• @TheAlbatross
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    10 months ago

    I’ll believe the economics are better when I’m not paying markedly more for everything in my life and my salary increases.

    The politicians are so wildly out of touch with the citizens.

    This idea that the data is “mistrusted” or “unseen” is ridiculous to the point of incredulity. I don’t care what the data says, I know what my lived experiences are and everything is getting wildly more expensive except my labor, it seems. Show me any study you want, it won’t change that groceries are 30%+ more expensive, my rent keeps going up, restaurants and bars have gotten nearly 50% or more pricier and my wage hasn’t grown to match.

      • Jordan Lund
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        8210 months ago

        Dining out is CRAZY now.

        My wife and I were out and about last weekend and needed to eat so we hit a Burger King.

        Meals for 2, nothing crazy, was $30… at freaking BURGER KING. We don’t even have a sales tax here.

        • pjhenry1216
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          3210 months ago

          Workers wanted an increase in pay, so shareholders needed to offset that by even more. Workers can’t get a raise without shareholders getting a raise.

          Inflation is majority driven by profit, not wages. Dems barely attack that angle. Republicans actively work against it.

            • pjhenry1216
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              3610 months ago

              Sorry, didn’t mean to word it as support. Just wording it as the reality of what they think.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Shareholders provide economic value (it’s literally in the name) and are not rent-seeking by definition

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  10 months ago

                  Shareholders are key investors and are the principal drivers of M&A and infrastructure investment.

                  Disagreeing with the idea that companies exist to drive shareholder returns does not change the actual purpose of shareholders, nor suddenly cause them to be rent-seekers.

                  • @TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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                    1210 months ago

                    How did they get that capital to invest I wonder? The simple answer is that they obtained it through a chain of underpayment of workers for the true value they produce, thus creating a profit. Investors are simply people with wealth who put some of that wealth at risk in the hopes of increasing that wealth by exploiting workers.

                    The only inherent value an investor has is taking risks, but the risks they take are rarely material risks. Most of these investors have diverse portfolios and are unlikely to see their quality of life affected in any meaningful way if they are in any way financially responsible.

                  • @nednobbins@lemm.ee
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                    510 months ago

                    You brought an economics argument to a rage thread. OP isn’t making a technical claim when they say “rent seeking behavior”, they’re angry and using it as a synonym for “greedy people”.

          • Wet Noodle
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            2910 months ago

            Yeah except the workers never get the increase in pay you tool. Both Dems and Republicans in office actively help this happening, progressive Dems are the ones that give a damn

              • @deadsenator@lemmy.ca
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                1010 months ago

                I know by definition “restaurant” can be a fast-food place, but genuine restaurants are what you meant. Fast-food joints do not operate this way.

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  10 months ago

                  Even BKs margins of 18% do not account for a $28 markup, as was suggested above.

                  You are correct that I was misattributing casual dining margins tho. That was a neat rabbit hole I went down.

        • @RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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          310 months ago

          $21 was the bill for 4 people to eat fast food for lunch in my part of the USA today.

          Y’all are paying too much for fast food, it’s not worth that.

      • @TheAlbatross
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        10 months ago

        I’m just below the median income for my area. Before the pandemic, I was comfortable. I largely didn’t have to worry about expenses, I could dine out a few times a month, cook meat more than once a week, buy a few hobby luxuries every few months. Could air travel for vacation once a year.

        I drive a newish economy sedan, live in a decent area with one roommate, didn’t have all that much but the 401(k) looked good and I had all I wanted.

        Now things are tight. Just the other week, went to a bar that sold a damn good burger for $9 with fries. Could have a beer with it and get out under $20. The damn hamburger is $18 now and the beer doubled in price. I try to buy meat twice a month to eat, but my diet is far more bean and lentil based now. Eggs, while doubly more, are still cheap enough to be a frequent protein. My vacations are all at home now. I’ve taken to enjoying fishing, which is admittedly great, but I used to fly to Europe or other parts of the US once a year.

        I do not know how folks on minimum wage get by here. Without forming a support network of other minimum wage workers to pool for rent and groceries, it has to be an insane struggle.

        If this is the “improving economy”, I don’t want any of it.

          • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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            410 months ago

            I went to buy eggs and they were like 12 dollars. I could have swore eggs were a lot cheaper in the past.

            Man some things have really hit the “I mean, it’s one banana, Michael. What could it cost? $10?” levels of ridiculousness price wise.

              • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                1110 months ago

                I’m a republican but we need to seriously raise the minimum wage.

                Uh, you might wanna consider if being a Republican is more important to you than not living in a country full of homeless starving people is before you cast your next vote.

                Most of your fellow Republicans believe deep down in the abolishment of the minimum wage, and are adamantly against ever raising it again.

                  • @Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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                    910 months ago

                    Every single Senate Republican voted against raising the minimum wage to $15, all but 3 House Republicans did the same. It wasn’t really a surprise political result to anyone, nor will it be surprising when they all vote against it again.

                  • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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                    10 months ago

                    Historically they’re been concerned about the inflation risk with raising minimum wage.

                    So inflation is bad already. They blame rising wages for inflation, and you think they’re going to raise the minimum wage? Why? Is there something in the party platform about raising the minimum wage?

                    I highly doubt there is, and I highly doubt that if they got more power that that’s what they’d do.

      • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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        1210 months ago

        Me and a partner got fish and chips at a bar yesterday, one app, no drinks, cost us fucking $80. Good fish and chips but like not that good… When I first moved here I was making enough to eat out basically every day and not notice it. I’ve gotten two raises since then but everything is going up in cost so much if I go out twice a week I’m straining my bank account. I’m used to being poor this job was a complete game changer for me but I’m already noticing I’m starting to pick up habits again from when I was making like 1/3 as much as I do now.

        • @TheAlbatross
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          610 months ago

          Someone was telling me they bought 3 carrots for SIX FUCKING PENCE in the UK when they visited a few months ago.

          America is so fucked, I don’t care what the office of the president says

    • @tasty4skin@lemmy.world
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      5110 months ago

      The economy is doing better precisely because regular people’s lives are harder. A “strong” economy means more and more off the backs of everyday laborers. Not to mention intentional raising of unemployment rates to combat inflation. The system is fucked. There’s nothing in it for me and you.

      • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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        2410 months ago

        Exactly this. Companies do better when they can exploit their workers for as much value as possible. That’s what a “good economy” looks like and it is the duty of every living human to hurt it.

      • @AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        710 months ago

        Food service workers haven’t gotten raises in decades. I finally quit when I threw my back out, but when I started in 96, I was making $20,000 a year as a line cook, and later $30,000 as a chef. When I went into management I got a whopping $36,000 as a GM. Meanwhile the prices on the menus have more than doubled. Dollar menus are non existent. It’s bullshit. I make more money working for myself a few hours a week growing flower and building computers than I ever would in food service.

    • @alvvayson@lemmy.world
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      1310 months ago

      I can see all my grocery store receipts in my app up to two years ago.

      Many things have gotten a lot more expensive, but some things haven’t. I would put it at 20%, not 30+%.

      Also, my mortgage didn’t go up. Renters are getting screwed, that’s for sure.

      Finally, my wage definitely went up. Although many people did not have had their wages go up and they are getting screwed too

      So I’m doing much better than two years ago.

      The economy isn’t bad for everyone.

      But for many people, it’s definitely bad.

      To say that the numbers are wrong is a stretch though. The numbers just reflect averages.

      • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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        410 months ago

        I too have largely been doing better since the pandemic than before it. But I also bought a condo during the extremely brief price dip in early 2020.

      • @RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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        310 months ago

        Same here, still doing fine in my low cost of living area. Not all of the USA is as bad as some of these reports.

      • @VentraSqwal@links.dartboard.social
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        210 months ago

        I think a lot of it is living costs. If you were able to lock in a mortgage with low interest rates, and don’t have to rent or look for a place to live right now, then you’re probably doing a lot better than others and then the President’s analysis may make actual sense.

        On the other hand, I’ve gotten a couple raises but it hasn’t felt like it. They’ve basically equaled out to inflation.

    • @SCB@lemmy.world
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      910 months ago

      This idea that the data is “mistrusted” or “unseen” is ridiculous to the point of incredulity. I don’t care what the data says

      Cannot believe you wrote this without a trace of irony.

      • @TheAlbatross
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        1810 months ago

        Buddy they can say the economy is better until the cows come home, it doesn’t change that for a huge swath of people, it fucking ain’t, it’s far worse.

        • @SCB@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Individual impacts are always felt last. In 08, the average person didn’t experience the crisis until it had been underway for about half a year or more.

          I am not arguing that every person is literally better off this moment but rather that economic messaging as a whole is not resonating with people.

          Wages are going up. Hiring is through the roof. Things are turned around. Fundamentals are all rock solid, and even the Fed is saying that they will be easing off as they have essentially already achieved the “soft landing” with inflation.

          The person I replied to is committing the same logical “sin” that the article bemoans.

          • @1847953620@lemmy.world
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            710 months ago

            It’s almost as if when the average person talks about the economy, they’re talking about metrics and dynamics that affect them, and when politicians talk about economics, they talk about a set of metrics and dynamics that the average person couldn’t give a flying fuck about, which may or may not affect them eventually. The degree to which those two sets are related is constantly in dispute, but trying to confuse the economy for the 1% as the economy for everyone else is kind of a fundamental deception that people are getting tired of. There’s no guarantee or even strong reason to believe any of our schools of thought of macroeconomics have ever been right. We’re making it up as we go along, and often times for the benefit of the upper class, not everyone else.