by Michael Snyder, The Economic Collapse Blog:
Do you believe Donald Trump? He is entirely convinced that if we stay on the path that we are currently on we are heading into a “great depression”, and many believe that he is right on target. Unemployment is rising, manufacturing activity is contracting, bankruptcies are soaring, home sales have fallen to depressingly low levels, the cost of living crisis never seems to end, poverty is soaring and homelessness is at the highest level ever recorded. Since Barack Obama first entered the White House, our politicians in Washington have been propping up the economy by adding 25 trillion dollars to the national debt. Now our national debt has crossed the 35 trillion dollar mark, and our politicians continue to spend money at a pace that is absolutely absurd. But despite this tremendous influx of borrowed cash, the wheels are starting to come off the U.S. economy anyway.
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This week, everyone is talking about a “recession” because of what has been happening in the financial markets.
Prior to Tuesday’s session, more than 6 trillion dollars in global stock market wealth had already been wiped out…
Bloomberg estimates that approximately $6.4 trillion has been erased from the value of global stock markets over the past three weeks.
Investors were desperately hoping for a bounce on Tuesday, but the Dow Jones Industrial Average only jumped 294 points.
Needless to say, that is not the bounce that they were looking for.
The turmoil that we have witnessed on Wall Street in recent days also caught the attention of Donald Trump.
On Truth Social, he blamed crashing stock prices on Kamala Harris and he warned that a “great depression” is on the way…
Trump took to Truth Social to blast Harris for the “Kamala Crash” in a series of posts.
“Of course there is a massive market downturn. Kamala is even worse than Crooked Joe. Markets will NEVER accept the Radical Left Lunatic that destroyed San Francisco and California, as a whole,” Trump wrote.
“Next move, THE GREAT DEPRESSION OF 2024! You can’t play games with MARKETS. KAMALA CRASH!!!” he added.
Of course Trump is in the middle of trying to win an election, and his goal was to make Kamala Harris look bad.
But he is quite right that if we stay on the road that we are on it will only end in disaster.
Last Friday, the Sahm rule was triggered when the unemployment rate went up again…
The Sahm rule, created by the former Federal Reserve official Claudia Sahm, triggers when the unemployment rate’s three-month moving average moves 50 basis points above its 12-month low.
That rule was triggered Friday, with the moving average rising 53 basis points above that one-year trough, according to the real-time Sahm Rule Recession Indicator from the St. Louis Federal Reserve.
The Sahm rule has successfully predicted every single recession since 1970, and it is indicating that another recession is here.
Sadly, the unemployment rate is likely to go even higher during the months ahead because large companies all over America continue to conduct mass layoffs. Today, we learned that Dell is planning another round of mass layoffs…
While Dell has confirmed the layoffs, it hasn’t revealed how many employees are losing their jobs. SiliconAngle reports that roughly 12,500 Dell employees are being laid off this week, citing an unnamed source. Impacted employees are primarily on Dell’s sales and marketing teams. A layoff tracker has since reported the same number.
Former Dell employee Ian Armstrong, who previously worked on the company’s UX design team for eight years, called the layoffs a “bloodbath” in a post, reporting that Dell has now laid off 24,500 staff in the past 15 months.
Meanwhile, the cost of living crisis continues to crush working families all over the nation.
At this point, it takes an additional thousand dollars a month for the typical U.S. household to buy the exact same goods and services that it did three years ago…
The typical U.S. household needed to pay $227 more a month in March to purchase the same goods and services it did one year ago because of still-high inflation, according to calculations from Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi shared with FOX Business.
Americans are paying on average $784 more each month compared with the same time two years ago and $1,069 more compared with three years ago, before the inflation crisis began.
Consumer spending has always been so critical to the U.S. economy.
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