I am sober, you might need to explain it.
I am sober, you might need to explain it.
"Donald Trump will serve a second term as president of the United States.
It’s over."
Little Thethe Nov 19, 2020.
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/09/07/us-n...-aug-2018.html
Economy adds more jobs than expected in August, and wage growth hits post-recession high
Nonfarm payrolls grew by 201,000 in August. Economists surveyed by Reuters expected a 191,000 increase.
Average hourly earnings jumped by 2.9 percent, above the 2.7 percent increase expected.
The unemployment rate held near a generational low of 3.9 percent.
Go get him!
Founding member of the Whiny Little Bitches and Pricks Club
Results on the field don't matter
"Donald Trump will serve a second term as president of the United States.
It’s over."
Little Thethe Nov 19, 2020.
Runnin (09-07-2018)
"Donald Trump will serve a second term as president of the United States.
It’s over."
Little Thethe Nov 19, 2020.
MarketWatch
Verified account @MarketWatch
1h1 hour ago
Nike’s online sales jumped 31% after the company unveiled its Kaepernick campaign
https://on.mktw.net/2MZaUHK
The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun is to make sure he doesn’t get a gun.
Left would rather talk about identify politics than yet another month of job and wage growth.
I get it. But damn it seems like y'all would get tired of it
The President needs to stay off of social media.
I think it’s fair and honest to acknowledge the big-picture good economic numbers. In these discussions I’ve been focused on real wage growth and have been disappointed by its lagging, but I will say I’m glad to see some movement in that number, too.
But, damn, if we’re gonna be making entreaties for intellectual honesty, let’s all just admit we can read a graph and say that the current good times are a continuation of a trend. I think the markets were goosed by Trump’s election and the promise of tax cuts and deregulation, and I think that the tax cuts have made an impact (though one which may boomerang later) but this narrative that a President Clinton, or Sanders or Kasich or Cruz, wouldn’t be presiding over a healthy and growing economy bespeaks ingesting some fairly suspect kool-aid.
A lot of economists forecast that it would be at least 10-15 years before we fully shook off the effects of the credit crisis/housing market crash/Great Recession dated to 2007 or so.
I mean, damn, 57 wasn’t out here taking monthly victory laps on every scrap of news about growth and lower unemployment during the Obama years.
growth has accelerated...and I think fiscal stimulus and a reduced regulatory burden have contributed to it
2 caveats:
1) At this point of the cycle fiscal stimulus is probably not the right thing...not surprisingly inflation has been accelerating
2) There are some things not counted in GDP (examples: cleaner environment, better worker safety). We are giving up some of those for things that get measured in GDP. But to the extent the regulatory burden is being reduced in a smart way, the trade-off may be positive.
Last edited by nsacpi; 09-10-2018 at 06:04 PM.
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
I guess Trump's "non-fans" around here want to make sure he gets full credit for all of it plus the flowers in place of missiles at the North Korean parade. I mean it is unfair the rest of us don't appreciate the sharp intellect behind the policy shifts that have produced these results. Results on the ground mind you.
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
Caligula's horse will always be Caligula's horse no matter how brilliantly the Roman economy performed during his time in office
"I am a victim, I will tell you. I am a victim."
"I am your retribution."
Trump wished us well in South Carolina and North Carolina.
Well, this is at least news to me in that I didn’t think you ever got tired of making specious arguments.
What claims can Trump make about the economy at this point that Obama couldn’t justifiably make? The unemployment rate? Consumer confidence? Do neither of those things have some relationship to the, like 75 consecutive months of job growth that occurred before Trump took office? 2.9% wage growth is worth a celebratory post now, but the same number doesn’t warrant it after the last quarter of the Obama presidency?