BoogyMan
07-03-2022, 10:12 AM
Did all you grumpy folks out there know that the recession we face is YOUR doing? Not the work of an incompetent and ignorant partisan running the country by taking polls of partisans more ignorant than he. Not the work of his party setting him on a course to destroy the engine of America’s prosperity for over a century. It is YOUR fault, grumpy.
Fortune went out and dug up and adjunct prof., that’s right AN ADJUNCT, to make this idiot claim. I guarantee you this moron has a “Ridin’ With Biden” sticker on his bicycle.
https://fortune.com/2022/06/04/what-causes-a-recession-consumer-confidence-sentiment-inflation/
There’s been no shortage of doom and gloom predictions from Wall Street since the start of the year. From billionaire investors (https://fortune.com/2022/04/06/billionaire-investor-predicts-recession-leon-cooperman/) to former Federal Reserve officials (https://fortune.com/2022/05/04/fed-quarles-recession-is-likely-inflation-response/), the list of experts predicting an impending recession seems to grow day by day.
Despite bright spots like another strong jobs report (https://fortune.com/2022/06/03/jobs-report-economy-labor-may/) in May and an unemployment rate of just 3.6%, a “cost of living crisis (https://fortune.com/2022/04/22/inflation-coming-grocery-aisle-companies-rising-costs-earnings/),” stock market woes, and persistent recession predictions are wreaking havoc on Americans’ confidence in the economy.
More than 80% of Americans now believe the U.S. will fall into a recession in 2022, an April CNBC survey (https://www.cnbc.com/2022/04/05/most-americans-are-worried-about-a-recession-hitting-the-us-in-2022.html) found. And consumer sentiment, as measured by the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index (http://www.sca.isr.umich.edu/), sank roughly 30% year over year last month, closing in on levels not seen since the Great Recession.
Most experts believe that Federal Reserve policy or macroeconomic woes like the war in Ukraine and sky-high inflation (https://fortune.com/videos/watch/Inflation-is-forcing-Americans-to-rework-their-budgets/fb56d19f-907f-4a29-98b1-8dfe04807cb1) will be the cause of any potential recession. But some economists argue that consumers’ bad mood and increasing lack of faith in the economy—which is sometimes unrelated to their own financial reality—could in and of itself affect economic growth or even trigger a recession.
Peter Atwater, an adjunct professor of economics at William & Mary, told Fortune that if consumer sentiment continues to fall, it could cause Americans to pull back on their spending, leading to a sort of self-fulfilling recessionary prophecy.
“I am in the school that believes that how we feel drives what we do. And so sentiment, to me, is an indicator of what we are likely to do ahead, economically,” he said…
Fortune went out and dug up and adjunct prof., that’s right AN ADJUNCT, to make this idiot claim. I guarantee you this moron has a “Ridin’ With Biden” sticker on his bicycle.
https://fortune.com/2022/06/04/what-causes-a-recession-consumer-confidence-sentiment-inflation/
There’s been no shortage of doom and gloom predictions from Wall Street since the start of the year. From billionaire investors (https://fortune.com/2022/04/06/billionaire-investor-predicts-recession-leon-cooperman/) to former Federal Reserve officials (https://fortune.com/2022/05/04/fed-quarles-recession-is-likely-inflation-response/), the list of experts predicting an impending recession seems to grow day by day.
Despite bright spots like another strong jobs report (https://fortune.com/2022/06/03/jobs-report-economy-labor-may/) in May and an unemployment rate of just 3.6%, a “cost of living crisis (https://fortune.com/2022/04/22/inflation-coming-grocery-aisle-companies-rising-costs-earnings/),” stock market woes, and persistent recession predictions are wreaking havoc on Americans’ confidence in the economy.
More than 80% of Americans now believe the U.S. will fall into a recession in 2022, an April CNBC survey (https://www.cnbc.com/2022/04/05/most-americans-are-worried-about-a-recession-hitting-the-us-in-2022.html) found. And consumer sentiment, as measured by the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index (http://www.sca.isr.umich.edu/), sank roughly 30% year over year last month, closing in on levels not seen since the Great Recession.
Most experts believe that Federal Reserve policy or macroeconomic woes like the war in Ukraine and sky-high inflation (https://fortune.com/videos/watch/Inflation-is-forcing-Americans-to-rework-their-budgets/fb56d19f-907f-4a29-98b1-8dfe04807cb1) will be the cause of any potential recession. But some economists argue that consumers’ bad mood and increasing lack of faith in the economy—which is sometimes unrelated to their own financial reality—could in and of itself affect economic growth or even trigger a recession.
Peter Atwater, an adjunct professor of economics at William & Mary, told Fortune that if consumer sentiment continues to fall, it could cause Americans to pull back on their spending, leading to a sort of self-fulfilling recessionary prophecy.
“I am in the school that believes that how we feel drives what we do. And so sentiment, to me, is an indicator of what we are likely to do ahead, economically,” he said…