• IHeartBadCode@kbin.run
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    4 months ago

    High inflation: I’m losing money faster.

    Low inflation: I’m losing money slower.

    That’s how it should be read.

    Despite negative perceptions on the state of the economy, people are losing money a lot slower than its June 2022 peak of losing a shit ton of money per quarter.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Rather than losing money, it’s technically more correct to say that we’re earning less.

      The real trick is converting to purchasing power of individuals and showing the trend overtime.

      Like the average/median purchasing power of an American year by year. Not just purchasing power of a dollar, but of the average salary.

      Edit:

      Are down votes because I didn’t mention savings?

      Like 50% have less than $500, over a third have less than $100

      This functionally isn’t a problem for most so I ignored it considering the focus is on poverty and not how I flation effects the wealthiest.

      • DancingBear@midwest.social
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        4 months ago

        I think it’s a perception thing? Maybe people feel like they are earning more money than ever before but things cost more so they feel like they are losing money rather than earning less? I don’t know the answer but yea…. Prices are going up and they are still going up, and even if inflation is under control it feels like prices are going up faster than they were before….

        Eating at a fast food restaurant I remember my first job I could get a burger for way less than one hour of work at my lowest wage I worked for I could get a whole combo meal at the fast food place next to one of my first jobs for about one hour of work…. Wages have gone up a bit but it’s not keeping pace so if i look at what my same job would pay per hour now it’s still not going to get me a meal for one hour of work, maybe only the burger.

      • EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 months ago

        I think you were being downvoted because while you may be technically correct, that means little to the daily life of your average person.

        The last time I saw data on wages (pre COVID, so sometime between 2015 and 2019), when adjusted for inflation, wages for the average worker had actually dropped about 5% since then. Add to that that prices have increased faster than inflation across the board, even before COVID, and people are losing money simply keeping afloat. The price of a taco at Taco Bell is now twice what it cost in the 90s when adjusted for inflation. College tuition is up something like 1,500% since the 70s (thanks, Reagan). Something like 60% of houses are considered unaffordable to the average American today, compared to 30% roughly 20 years ago.

        All this means that purchasing power has dropped, but “purchasing power” and “earnings” means absolutely nothing to people. The number in their bank account dropping instead of going up matters. The fact that people can’t get a mortgage for a house even though the rent they currently pay is more expensive matters. The fact that people have to take on debt to afford essentials is what matters. To the average person, any of that is a clear sign that they’re losing money.