DiabloWags said:
wifeisafurd said:
cbbass1 said:
DiabloWags said:
.
You guys are missing the point here.
The fairness or unfairness of income inequality are irrelevant. The mechanisms of it, and the politics of it, are irrelevant. There's no need to discuss it if you don't want to.
But what IS relevant is the collapse of Aggregate Demand. What happens when the vast majority of Worker/Customers can't afford to purchase the goods & services that they used to?
Whatever your political & economic views are, it's easy to see that the collapse of Aggregate Demand isn't good for businesses.
But that's exactly where Capital and policymakers are taking us, no?
BTW, this is exactly where we were after the October, 1929 market crash. Nobody had money to spend. The banks collapsed. The few who were wealthy bought up the assets of those who needed cash to survive. No reason to expect anything different this time.
So if you're Jamie Dimon or Jeff Bezos, you're probably looking forward to some bargain-hunting, and expanding your asset base for pennies on the dollar. But for everyone else, it's going to be a wipeout, with millions suffering and dying worldwide. And none of these guys care in the least.
"I want my fair share -- and that's all of it."
-- Charles Koch - oligarch / oil billionaire / co-founder of the Cato Institute / huuge donor to Americans for Prosperity, American Enterprise Institute, Ayn Rand Institute, Pacific Legal Foundation, and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)
Okay, you say income inequality doesn't matter. Nor do politics or media, etc. What matters is what is in bold.
Let's play your game:
Literally from the FED website:
"Aggregate Demand represents the total demand for these goods and services at any given price level during the specified period. Aggregate Demand eventually equals gross domestic product (GDP) because the two metrics are calculated in the same way. As a result, aggregate demand and GDP increase or decrease together."
So during this horrible period of capital smashing labor, show me when Aggregate Demand (which the governmet calculates as GDP) has shrunk so dramatically? Show everyone still reading this thread, the starting GDP level when labor starting losing out and where it is now as this rape of labor continues. I think you are going to find Aggregate Demand is pretty robust during the period.
I'm still waiting for Mr. Cbbass to answer your question above as well.
[Update: I addressed this to Diablo, but I'm replying to wife's original question as well.]
[Also, please read my previous post closely. I never said that income inequality wasn't important; I said that
the mechanisms of it, or the
fairness of the policies that lead to it aren't important. In other words, how we got here is irrelevant.
The fact that we're here is what's important.]
Whoa. GDP = Aggregate Demand??? On which planet?
From Investopedia,
GDP = C + G + I + NX
where:
C = Consumption (Consumer Spending)
G = Government spending
I = Investment
NX = Net exports
In the real world, the best measure of Aggregate Demand is
Consumer Spending, because GDP includes government spending and investment.
That said, even Consumer Spending doesn't tell the whole story, because the Consumer Spending bucket includes spending on
food, energy, and housing, and all of those have skyrocketed in the last couple years. With the cost of necessities increasing -- mostly due to price gouging by producers with pricing power -- the Disposable Income for a majority of U.S. households has largely disappeared.
It's also important to remember that the consumer spending numbers are skewed by income & wealth inequality. They disproportionately show the resilience of Consumer Spending by the top 20% to 30% of household incomes; but they don't show the real impact that inflation & price gouging have had on the bottom 60% of households.
Two key statistics that support this:
- For several years now, the number of U.S. households who couldn't come up with $400 for an emergency is close to 50%, and that was before Covid; might be higher now;
- Consumer Debt is at an all-time high, and increasing.
The statistics that would give us a better picture of the state of U.S. Consumers would be Personal Income Expenditures (PCE) minus food, energy, and housing.
I would also
subtract credit card debt, and interest on credit card debt. With the increase in interest rates, people who are running up CC balances to survive are going to get crushed. Of course, the banks will either cut off credit, OR keep extending credit, let millions of Americans go bankrupt, and get you & me -- the Taxpayers -- to cover their consumer debt losses. See how this works? This is 2008 on steroids.
SO -- If you're going to continue to make the case that "everything is just fine" with U.S. Consumers, I'll have to disagree. And since I have to work, don't expect the analysis I've laid out above to show up here anytime soon.
Just talk to people. Talk to people who are in the bottom 60% of household income, and check into how they're doing. Ask them how they feel about Fed Chair Powell's intention to "rebalance Demand" and
increase unemployment.I really don't care what some jackass from the Fed says to justify their intentional takedown of the economy. To me, he looks like a factory owner who torches his factory -- with all of his employees in it -- in the hope of getting a big check from his insurance company (which is, in this case, U.S. Taxpayers).
Diablo, you're reading, and believing, too much pro-Capital propaganda. The people whose actions you're defending Do. Not. Care. About. You. And they are NOT going to bail you out when the sh-t hits the fan.