• @azimir@lemmy.ml
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      526 days ago

      He disbanded the US government agency that develops the annual GDP numbers. Guess how they’ll figure those out next year?

      If you guessed “we’ll make some up that are higher than last year” then you’re spot on.

      • @Lyrl@lemm.ee
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        35 days ago

        If it’s representing value produced by a population, and that population is both growing in numbers and finding ways for each person to be more productive, it makes sense for the index to go up. The current drop in stock markets is not related to either population decline nor to some widespread productivity hit, meaning sustainability isn’t the problem at hand.

      • @jj4211@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Ultimately, it’s a numerical abstraction. A number can always go up. It does not mean it’s materially better than the number from last year, just that the number is bigger. When inflation goes high but people’s investments do not, that indicates bad stuff.

        If inflation and wages and investments and savings all go up consistently, it’s not necessarily unsustainable, it’s just quirky math.