Quote:
Originally Posted by lonewolf
I think two quarters of gdp contraction, stock market -25% YTD, 6 months of near double digit inflation and YoY negative real earnings growth are little more indicative of downturn than job openings IMHO
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Huh? Jobs are everything. (Also, there's a difference between job openings and jobs added.) As long as everyone who wants a job can still get one, it's really very difficult to surmise that the economy is bad (or is about to get bad).
The most recent jobs report showed more than 200k jobs added, the one before showed more than 300k, before that 500k. Yes, that shows a slowdown, but it's one that is needed as inflation is high and could eventually cause a problem. Even with that slowdown, the job market is still *very* healthy at the moment. (Doesn't mean that can't change, but it hasn't yet despite all the predictions.)
The things that you mention aren't exactly good, but as of yet, they aren't affecting anyone's ability to get/switch jobs in any real way. That is most everyone's primary concern.
The stock market isn't the economy. It doesn't directly correlate to people's employment status. It is basically a predictor that is predicting that everything is going to go to hell. It's arguably behaving worse than it was when the covid shutdowns happened and during the 2008 housing debacle. That is crazy ridiculous. We aren't in any kind of crisis as we were during those times. Many of the people in the market are behaving like overly emotional teenagers throwing a tantrum. Nothing has gone to hell yet or has indicated that hell is definitely coming.
GDP is also a poor indicator of the health of the job market. Most people don't even understand it, let alone care about it while they are still gainfully employed. Inflation is what directly affects people and what they really care about (in addition to being employed), but it appears to have peaked. We don't fully know yet whether or not it's coming down, but there are some indications that it has started to. Oil and gas prices have been one of those indicators. As crazy as it is, inflation as high as it's been hasn't done as much damage as one would have expected. At least not yet. I'm very surprised by that, but that is what it is.
At any rate, I've gone on too long. We need a slow down to help with inflation, but a slowdown doesn't mean the economy is bad or that armageddon is coming. It doesn't mean that everyone is going to start losing their jobs. I've gotten the impression that some of the people calling for the economy to tank are actually rooting for it. Which, if they are rooting for that, is pretty shitty.