So it continues.

  • KevonLooney
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    10 months ago

    Exactly. This person is noticing a local recession and believes the entire world is like their small town. It isn’t.

    Recessions have causes and “housing expensive” is not a cause. In a recession everyone loses, not just “some factory workers” or “people who rent”. This person is describing the effects of situational unemployment, which can hurt small towns reliant on only one industry.

    • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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      10 months ago

      Anecdotally, I know some people working in a paper mill who make essential materials for the world’s sticker tags, you know, the things that get put on absolutely anything and everything that gets shipped or sold everywhere globally. This factory is one of a very few globally in this ultra-niche industry.

      They said that the KYC they are doing now shows their clients globally overstating their manufacturing since the pandemic by a lot. Somehow, everyone has lost 20-40% of their turnover while producing the same financial results. I know this is multiple layers of trust me bro stuff, but still.

      There is a lot of pressure and lies in the global economy right now, more than usual. I don’t think we ever recovered from the “pandemic downturn”, which actually was much more than just the pandemic, it was war, it was idiocy, it was much more things at the same time.

      I guess what I’m saying is that the economy is not well, it has never been well since at least 2020, and people keep lying. The US was never in a recession if you listen to the White House, only if you listen to your eyes looking at the actual numbers.

      And I’m saying this as someone who is not interested in more chaos, quite the opposite.

      • KevonLooney
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        10 months ago

        Somehow, everyone has lost 20-40% of their turnover while producing the same financial results.

        That’s called inflation. And stickers aren’t a good way to track the economy. Where do you put the sticker on a service or app?

        • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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          10 months ago

          This is mostly about manufacturing, and the global economy. I know most of the US economy is about services, but services depend on goods, and goods depend on manufacturing. How do you sell more apps if people buy fewer phones?

          To be fair, all of this is anecdotal. It’s just that I see continuous layoffs in service as well, like the article says. I’m hearing manufacturing is similarly depressive. There are and have been huge problems with trade and supply chains, it was the pandemic before, now it’s the Yemen thing.

          I guess I’m just saying the world economy is not doing well right now. I hope it will get better soon. Also, it’s not just the Western world’s economy. China is trying to stave off a real estate collapse. Russia is in a war that basically eliminated it as a world power. A lot of South America and Africa is in turmoil. Europe is trying to solve multiple refugee crises simultaneously, while also trying to not go full fascist.

          I would just be happy if this did not escalate further. I’m tired.

          • KevonLooney
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            10 months ago

            How do you sell more apps if people buy fewer phones?

            Maybe you don’t know this but you can install multiple apps on one phone. And there are a ton of services built into those apps. They don’t all build their own payment processor, or security packages, or a ton of other backend things you never see. You just don’t see all the b2b services that you use every day.

            Then there’s all the physical services. People always need haircuts and plumbers. Look at the actual numbers and you’ll see that layoffs are quite low now:

            https://www.bls.gov/news.release/jolts.t05.htm

            Honestly, your thinking appears to be influenced by your personal feelings and not the actual facts. There’s always problems in the world. Today’s problems seem bigger but that’s just recency bias. In the 90s there was literal war and genocide in Europe and around the world. The economy was fine.