werepossum
Elite Member
- Jul 10, 2006
- 29,873
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I agree completely with regards to long term prognosis. We've outsourced a great deal of our wealth-producing jobs, and the combination of low to nonexistent trade barriers, relatively high wages and benefits, & expensive regulations guarantees that this will continue. I'm thinking more along the lines of consumer confidence and the immediate future. I'm just not seeing the kind of fiscal panic that kills businesses and hoards cash against an economic crash. I'm sure people are holding more cash than they did five years ago - and that's a very good thing - but I'm also seeing a lot of spending on VERY discretionary things, like Halloween decorations, including in my own household and those of our neighbors. None of us are holding our cash as tightly as we did a year or two ago, yet the news says this should be just the opposite. (Although perhaps this isn't a good example since I did buy a new motorcycle last year.)Yes, we still have an active economy. The question is what direction are we going in. And for the reasons Engineer mentioned, things don't look like they're going in the right direction.
I have not heard of one good reason that employment would rise meaningfully in the near or long-term future. With high unemployment and underemployment we're not going to be able to sustain our consumer economy.
First it was the industrial workers who lost their jobs and nobody cared because most people had their office jobs and just told the industrial workers to get a college degree. Now it's been the generic office workers who can't find jobs even with a degree. Many professionals are going to suffer the same fate next (we see it in some industries) if something doesn't turn around.
Unfortunately, none of these Halloween decorations (or my motorcycle) are manufactured in the USA, so much of that spending flows straight out of our economy.
