JR, did you mean that a "consumer nation cannot survive," or did you mean to imply that a nation where individuals finance their consumption through debt cannot survive? I would think we will always be a nation of consumers. In my own opinion, we make use of what becomes available to us; baby boomers, myself included, have run up the largest proportion of debt in th ehistory of the US. And, even though I know this is not the way to operate, I bought into the system.
I'm not sure we will see a depression, but I feel it is not unlikely that we will see economic hardships that parallel the early 1980's (the depression of my generation living in the Pacific Northwest). Inflation will increase while wages and total employment decrease in real dollar value.
It would also be nice if the federal government would put back food, energy, and transportation costs in the analysis of inflation. In particular, there is a very high association between transportation cost and food costs. While the fed's numbers may suggest inflation is modest, my own personal experience based on what I need to survive (food and trasportation) has doubled or tripled in the past 3-4 years. My income has not even kept up with the lower values for these items. TH
I'm not sure we will see a depression, but I feel it is not unlikely that we will see economic hardships that parallel the early 1980's (the depression of my generation living in the Pacific Northwest). Inflation will increase while wages and total employment decrease in real dollar value.
It would also be nice if the federal government would put back food, energy, and transportation costs in the analysis of inflation. In particular, there is a very high association between transportation cost and food costs. While the fed's numbers may suggest inflation is modest, my own personal experience based on what I need to survive (food and trasportation) has doubled or tripled in the past 3-4 years. My income has not even kept up with the lower values for these items. TH
Comment