So, USA’s economy is improving, huh? (6 posts)

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  • Profile picture of limalimamike limalimamike said 3 months ago:

    http://www.businessinsider.com/michael-snyder-economic-collapse-2012-1

    The following are 24 statistics to show to anyone who believes that America has a bright economic future….

    #1 Inflation is a silent tax that steals wealth from all of us. We continue to shell out increasing amounts of money for the basic things that we need, and yet our incomes are not keeping pace. Just check out the following example. Gasoline prices have been trending higher for several years in a row as one blogger recently noted….

    January 2009 $1.65

    January 2010 $2.57

    January 2011 $3.04

    January 2012 $3.29

    #2 If you can believe it, the average American household spent approximately $4,155 on gasoline during 2011.

    #3 Electricity bills in the United States have risen faster than the overall rate of inflation for five years in a row.

    #4 Health care costs continue to rise at a very alarming pace. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, health care costs accounted for just 9.5% of all personal consumption back in 1980. Today they account for approximately 16.3%.

    #5 Getting a college education has also become insanely expensive in America. After adjusting for inflation, U.S. college students are borrowing about twice as much money as they did a decade ago.

    #6 To get the same purchasing power that you got out of $20.00 back in 1970 you would have to have more than $116 today.

    #7 To get the same purchasing power that you got out of $20.00 back in 1913 you would have to have more than $457 today.

    #8 There are fewer payroll jobs in the United States today than there were back in 2000 even though we have added more than 30 million extra people to the population since then.

    #9 The U.S. economy is bleeding millions of good jobs. Greedy CEOs are systematically shipping them overseas and our politicians are standing around and doing nothing about it. This has gone on year after year after year. The following is from a recent article by Paul Craig Roberts….

    In the first decade of the 21st century, Americans lost 5,500,000 manufacturing jobs. US employment in the manufacture of computer and electronic products fell by 40%; in the production of machinery by 30%, in motor vehicles and and parts by 44%, and in the manufacture of clothing by 66%.

    #10 Our economic infrastructure is being torn apart right in front of our eyes. In 2010, an average of 23 manufacturing facilities a day shut down in the United States. Overall, more than 56,000 manufacturing facilities in the United States have shut down since 2001.

    We have made it legal for big corporations to send millions of jobs to countries where it is legal to pay slave labor wages, where the tax burden is much lighter and where there are barely any regulations. The following is a brief excerpt from a recent article posted on Economy in Crisis….

    Back in the ‘80s, I called my friend Walter in California and asked: “On your next expansion we need a plant in South Carolina.” Walter replied: “We don’t produce anything in the United States. It’s all in China. China furnishes you the plant on a year-to-year basis. If your investment works out, you don’t have to pay any corporate tax; just reinvest it for another plant and more profit. If it doesn’t work out, you can walk away with no legacy costs. I send a quality controller to watch production. I check on it every day. I don’t have any labor, health, safety, or environmental concerns, and have time to play a round of golf.” The bleeding of jobs off-shore started in the ‘80s — now hemorrhages under Bush and Obama. Waiting for the economy to bounce back; calling this “the worst recession” is a bum rap. The reason the economy hasn’t bounced back since 2008 is because the economy is being off-shored.

    #11 As a result of our insane economic policies, our trade balances are absolutely exploding. For example, the U.S. trade deficit with China in 2010 was 27 times larger than it was back in 1990.

    #12 As you read this, there are millions of Americans out there wondering why they can’t find any jobs. According to Reuters, 23.7 million American workers are either unemployed or underemployed right now.

    #13 The number of good jobs has been steadily shrinking in America. Since the year 2000, the United States has lost 10% of its middle class jobs. In the year 2000 there were about 72 million middle class jobs in the United States but today there are only about 65 million middle class jobs.

    #14 Over the last three decades, the percentage of low income jobs has consistently risen. Back in 1980, less than 30% of all jobs in the United States were low income jobs. Today, more than 40% of all jobs in the United States are low income jobs.

    #15 The number of middle class neighborhoods also continues to decline. In 1970, 65 percent of all Americans lived in “middle class neighborhoods”. By 2007, only 44 percent of all Americans lived in “middle class neighborhoods”.

    #16 A decade ago, the United States was ranked number one in average wealth per adult. By 2010, the United States had fallen to seventh.

    #17 Our incomes continue to go down. Since December 2007, median household income in the United States has declined by a total of 6.8% once you account for inflation.

    #18 Unfortunately, middle class Americans have been seeing their incomes decline for a very long time. According to one study, between 1969 and 2009 the median wages earned by American men between the ages of 30 and 50 dropped by 27 percent after you account for inflation.

    #19 Since 1971, consumer debt in the United States has increased by a whopping 1700%. Unfortunately, U.S. consumers have still not learned how to stay out of debt. According to a recent article posted on Financial Armageddon, the rate of personal savings in the United States is rapidly falling right now at the same time that the total amount of consumer credit is absolutely skyrocketing.

    #20 The number of children living in poverty in America keeps rising year after year. The percentage of children living in poverty in the United States increased from 16.9 percent in 2006 to nearly 22 percent in 2010.

    #21 The number of Americans on food stamps continues to set new all-time records. Just check out the following progression….

    October 2008: 30.8 million Americans on food stamps

    October 2009: 37.6 million Americans on food stamps

    October 2010: 43.2 million Americans on food stamps

    October 2011: 46.2 million Americans on food stamps

    #22 The U.S. debt problem has gotten completely and totally out of control. Recently, the debt of the federal government surpassed 100% of GDP for the first time ever.

    #23 During the Obama administration, the U.S. government has accumulated more debt than it did from the time that George Washington took office to the time that Bill Clinton took office.

    #24 Barack Obama’s proposed 2012 budget projects that the national debt will rise to 26 trillion dollars a decade from now. And his budget numbers are ridiculously optimistic.

  • Profile picture of TonyH TonyH said 3 months ago:

    Anyone who doesn’t live under a rock should be able to see it. It’s right there in our faces everyday. I don’t care what the Mainstream Media says about it. It ain’t getting any better. In fact, it’s still getting worse.

  • Profile picture of TonyH TonyH said 3 months ago:

    I know how costly it is to move existing manufacturing to a foreign country. It cost a BUNCH.

    In the case of a long established factory, the local community has, over time, morphed itself into a perpetual labor pool for the place. Since the whole community knows what the place does, and how it operates, it makes it easier for the company to hire workers who will be long-time employees. This minimizes employee turnover (another expense). So, why would any for-profit company spend millions and millions of dollars AND walk away from an existing solid labor pool to move manufacturing to a foreign country? Maybe, because thay’re being taxed to death, and it’s a matter of corporate survival. Not always, but a lot of times, it’s a matter of making A PROFIT, and not MORE PROFIT. If the Government would crawl out of their wallets, most manufacturers would be content to stay put and keep plugging along. I can give you examples, but I don’t want to come right out and name companies here.

  • Profile picture of limalimamike limalimamike said 3 months ago:

    You can thank the EPA, and local jurisdictions for that.
    examples
    EPA is responsible for the made-up maximum ozone levels that we over step every year. As a matter of fact, since monitoring ozone in the southern San Joaquin Valley, ozone levels have NEVER been below the maximum allowable number. So…the EPA, through SJVPCD, jacks our yearly vehicle renewal up another 18 dollars to pay for the fine….What about all the travelers using the 3 interstates, and not to mention the smaller state hwys like 46, 166, 155 and the 178? What about people who live in LA and commute to Bakersfield? Airplane engines generate ozone, why aren’t they being charged extra?

    EXAMPLE # 2
    The EPA now claims that SAND is a pollutant. Case in point, by calling it PM 2.5, sand has been blowing off the sand dunes south of Pismo Beach now for hundreds of thousands of years. The offshore wind flow picks up the sand and carries it inland, until it hits the coastal range. It then deposits said sand where modern day Nipomo sits. BTW…Nipomo sits a full 330 ft above sea level….so the wind, for hundreds of thousands of years, has carried sand that has built the Nipomo mesa up 330 ft tall. All this common-sensical evidence, yet the EPA and PCD of SLO are hell bent on taxing SOMEBODY for what mother nature does.

    So now the EPA, because they now consider sand (just like carbon dioxide) a POLLUTANT. Millions of dollars are being spent, of federal and state money, to determine what the cause of the blowing sand is….Ignorance at it’s best.

    Fleecing the people to the nth term
    A local business owner, who just opened up their 2nd ice cream shop on Hageman and Rosedale hwy relayed to me that the city CHARGED him $40,000 for a “traffic impact” fee to put a driveway in on Calloway for access to his business. when he asked if the money goes directly to repairing roads, he was told that the money gets put in the general fund, and is spent as seen fit.
    Meanwhile, repairs badly needed on Calloway drive havent been done in over 5 years.

  • Profile picture of TonyH TonyH said 3 months ago:

    “Traffic Impact Fee”?????
    That’s nuts. That’s being charged for the “privilege” of adding to the tax base for the city. See, these are the kinds of things that stifle commerce. $40,000 is A LOT OF ICE CREAM. Sorry, but there just isn’t that much profit in a business like that. Why else do you think that people in that business own 2, 3 or 4 locations? It takes about 4 fairly good locations for a managing owner to get his income to the 6 figure level.

  • Profile picture of drilnliftcrude drilnliftcrude said 3 months ago:

    And the libs and their allies in the media just want to talk about contraception.