this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2024
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United States | News & Politics

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[–] [email protected] -2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

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I believe that most people have largely been seeing their wages keeping pace. It's the disconnect between seeing their wages rise and not seeing any increase in purchasing power that's leading people to think that the economy is bad. But--again--this is stagflation. With a combination of factors, it feels really bad, even though most people are not objectively worse off than they were. And, compared to the height of the pandemic (which was all Trump!), the vast majority of people are doing far, far better than they were. What I mean by people aren't worse off is that you aren't seeing a sharp rise in indicators of economic distress, like people defaulting on mortgages or car loans. But--again--it feels bad because it's easy to remember when a box of cereal was $7 instead of $10.

When you talk about wages v. productivity, then no, wages don't even come close to tracking.