative and spins the stories. There is no strong economy. The world is dedollarizing because the threat of devaluation is massive. The US dollar has lost 17% of it's value since 2021. We have to shed at least 45 trillion dollars before our economy can work properly. The US "leadership" found that forcing cross border trade in approved currency, have OPEC sell oil only in dollars, and sanction any nation that doesn't follow our orders to the letter led to a "strong economy" and got votes. Well, like legit economists have been saying for decades, printing and borrowing money is extremely damaging to the economy in the guise of INFLATION.
People who have been saving and investing for years like me ?
lol
Big difference between the stock market and the grocery market
Because a lot of my friends are getting laid off, and my company has been on a hiring freeze for over a year. "Strong" economies don't have tons of corporate layoffs and hiring freezes. Yes, there are tons of $15 an hour burrito making and rideshare jobs, but if you want to make any kind of money, you're not getting hired right now.
Yup. They don’t wanna pay. But at the same time they are barely surviving
I think prices are too high for everyone. But if businesses want to survive people need to make money
Businesses have also costs too gotta think about that
@@orlandpaul5810 +1 increases in asset prices don't cause your local burrito shop to make any more profit that it can pass onto workers.
so 3.9% unemployment is fake news ?
because the economy is not strong, and consumers aren't fooled by faulty statistics
Its almost like you dont see the thousands living in the street.
Insurance has gone up. Utility bills has gone up. Gas and groceries has gone up and taxes have gone up.
Because GDP is not a good indicator or the median income growth for the middle class. The growth in the economy disproportionately goes to the wealthy.
Our economy is like a flailing fish, fighting for its life. The normal state of the U.S. economy is actually very bad. Because of this it goes into convulsive spasms fighting to grow any way it can out of desperation. Tricks, gimmicks, rule changes try to stimulate the economy and prevent it from falling but they only bring temporary relief to people since, when you factor in inflation we are declining.
People believe their currency has the worth it does because they have no other option. Even in a hyperinflationary environment, individuals must continue to use their hyperinflationary currency since they likely have minimal access to other currencies or gold/silver coins.
Inflation is gradually going to become part of us and due to that fact any money you keep in cash or in a low-interest account declines in value each year. Investing is the only way to make your money grow and unless you have an exceptionally high income, investing is the only way most people will ever have enough money to retire.
I've tried investing in the stock market several times but always got discouraged by fluctuations of stock value. I would be happy if you could advise me based on how you went about yours, as I am ready to go the passive income path.!!
‘Sharon Ann Meny ’ is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.
Thank you for the lead. I searched her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
I'm just saying, 2-3 years ago when I go out and eat it cost $7-$13 now it cost me $12-$22 for the same things.
If you can't afford it, stay home. There are lots of good meals you can prepare that don't cost that much : Spaghetti, grilled cheese sandwiches, hot dogs, hamburgers, salads, etc.
@@thewolfdoctor761 Good advice in general. But the POINT of that comment was that cost of living is outpacing wages.
@@jrho8033 Actually the point of the comment was that eating out is more expensive. Wages wasn't mentioned.
@@thewolfdoctor761damn bro, should I not buy houses and cars too with 8% interest rate 😂
@@Habibi_exe He didn't mention cars or houses.
“The economy is doing great” only has and will mean “the rich are getting richer”
wish theyd stop including ghost jobs in their metrics
Unemployment is only for people who are seeking a job. They should definitely release total employment figures with stratified age groups.
Good for the elite. The quality of life for the average citizen has gone down the toilet. I understand now why people indulge in criminal acts. This government encourages it.
Home prices went up 3x in my area. 200k to 600k.
And your salary went up 3x, right???
@@jrho8033 20%.
@@jrho8033 Uh, no
Salary went up x3 times right 😂 yea a guy doing the same job for 50k went up to 150k
-Do I have the wrong indicators for microeconomy?
-no, it's the voters who are wrong
It’s *macro, and yes voters are wrong, did you watch the video ?
Voters dont care about the macro.
They care about the micro. It is their own wage. Their own rent. Their own bills. Their own job prospects. (discouraged jobseekers)
These macro indicators are not a good aggregate for all the micro economy problems.
The median is a much better presentaion. And you have to look at cohorts. Top quarter earners may be doing great while the bottom quarter earners could be slammed.
@@thijsjong Can you please google what’s microeconomics, I don’t think you understand the term correctly
@@God_of_Virginshe is right
@@God_of_Virginsi don't think you do either
Missed the key point: The income gap has widened significantly during the Biden Administration. Most people are worse off regardless of what GDP says as the driver for the last 4 years has been monetary policy rather than fiscal policy. This results in a disproportionate amount of wealth being generated by asset price appreciation rather than the real economy (other than the tech sector). Whilst those that own a multi-million stock and/or real estate portfolios have gotten tremendously richer, the middle and working classes have gotten increasingly squeezed...there are a lot more of the latter.
I agree completely! Notice how the ones that say the economy is doing great are either super wealthy. Or are stuck behind a screen looking at numbers and get paid to say the economy is doing great..
Trump will make the income gap greater if he’s reelected
@@paulh1862Undoubtedly.
My thoughts exactly. All the wealth increase is in corporations and stock markets. Most people feel their wealth in their spending power, which has shrunk dramatically.
Bla bla bla...move to canada if he's reelected 😂@@paulh1862
If Wall Street is strong they say economy is doing good, but those companies can layoff thousands of workers and see their stock prices go up while those people just had their lives turned upside down but we still care more about how well WS is doing all the time.
Although constantly harping on the "strong economy" talking points, it didn't stop my liberal Trump-hating friend from feeling she had to move from CA to Texas to survive economically.
You know she grew up as a spoiled rich kid if she's crying about the price of food.
@@spacetoast7783 you still here lying? Regardless, of course it's cheaper to live in a third world country.
@@whoees3953 Who are you talking to? I never said anything about third would countries.
The one thing these videos always gets wrong is saying that people feel like their income has not kept up with inflation that's wrong they want the prices to come down more than they want their income to go up
@@dstarrII8442most people's income are not going up. The average is increasing based on outliers
I have savings of $1,000,000 and I'm ready for retirement, only concerned about the soaring inflation. Is this enough to retire comfortably, or do I need some sort of money management?
The quickest route to financial freedom is by investing. It's never too late to begin planning for a stable financial future because investment generates money.
I just googled her and I'm really impressed with her credentials; I reached out to her since I need all the assistance I can get. I just scheduled a caII.
Bots
how did you able to save that much? any advice? I was trying to save, but expenses kicking me left and right
It’s interesting. I’m in Canada. The grocery stores are under investigation for processing gouging due to public pressure. In the last few weeks, the prices on groceries has gone down DRAMATICALLY. One example- ground beef has gone from $15/kg to $9/kg.
You'll never see such an investigation happening in the US, the country that pretends that price gouging and greedflation do not exist.
Why don't voters agree? Have you ever been to the store lately or paid any bills? The price increases from the past 4/5 years has been absolutely insane!
Elections can significantly shift market dynamics and investor sentiment. It's essential for us as investors to stay informed and adapt our strategies accordingly. Historically, certain sectors thrive depending on election outcomes-think green energy vs. fossil fuels. Keeping a close eye on the candidates' policies could provide valuable insights for making smart investment choices.
Definitely! With the potential shifts in the economy due to election outcomes, having an adviser can provide invaluable insights. They can help us interpret the implications of new policies and guide our investment decisions in a rapidly changing landscape.
JULIANNE IWERSEN NIEMANN
That's whom i work with
The economy is strong, most people just can’t afford to live as well as they did their entire lives before Biden became President. People are broke and financially hopeless, but everything is great. Thanks!
Many companies benefit from inflation but consumers get hit.
well said
Inflation make rich to richer and poor to poorer
What companies benefit from inflation?
Regular people don’t feel GDP, they feel the inflation
Rent/mortgage rates, groceries, gas, and wages are the real economy. And all of those are a disaster right now.
It isn't strong. It doesn't take an economist to figure that out.
You're just proving their point
Dems believe in facts over feelings... Sorry if you don't like the facts. You sbould go back to the conservative hug box
Do you also have any arguments or just blatantly talking BS?
@markmierzejewski9534 People living paycheck to paycheck, businesses closing and big companies laying off a lot of employees is NOT a working economy.
@@podsmpsg1
That’s how it always has been ever since capitalism existed… (we know it’s not a fair system but is what it is)
My question to Economist is why GDP model are relevant to Economist when it only benefits 10% percent of the population?.
Because that's the only 10% that matters. The rest is just a human resource.
@JonasWilms meaning Economic are designed to serve those in power not the working class?. Capitalist are been exposed every day 😂😂😂
Botton line, my life isn't better than it was in 2019! We(my wife and I) make more money than ever but we can't afford the same lifestyle! Our standard of living is slipping.
Is the WSJ gaslighting us 😂
Inflation isn’t 3% sorry like the fake cpi. It doubled
I hear and read so much chatter about how this economy is, "Smokingly hot, never been one like it before, we're the envy of the world," etc. This chatter is just the 1% talking amongst themselves.
Bingo. Corporate media and those who consume it are doing just fine. They're the people riding around manhattan in a black car moving between high end restaurants and cocktail bars. They don't get it. They won't get it.
Project Mockingbird messaging
Every time I hear so much chatter about how people can't afford food, I know I'm listening to a spoiled brat leftist kid.
@@spacetoast7783 Every time I hear so much chatter about how people can't afford food, I'm watching Fox News.
Definitely!
You know I feel like my "feelings" are affected by groceries going up 22% the past 4 years and housing prices doubling, I'd say I DON'T FEELA so geat about that.
Unemployment is down, but because people are working 2 jobs because salary is so low.
And because "unemployment" means "getting unemployment benefits," which you just stop getting after 6 months out of work.
A dozen eggs are now costing over $4. How long will it take for the Labor Department to wake up and add it to the inflation rate. When was the last time that the price of a basket of goods and services consumed by households been changed to accurately measure what Americans are buying and what the true measure of inflation is?
There is a disconnect between people and economists, Businesses, Corporations.
Economists want to use GDP, unemployment rate, labor participation rate, stock market as indicators.
But people care about median wages, inflation, purchasing power, retirement savings, healthcare costs.
The reason is because how well the Economy is doing doesn’t matter to people. People care more about what they end up paying at the register . Not to mention the negative affects of the pandemic on the economy already done it’s damage , so while the economy is doing much better , things still won’t go back to being how much they costed pre pandemic.
Inflation is part of the economy. People are struggling. The pay doesnt match the inflated cost of everything that has to be purchased.
They showed that wages adjusted for inflation have grown though
@@dementedchicken1 They haven't kept up with inflation though. When home prices spike and interest rates rise, it makes it even more difficult for most to buy.
@@dementedchicken1 I don't agree. It's people sleeping in cars and storages units. Some people have to pick up two to three jobs and barely getting by....
@@jake1110 By definition, "grown adjusted for inflation" means that they have kept up with inflation (and exceeded it)
@@jake1110 Pretty sure interest rates getting higher is meant to reduce inflation
Hey buddy, There’s nothing “well balanced” about a $2000 + a month average RENTAL housing cost, and the cost of food being so high that it’s no longer affordable to start a family. We have a real problem, starting with housing.
Ummmm because our money had been devalued by the rising prices we see everywhere.
The media puts a title like this, why don't voters trust them?
The dems favouring their big money overlords whilst crushing the common people.
They are pawns for the top dogs. They tell us what to think, we think it, we vote it into power, then we suffer like sheep heading to the slaughter house.
They changed it aha
Feels like everything went up to twice the price, the portions also got smaller/ are lower quality, we now have an immigration crisis driving up the demand for more products making things more expensive, we’re sending all our money to Ukraine and Israel, and it feels like people are trying to add more expenses like the New York driving tolls or things like everyone in your family having to have a Netflix account
bruh most patronizing thing ever
These expert people are way out of touch when basic necessities or as we call the “basket of goods” cost a lot more compared to purchasing power.
Inflation is still happening. I went to Aldi yesterday and saw they raised the cheapest bottle of wine price 15%. And 6 months before that it went up another 15%. Now apply that to all other food & drinks and fast food/restaurants & housing.
Most people are not receiving 15-30% raises in a year.
The bottom did the top took those in pay cuts ....working 20$ an hr is nothing to aspire to, managing your company for 55k is pathetic
Are you seriously using wine as your example?
Wine isn’t a necessity
Wine isn’t a necessity, second if you want i can send you some wine from my country cheapest is 5,50€/5L box😂
Yes, because it is the most recent example I encountered, literally yesterday. I'm not implying wine is a necessity, but it is definitely an example that inflation is not over when it jumps 30% in a year.@@warpfire052
"Guys, please believe us! We totally aren't lying to you!"
They're really out here trying to tell us it isn't bad but what they really mean is debt slavery is on its way and there's nothing the elite want or care to do for us. Soon big grocery stores will offer their own credit card and you'll have to take out a loan just to buy food.
There are two economies in the USA right now. The wealth gap is huge so you got half the country hurting hard from inflation and is in a hard recession while the other half is booming.
Contributing factors;
A) political instability and polarization. B) High levels of Asset Inflation. C) High levels of wealth inequality. D) High Interest Rates and Decreased Social Security Spending.
These are the factors I've identified that contribute to the vibecession. It doesn't matter if the economy is good if the benifactors of the economy are wealthy asset holders.
That's odd, it's as if people said, I wonder how much longer this awful cost of living, inflation, zero good job opportunity, etc. and saw that the government has very little interest in making any of that better and lost faith. So weird. If only the people with their own money saw things as clearly as "expert economists" that have plenty of it
You did not take into consideration how savings has diminished and eroded. This is the main reason.
The next time you see a poor person, just tell them that they're just a bunch of anecdotes because the stats tell us the economy is doing great.
Nobody is happy in this economy. It's a win for corporations and a big loss for workers. We now all have to work more to afford the rising prices. The rich are getting wealthier.
Inflation has been bad, and wages for the working class have failed to keep up. Most people are still struggling. Working two or three jobs at once is also a way of struggling. If you are a rich person, you never see this or feel this.
I’ve been looking for an entry level engineer position for 4 months, entry level and I barely get any interviews. I’m tired of these companies telling us everything is fine.
It is utter nonsense, what jobs are they talking about, the minimum pay jobs ?
The people are getting minimum pay jobs because they can’t afford to survive these high prices just by depending on one income. I’m SWE a lot of people have been laid off, and now all of the jobs require a Bachelor’s. This is Nuts, the inflation is thru the roof,household on two income streams are finding it hard to survive.
After watching this video, I feel so much better. I feel like I can afford everything again. I feel rich
You're gaslighting your viewers WSJ,
You should be ashamed.
where?
Real Median Wages are lower than they were in 2019. When you account for inflation the average American is worse off financially
Good to hear the stock market is high and part time and low paying jobs are on the rise… but look at food, groceries, rent and housing, etc etc
Exactly
I'm full of hearing that the economy is "strong." Strong for who? Maybe if economists asked people how they feel about rampant inflation, increasing housing costs, and daycare, restaurants, college, healthcare costs, etc, they would stop thinking that everyone is benefitting from this supposedly good economy
While high housing prices suck for people who don’t have home… it’s a boom for people like me who have owned one for years. With my 2.5% 30yr interest rate and my raises that have kept above pace with inflation the past few years, housing costs have shrunk for me dramatically, enabling me to have way more money to spend, save, and invest. 66% of americans own their homes. So while in the headlines it might appear everyone’s complaining about not being able to afford one… there’s twice as many people in a situation like mine. 🎉
yea your rich on paper but what good is having all that equity and you can't sell cause your gonna triple your housing costs getting out of your current loan
@@takeflightfinance644 lucky me then, I don’t need to sell. I get to keep that extra cash flow for a good long time.
If you get transferred, you won't be able to replace that house because interest rates are much higher. Home ownership has dropped to 55% per the banking industry and the realtor industry. You've forgotten the wave of repossessions that have been happening in the US coupled with the amount of housing purchased by foreign and domestic businesses.
@@LunaLapin-ho5tk wave of repossessions? They’re only going back up to where they were pre-pandemic…. This isn’t 2008 again!
yo got to be kidding, prices are sky high. can't leave home without spending a hundred bucks. it's an unhappy economy.
If you have to explain to us that the economy is strong, then it isn't strong.
I know no one who is happy about their household economy, taxes are too much of their budget, food prices are too expensive, everyone are working more than they want, and not getting enough for their money. Certain things are cheaper, pot is cheaper than five years ago, but most people in my age group have stopped smoking for health reasons.
They are right to do so, smoking is very bad. Have you thought about doing edibles? They're reasonably priced and nice and strong here in Cali.
That real personal income is the average... What does it look like if we are talking about the medium income? That's a LOT more important because it isn't being pulled by outliers.
The issue with illegal immigrants will destroy his chances.
"If you don't the economy is working, it's your fault" - WSJ & Democrats
This one is pretty easy. Businesses are doing well because they don't live in overpriced housing or eat overpriced food. People do. When your making not enough to cover the rent or buy food it really doesn't matter what the DOW or NYSE is doing at the moment.
economy doesnt mean the peoples it just means companies and the peoples are doing terrible
It FEELS bad when you go grocery shopping pay $100 and return with only a small bag! A very small bag!! Biden has never had THAT feeling!!
Grocery stores and retailers are price gouging consumers. So the sentiment is accurate.
Who is this economy strong for? Cause when I'm paying 60 percent more for food and gas, it only feels strong causes its choking me out.
Housing is the biggest issue, we need young couples buying and not renting.
In truth, the “economy” is not a monolithic entity; it has many sub-parts. For large businesses and the wealthy, the financial present is rosy. For those living below the income average, it is not so good. For small businesses, it is downright awful. The government statistics (a) ignore the sub-markets; (b) often report only partial data; and (c) are often wrong (as evidenced by the many later corrections to the data). The effects of the rampant inflation caused by the current Administration’s money printing and over-spending hurt the bottom half of society more than the top half. Some voters have been in a mild recession for over a year, and they are angry -- as the November election will reflect.
Guys, strong economies dont require a trillion dollars every three months to keep going. Oh, and I N F L A T I O N.
you are confusing productivity of the country with stupidity of the politians.
Strong economies tend to have bigger numbers in the budget. I'm not sure what point you think you're making.
@@spacetoast7783 16% of the budget goes to servicing debt almost $500bl a year, Not even paying it off just paying interest and adding trillions a year
@@ldIezz Ok?
@@ldIezz So?
The economy is growing because they are spending one trillion every 100 days
The answer is because the stats of the economy don’t make their way to the average American. Wages have not increased for decades to where they need to be when adjusted for inflation over decades.
On top of this as well but most jobs that are being created are not high paying jobs.
Also as touched on but the cost of many important things like groceries, electricity, and many other inflexible expenses have gone up overall and stay up.
To add a cherry on top most people have not the faintest clue on how macro or micro economics works. So the blame gets put on Biden even though he has very little control over the economy. Then of course we have an irresponsible congress constantly making a clown show.
Deflation would be its own bad can of worms for other reasons but this economy is fake strong. It’s heavily propped up right now by government spending and much of that growth is going into the hands of the few worsening the divide between income brackets
Probably the most comprehensive, down to earth explanation of the situation right now that I've seen. 👏🏽
@@alexts94 thanks for the kind words. I don’t know if you celebrate Easter but if you do I wish you a happy one and I hope that things can get better for everyone who reads this
Low levels of deflation are good for working people, bad for Wall Street. Wall Street is the economy now, hence you can't point to the "good economy" and expect people to care at all.
Perhaps it's time to stop chasing metrics that don't actually matter to the average American.
Have you seen the layoffs in tech? People are going back to minimum wage jobs after university and switching careers.
Simple: C-suite executives have got 30-70% hike per year while employees got 1-4%
All everyone, inside and outside of the US, hears is "I can't afford to live", "I can't afford rent", "It's too expensive to live". The GDP isn't the end all be all indicator of how well off people are.
The economy is good for people that have a mortgage or own a home. People without that equity or that are trying to buy their first home are left behind.
Yup!! 100%
Not really. Prices on everything is going up and that means my mortgage is getting harder and harder to pay.
Record high credit card payments, more gains in part time jobs verses full time jobs, mortgage payments 200% higher than 3 years ago
It isn't strong.
The economy can be as great as you want. If the average person struggles with monthly expenses while some billionaires get richer, they won't feel like things are going great.
I don't understand why all these news people need articles and studies it's very clear why people don't feel the economy is great you can ask just about any normal person.
They literally adressed that in this video. Normal people are detached from reality.
I'm getting squeezed at every turn, it's becoming difficult just to survive with the bare minimums