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263 comments
  • The jobs market is robust

    Which is why every big corp is doing layoffs right now, with hire freezes, wage increase freezes, and shoddy layoff schemes designed to avoid having to pay unemployment.

    Even ignoring all the insane foreign policy and fake as hell local policy that will never see the light of day much like the Obama administration, exactly what metric are these fools using to evaluate the economy?

    Because if it's the Federal Reserve, then of course those banking moguls are having a hell of a time.

  • We need a new New Deal.

    It's not working for the middle class. It's working for another class.

  • The Economy is doing well...for the rich.

    It's not doing well for everyone else, you old baffoon.

  • Because we've had about 90 years of decline in the power of labor, and everyone knows they're being exploited all the time and there's no way to get ahead if you don't already have money.

  • Some companies raised prices and made greedy money. And those companies don't want to lower the prices back.

    Shameful.

  • Mandate WFH for companies that have proven they can do it especially for those of us who would rather die than be in a room full of people.

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    That disconnect looms large over Biden’s political prospects, with White House advisers and campaign officials acknowledging that how Americans feel about the economy could be decisive in determining whether the president can win a second term in November.

    But one senior adviser to the president told CNN the one thing they have not offered Biden is a prediction for when the American public’s psychology about the economy will have meaningfully improved.

    There is also a delicate balancing act for the president to execute: Touting economic progress while being publicly sympathetic to the reality that many Americans still feel burdened by high prices, including on rent, housing and food.

    To that end, Biden has started testing out lines that point the finger at some corporations that he says are taking advantage of the fact that prices were at record highs for so long.

    And as Biden addressed culinary union workers at a hotel cafeteria in Las Vegas on Monday morning, he pointed to a classic American candy bar to gripe about shrinkflation.

    A recent New York Times op-ed by the chief economist of UBS Global Wealth Management that used the price of Snickers bars to examine why so many Americans are still unhappy – despite falling inflation – had caught the president’s eye.


    The original article contains 858 words, the summary contains 212 words. Saved 75%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

263 comments