Government distorted economic figures do not reflect economic realities

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The government has increasingly manipulated the economic data to its own advantage for decades. When you realized that it now takes two wage earners to support a family when it took one in the 1960’s you will begin to get the picture that things are not as government reports. Nevertheless, you have seen nothing yet. Understating Inflation does not prevent it. Americans are about to experience a rapid decline in their standards of living. They might not call it a depression or hyperinflation but the impact will be the same. Americans standard of living will fall 50 percent in the next decade. Are you ready to live on half of what you do now? Most of us will. If the socialists get control of government the fall can be even more dramatic unless you are on the dole.

This is a good article that explains how we are being lied to by our own government.

Numbers Racket: Why the economy is worse than we know KEVIN PHILLIPS / Harper’s Magazine v.316, n.1896 1may2008

The real numbers, to most economically minded Americans, would be a face full of cold water. Based on the criteria in place a quarter century ago, today’s U.S. unemployment rate is somewhere between 9 percent and 12 percent; the inflation rate is as high as 7 or even 10 percent; economic growth since the recession of 2001 has been mediocre, despite a huge surge in the wealth and incomes of the superrich, and we are falling back into recession. If what we have been sold in recent years has been delusional “Pollyanna Creep,” what we really need today is a picture of our economy ex-distortion. For what it would reveal is a nation in deep difficulty not just domestically but globally.

Undermeasurement of inflation, in particular, hangs over our heads like a guillotine. To acknowledge it would send interest rates climbing, and thereby would endanger the viability of the massive buildup of public and private debt (from less than $11 trillion in 1987 to $49 trillion last year) that props up the American economy. Moreover, the rising cost of pensions, benefits, borrowing, and interest payments—all indexed or related to inflation—could join with the cost of financial bailouts to overwhelm the federal budget. As inflation and interest rates have been kept artificially suppressed, the United States has been indentured to its volatile financial sector, with its predilection for leverage and risky buccaneering.

Arguably, the unraveling has already begun. As Robert Hardaway, a professor at the University of Denver, pointed out last September, the subprime lending crisis “can be directly traced back to the [1983] BLS decision to exclude the price of housing from the CPI. . .With the illusion of low inflation inducing lenders to offer 6 percent loans, not only has speculation run rampant on the expectations of ever-rising home prices, but home buyers by the millions have been tricked into buying homes even though they only qualified for the teaser rates.” Were mainstream interest rates to jump into the 7 to 9 percent range—which could happen if inflation were to spur new concern—both Washington and Wall Street would be walking in quicksand. The make-believe economy of the past two decades, with its asset bubbles, massive borrowing, and rampant data distortion, would be in serious jeopardy. The U.S. dollar, off more than 40 percent against the euro since 2002, could slip down an even rockier slope.

The credit markets are fearful, and the financial markets are nervous. If gloom continues, our humbugged nation may truly regret losing sight of history, risk, and common sense

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Date posted: Wednesday, May 14th, 2008 11:26 am | Under category: American patriot topics, Danger to the US, economy
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