eVDGOdqO |
DNGHxZkyqzHKos [2019-05-25] |
I'm sorry, I'm not interested http://ghettotube.in.net ghettotube.com Yes, uncharted territory and no vision to see what is in front of them. Jobs are disappearing faster than donuts at a fat farm. As we continue to automate jobs away, or move them to other parts of the global supply chain, costs go down, so there is less pressure to increase prices. Wages in “consumer” economies have have stagnated for a decade and in many cases gone down due to the automation and global sourcing. We seem to be at a balancing point. I think it is temporary though too. This balance in not maintainable of course. Another factor is that not all things are counted in inflation. Primarily things that consumers cannot stop buying like food, energy, and healthcare. What I truly don’t understand is why the economists of the world, being some of the brightest people, keep their heads in the sand and continue to try to use models from the 20th century. Is it really just resistance to change?
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