AdamCrock
Polish Pirate
Cash$ is like girls - everyone wants it (males at least), but only few know hot to truly get it 

There are more kinds of "collapse" than just financial. There's social, and isn't Trump trying to find some way to postpone or cancel the election this year?I don't think there's any doubt that the US is going to undergo or is already undergoing a.."readjustment" (to put it in clinical, impersonal terms), but collapse? Warrantless hyperbole, imo.
It might be my current lack of sleep or the fact that we will still be in the hospital for another night, but I have little patience for these sorts of snide comments right now. There is no inconsistency between those two things I said.So close, and yet, so far.
You are absolutely correct, there are multiple types of collapse, and it would be really helpful if it was specified which type of collapse we were meant to discuss here. Collapse is also a very strong word, bringing to mind the Bronze Age collapse, the fall of Rome, and other catastrophic events like that.There are more kinds of "collapse" than just financial. There's social, and isn't Trump trying to find some way to postpone or cancel the election this year?
It might be my current lack of sleep or the fact that we will still be in the hospital for another night, but I have little patience for these sorts of snide comments right now. There is no inconsistency between those two things I said.
Parts of the country != the whole.If large parts of the country are going to be laid waste, after already being laid waste for 40 years, and unemployment rises to 25% as the entire market crashes because it's built on speculation that's only got worse since 2008, you're going to look quite the fool for acknowledging that "large parts of the country" would be destroyed but a "collapse" is somehow off the table.
Any time table for this? 6 months? 1 year? 2 years? 5 years? 10 years?... as the entire market crashes because it's built on speculation that's only got worse since 2008, ....
https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/NY.GDP.PCAP.KD?locations=USAny time table for this? 6 months? 1 year? 2 years? 5 years? 10 years?
Parts of the country != the whole.
I feel like I shouldn't have to say that.
Parts of the country != the whole.
I feel like I shouldn't have to say that.
Any time table for this? 6 months? 1 year? 2 years? 5 years? 10 years?
A market collapse that trashes the rich and the bankers such that there is no recovery for them is not the same as an economic collapse that makes everyone else poor and out of work.Good question. Short term I think the coronavirus crash is worse than anyone expects and the rebound is not coming. First of all because coronavirus is going to stick around for 6-12 months and secondly because I think the jobs that have already been shed won't be reabsorbed before the downturn gets worse. The stimulus was meant to correct this but I don't think it's targeted correctly and we've got a bubble. Medium-short term this means a long downturn.
This isn't about predicting an exact moment of total state failure or revolution, either. As you said collapses are best understood in the scale of decades or centuries. In this case I think the collapse started a little while ago and the crater has been slowly expanding since then. Coronavirus is simply the latest in a long line of shakes to the dysfunctional frankenstein we call an economy.
A market collapse that trashes the rich and the bankers such that there is no recovery for them is not the same as an economic collapse that makes everyone else poor and out of work.
In your post i quoted, you said market collapse. Above you seem to be talking about more than that. Can world markets collapse such that the damage is mostly done to the wealthy? Or must they take everyone else down too? In any widespread collapse, it is likely that the top 20% will not be affected substantially unless the stock markets also go fully to zero.
Yeah, but the economy is interconnected enough that a collapse in part also means a collapse in whole is not out of the question, you see?
Some parts of the country, as unfair and unfortunate as it is, are not as important to the overall health of the country as others. There are multiple areas, both urban and rural, that have suffered widespread poverty (Appalachia, Detroit, etc) and a lack of services which might be what you are referring to by "collapse", and they have had little impact on the economy of the country as a whole over many decades.You're right, parts of the country are a part, just like struts are part of a structure.
Hate to be the bearer of bad news, but from the outside, the US already looks to be collapsing. Not yet falling, but like the surge of a glacier that's moving quicker and quicker every year.
Some parts of the country, as unfair and unfortunate as it is, are not as important to the overall health of the country as others. There are multiple areas, both urban and rural, that have suffered widespread poverty (Appalachia, Detroit, etc) and a lack of services which might be what you are referring to by "collapse", and they have had little impact on the economy of the country as a whole over many decades.
It is another unfortunate truth that current and future economic hardship will probably disproportionately hit those areas which historically already suffer those hardships.
Is a widespread country-wide collapse possible? Of course it is. Is it likely? No, I don't think so, and I think saying that widespread collapse is the most likely path we are on is in fact, hyperbole.
iirc gdp dropped by like 33%, grand depression #s. How come people are still getting lattes and pizzas and watching Netflix and not dying?
Even before this crisis, basically my whole life since I understood what global warming was I've had this uncomfortable feeling that everything is fake and fragile and held together by collective belief and sacrifice of the future.
But maybe I'm wrong like libertarians think and everything will keep improving and somehow we'll solve our problems in the nick of time like every action movie.
Even with the unemployment boost and eviction moratorium, we've already seen breadlines of the kind not seen since the Great Depression though we've managed to stave off complete collapse. Unfortunately it appears we are in for that total collapse as the GOP is showing us all that in spite of their talk of rising tides lifting all boats, they really see the economy as a fixed-sum game wherein the growth of workers wages can only come at the expense of the owner class and therefore must be stopped at all costs.