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11 Replies

 @ConstitutionTommyLibertarian from Washington D.C.  commented…2yrs2Y

All that money printing since 2008, doubled down on after 2020, has long lasting effects on the economy - who would have guessed?

 @R3volutionSnailDemocrat from Oregon  disagreed…2yrs2Y

You mean in terms of strong growth, low unemployment, and falling inflation? Who would have guessed indeed!

 @JoyfulP0pulistRepublicanfrom Washington  agreed…2yrs2Y

Strong "growth" and low unemployment is requiring the US government to borrow 1 Trillion dollars every four months. It won't be long before the US is unable to afford to pay interest on its gigantic debt, which is why Powell is desperate to cut interest rates. Clearly a gigantic crash is baked in. And you're wrong, inflation isn't low.

 @SpiritedThirdPartyForward from Georgia  commented…2yrs2Y

Hard to have inflation drop when Federal deficit is 7% of GDP

 @Unanim0usXerusSocialistfrom Texas  commented…2yrs2Y

Walk me through the mechanics as to how that deficit gets to the consumer's pocket and shows up in retail sales. Well, I guess those unfunded tax cuts in 2018 did run up the deficit and put money in the pockets of the already wealthy.

 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

How do you interpret the fact that consumers continued to spend more despite the overall rise in prices, and what might this say about the perceived value or necessity of certain goods?

 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

How do you feel about the idea that increasing retail sales in the US, despite rising inflation, reflect on individual consumers' financial priorities and societal values?

 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

Given the impact of retail sales results on global financial markets, how do you think individual shopping behaviors influence broader economic trends?

 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

With some categories like sporting goods and clothing stores seeing a decline in sales, what does this suggest about changing interests or economic pressures faced by consumers?

 @ISIDEWITHasked…2yrs2Y

Considering the significant rise in online sales, what does this shift tell us about consumer habits and preferences in the modern economy?

 @BoredRoadrunnerMountainfrom Georgia  commented…2yrs2Y

Wealthy people save money, not spend it. That's why all that paper money from QE infinity didn't blow up the "real economy" (despite inflating an incredible asset bubble). But give away money to people who live hand to mouth and they spend every dollar on consumables and the general price level goes nuts.