US GDP Statistics Belie Economic Reality

ptif219

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The GDP is falsely being propped up by government spending. The people still see their money is not going as far as it used too


https://www.theepochtimes.com/artic...utm_source=partner&utm_campaign=BonginoReport

One year ago, the prevailing consensus among economics and market analysts was that the United States would enter recession at some point in 2023 on the back of rising interest rates and tightening credit. March’s banking crisis seemed to confirm that the worst was yet to come.

And then, suddenly, nothing happened. Not only was there no recession but also growth in the U.S. economy accelerated, with real gross domestic product (after adjusting for inflation) doubling from just over 2 percent in each of the first two quarters of 2023 to 5.2 percent in the third quarter.

At the same time, middle- and working-class Americans feel excluded from any benefit coming from this reported economic growth. According to a November 2023 Financial Times poll, the majority (55 percent) of Americans feel financially worse off. The perception is to some degree skewed on party lines. Some 82 percent of Republicans say they feel they are worse off financially, while only 31 percent of Democrats admit they feel worse off. Yet nearly half (46 percent) of Democrats say they’ve seen “no change” to their financial condition under so-called Bidenomics, leaving only a quarter of Democrats who believe that President Joe Biden’s economic policies have made things better for them.Since 2020, Americans have lost nearly 20 percent of their purchasing power. In other words, what then cost $1.00 now costs $1.21. Prices in critical categories such as energy remain over 70 percent higher than three years ago. Indeed, two decades of “moderate” inflation—caused by the trebling of the monetary base—has resulted in Americans losing 45 percent of the value of their dollar since the turn of the century. With this slow but steady bleeding out, it’s no wonder that most Americans are feeling financially anemic.

The other possible reason most Americans don’t believe that they are better off is because of the source of GDP growth. Cutting through the rhetoric, Bidenomics is primarily fiscal stimulus—i.e., increased government spending on programs like the Inflation Reduction Act, the Infrastructure Bill (that had little to do with actual infrastructure), and the CHIPS Act. Supporting the 5 percent GDP growth was a 7.0 percent increase in federal government spending and an 8.2 percent increase in national defense spending in the third quarter. Consumer spending lagged at 3.6 percent.

While government defense spending on Ukraine and the Middle East and massive entitlement spending at home may contribute to GDP growth, it comes at a cost. In 2023, this cost included a $1.7 trillion deficit, which was funded with new debt carrying an interest rate of nearly 5 percent. With total national debt nearing $34 trillion and annualized debt service costs (i.e., interest payments) now at $1 trillion, we are heading for a confrontation with market realities.
 
GDP - Inflation = Actual economic growth

Since inflation under Bribem has been consistently higher than GDP, the economy is shrinking not growing.
 
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