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“It may not seem so to some, but many Americans are struggling . . . “



Photo above - this is one of the images returned when I googled "AI art average American" . . .

“It may not seem so to some, but many Americans are struggling”. This sort of observation – in the opening of the interview with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant (linked below) – completely encapsulates the disconnect between Washington DC, Wall Street, and “many Americans”.

To be fair to Secretary Bessant, those are NOT his own words. They were penned by the reporter for “The Street”. The target audience for this publication is well-to-do investors who imagine they are going to read some secret known only to the craftiest Wall Street bigshots.

“It may not seem so . . .but Americans are struggling”. Ponder those words for a moment. How can ANYONE be so completely disconnected from the reality to not realize that . . .

78% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck

The average salary is $59,000 a year. This may SEEM adequate, but . . .

The average cost of a home is $420,000. $59K salary qualifies you only for a mortgage on a $150K home. Try buying anything, anywhere, for that. You’d need an income of $170K to get an “average” $420K home.

The average rent in America is $2,100. More than half of your $59,000 income (after social security withholding, Medicare withholding, federal income tax, and state income tax) would go toward rent. Better to live in mom’s basement, no?

I’m not going to do a deep dive on mortgage defaults, evictions, car repo’s, credit card delinquencies, unpaid child support, food stamp use, bankruptcies. Anyone can doomscroll these for themselves if – like Wall Street and DC – they are disconnected from how average Americans actually live.

I bet Treasury Secretary Bessant didn’t understand how his anodyne remarks on inflation and unemployment would be read by average Americans. But Bessant has a point. The federal government – if it sticks with interest rates, the go-to tool, is bound to screw up either inflation or unemployment. If you're only tool is a hammer, the world is going to get nailed.

No matter what, Trump is going to be blamed for what comes next in the American economy. And despite the truly awful economic job done by aides who concealed Biden's advancing dementia, Trump will deserve all the blame he gets. Nobody asked for a trade war with Canada, 401k balances in a death spiral, FAA controllers to be fired, or more unemployment in general. Trump told us fixing things would be painless. It never is. We always get fooled by campaign rhetoric. Shame on us.

I’m just sayin’ . . .

Treasury Secretary delivers startling message on U.S. economy

Majority of Americans Live Paycheck To Paycheck – Forbes Advisor

Average Salary in the U.S. in 2024
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@SusanInFlorida says
And despite the truly awful economic job done by aides who concealed Biden's advancing dementia,
DEAD WRONG!!!

Biden inherited a MESS from tRump and built the economy back up STRONGER than it ever was under tRump!!

For the first time in literally GENERATIONS, real wages are growing for the lower quintile of US workers. And they're growing FASTER under Biden than they did under Obama or Trump. For the first time in GENERATIONS, the lower half of workers are sharing in our economic growth!



There were more than 5,000,000 (FIVE MILLION) more people employed by the end of the Biden admin than during the peak under Trump. Just read the graph.


And the number unemployed is historically low!


Inflation? The pandemic deflation was followed by worldwide inflation; that is now gone.



However, I do agree with you that the upcoming tariff-driven recession will be entirely tRump's fault, even as he does his best to blame it on Biden.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@ElwoodBlues

thanks for your extensive powerpoint slide show. Which entirely fails to explain why (under biden)

1 - homelessness doubled

2 - inflation doubled

3 - fed funds and mortgage rates more than tripled

4 - the federal government spent twice as much as it collected in taxes
GerOttman · 61-69, M
@ElwoodBlues I just have to ask because it's been bothering me... Does it help you cope in some way to deliberately spell the president's name wrong? Is it like not saying Candyman or Voldemort? if you don't say it out loud he won't really exist! I notice you're not the only one who does it. Is it like a secret club handshake or something?
@SusanInFlorida says
Which entirely fails to explain why
Wrong.

I provided an overview of the whole economy; you cherry-picked a few statistics driven by international post-pandemic inflation.