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<b>In Designing Their New Economic Ship Of State, Corporations Forgot
What Fuels Economies - The Gas Tank Is Dry</b><br>
<br>
Dan Stafford - 09/22/2008<br>
<br>
No economy works if the majority of the populace can't afford to buy
anything. <br>
<br>
This should be simple and basic. If wages are too low, and costs too
high, across a broad spectrum of the population , economic activity
stops. The rich will only buy so many items, being one % of the
population, or so, they are not enough to "fuel" a global economy.<br>
<br>
Right now, housing prices, fuel prices, insurance prices, and myriad
other prices have risen continuously while wages have stagnated or even
fallen precipitously across the USA. <br>
<br>
The true numbers are completely unreflected in government statistics
which either use outdated or arbitrary numbers designed to minimize the
scope of the problem.<br>
<br>
The world wonders at the precipitous use of credit cards and large
mortgages in the USA and fails to understand why this has happened,
because only so-called "fringe" voices haved dared to speak the truth;
wages in the USA are worth half what they were in the 1950's and
Americans have been buying NECESSITIES on credit because of it.<br>
<br>
In the 1950's, one person in the family worked, and one person stayed
home to take card of the children and the home, yet credit use was low
and the bills were generally paid with a little left over for savings.
Now, in many US families, BOTH parents work, often multiple jobs, and
there is still not enough money coming in to meet expenses. Or, more
properly, that was the case up until the past few years. Now, at this
moment, many are unable to find jobs either at all, or jobs that pay
anything near what they used to. <br>
<br>
Americans are forced to commute great distances for work, as offices
and jobs are in the city, and housing that is even close to being
affordable is far out in the suburbs. Add to this companies constantly
laying people off, while forcing the remaining employees to take on
ever greater responsibilities. The vast majority of Americans work long
hours, commute at least an hour and more often two, and are stressed at
work by the sheer load on their shoulders and at home by the financial
burden on their shoulders. They face endemic chronic sleep shortages,
most average six hours a day.<br>
<br>
Between the stress and the unhealthy lack of sleep, combined with junk
additives to almost all food, obesity has become rampant. Stress and
sleeplessness messes badly with the human metabolism and increases
appetite. In addition, most US workers see the shortest vacation times
in the "First World." <br>
<br>
The average American is exhausted physically, emotionally, spiritually,
and financially. This is true of a very large swath of the US
population. They come home from work and drop into a chair and watch TV
because they are too broke and tired to do much else. They get no time
for creativity or play or in-depth relationships. They have no energy
left for "bad news" because they are worn out and bombarded with it on
TV. <br>
<br>
The scale of this is vast - and by the great majority un-admitted.
Being a "hard worker" has become so over-valued at the expense of
feeding anything that truly recharges the soul, that people have come
to see anyone gone from the office for more than two weeks at a time as
a "slacker" and eccentric.<br>
<br>
Is this any state of mind or soul to be in to make sound financial
decisions, to make in-depth discussions of difficult or complex topics,
or anything else of value? I don't believe so. We have become a nation
of workaholics, and worse, no one could - until now at the card house's
collapse - admit that we couldn't afford even all the necessities, let
alone the luxuries.<br>
<br>
Materialism then becomes the easy way for a brief emotional high. The
new TV or car or clothes or whatever. "We can afford it, we have a
great credit rating! Let's get out and have a nice dinner, I'm starving
[stress-induced hunger pangs] and too tired to cook!"<br>
<br>
---------------------------------<br>
<br>
If you want people to continue purchasing goods and services at a
sustainable rate and an economy that hums along fairly smoothly, people
need to be fairly well-rested and happy, and have a bit of money left
over after basic expenses across the majority of the population.<br>
<br>
If you want to make a few hundred million before the crash, or the next
crash, or the next, give them lots of credit and not enough money, with
plenty of stress and just enough sleep to stay alive but not truly
live. They won't be thinking straight and impulse buying is pitifully
easy to encourage. They certainly won't tell their friends and family
that they can't afford the
wedding/anniversary/graduation/birthday/holiday/ insert event that you
can't avoid without appearing not to care about someone.<br>
<br>
Economically speaking, do you drive a fuel-efficient car across the
country, or do you run a dragster with a tiny gas tank and a big engine
until you're on the side of the road on empty?<br>
<br>
Maybe we should all sleep on it.<br>
<br>
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