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Inflation

Bessent is the leader in the club house to be the MVP of this administration.

He’s got the economy on a string (which is an indictment of the power and leverage of our Federal government) and is making it dance exactly how he wants it, to accomplish this administrations objectives.
 
Inherited Joe's economy. Just don't fvck it up.
Get Out Theatre GIF by Tony Awards
 
Let’s put it in very simple terms

Promises made. Promises kept
We've been told by all the Trumpers that none of this stock market impact or economic news belongs to Trump as the first 6 months don't count in a new administration.

So just so I can keep score at home, any good news on the economic front we assign to Trump. Anything bad to Biden?
 
We've been told by all the Trumpers that none of this stock market impact or economic news belongs to Trump as the first 6 months don't count in a new administration.

So just so I can keep score at home, any good news on the economic front we assign to Trump. Anything bad to Biden?
Best two things to happen to biden were manchin and losing the house. Free pizza and no homework would have never ended
 
We've been told by all the Trumpers that none of this stock market impact or economic news belongs to Trump as the first 6 months don't count in a new administration.

So just so I can keep score at home, any good news on the economic front we assign to Trump. Anything bad to Biden?
D in office?
Bad = D
Good = R

R in office?
Bad = D
Good = R
 
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We've been told by all the Trumpers that none of this stock market impact or economic news belongs to Trump as the first 6 months don't count in a new administration.

So just so I can keep score at home, any good news on the economic front we assign to Trump. Anything bad to Biden?
Problem is Democrat’s don’t see the relationship between a tumbling stock market and inflation reduction because they’ve been conditioned to believe in Silver Bullets and that tradeoffs don’t exist.
 
It's all well and good that inflation is improving, but I'm buckling in for a recession. All of the government spending that's now being wrapped up and stopped has been the only thing that's prevented it from happening sooner. Throw in all the uncertainty around tariffs and it gets spicy.
 
All that logic is sound. Minus the idea of a manufacturing renaissance in the U.S. and lower grocery prices across the board.

Some agricultural products we simply can’t grow in the U.S. at scale or at all. The tail on domestic manufacturing reinvestment is extremely long. The Big 3 can’t turn on domestic output of their source materials in a month like Trump wants them to.

Bessent said something troubling the other day along the lines of:

“The American dream is not defined by access to cheap goods”

That’s actually incorrect. Access to cheap goods isn’t the only tenant of the American Dream, but it plays a large part.
 
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All that logic is sound. Minus the idea of a manufacturing renaissance in the U.S. and lower grocery prices across the board.

Some agricultural products we simply can’t grow in the U.S. at scale or at all. The tail on domestic manufacturing reinvestment is extremely long. The Big 3 can’t turn on domestic output of their source materials in a month like Trump wants them to.

Bessent said something troubling the other day along the lines of:

“The American dream is not defined by access to cheap goods”

That’s actually incorrect. Access to cheap goods isn’t the only tenant of the American Dream, but it plays a large part.
You missed Bessent’s point. The working/middle classes have gotten f#cked the past 30 years. The top 10% and Boomers made out like bandits on globalization, immigration, endless war/debt, and etc. The working class got cheap goods, but gave up affordable housing, education, and healthcare.
 
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It's all well and good that inflation is improving, but I'm buckling in for a recession. All of the government spending that's now being wrapped up and stopped has been the only thing that's prevented it from happening sooner. Throw in all the uncertainty around tariffs and it gets spicy.
Which always begs the question. If we take away government spending and go into a recession, weren’t we already in one🤷🏻‍♂️
 
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I'm happy for any good economic news, but it's a bit premature for any grand celebration. Inflation for the Year 2024 was 2.9%. If we end of up the year lower, I'll be happy (assuming we're not in a recession). But I'm not getting too excited one way or the other about monthly numbers.
 
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Which always begs the question. If we take away government spending and go into a recession, weren’t we already in one🤷🏻‍♂️
Yep. Jeffrey Tucker has a great article on this


The principle is undeniable that governments have no resources of their own. Everything they have is taken from wealth created by the private sector. They get that through taxation, fees, inflation, and in any other way it can. The revenue comes always at the expense of the private sector and wealth creation.

We can argue about what the government should and should not do and all the ways, if any, that government makes our lives better because what it does is necessary and not otherwise obtainable. What is undeniable, however, is that the resources governments have come at the expense of private production.

How much prosperity did we really experience since 2020? We have every reason to believe it is much less than we’ve been told. For that matter, what about the 1990s and the 1960s? We would like to know.
 
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