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Economic Disaster: Secondary Impact

Economic Disaster: Secondary Impact

Even Bezos is now warning about how bad things are going to get, but even he might not know...or be forthcoming about it.

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The Farm
Nov 15, 2022
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Economic Disaster: Secondary Impact
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In a previous piece here:

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MAJOR ECONOMIC WARNING: How the Federal Reserve is Creating Conditions for Total Economic Devastation
The United States has already technically entered a recession. Granted — we’ve entered a recession as of the previous definition of recession, before it was conveniently changed prior the recent and …
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3 years ago · 11 likes · The Farm

A case is laid out that the only missing puzzle piece which will formally trigger either a ‘recession’ or a ‘Superdepression’ is a consensus on the state of the system as it stands — on a structural level — by business leaders, in board rooms, and by consumers (whatever is left of them). After what amounts to 20-30 years of the federal government printing and spending money compacted down into just a few years time, it comes as no surprise that after the flash (the stimulus — printing) comes a fireball (the inflation) and sometime later, a bang (the downturn.)

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MORE - Jeff Bezos warns Americans should "prepare for the worst" as recession looms and advises to stockpile cash in case there's a devastating downturn.
markets.businessinsider.comAmazon founder Jeff Bezos warns a recession is looming - and Americans should ‘prepare for the worst’Bezos advised consumers and businesses to delay unnecessary purchases and build their cash reserves in case economic conditions worsen.
6:20 PM ∙ Nov 14, 2022
382Likes167Retweets

The result of this, as far as traditional braindead ‘Modern Monetary Theory’ logic is concerned, is that all of this government-led spending should ultimately lead to economic growth.

Pro-tip: it has not, that’s why fiscal deficits, debt-to-GDP ratios, and government debt levels have continued to climb unabated. That’s why years ago, unsound European economies like Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain defaulted on their debts. These same countires then unveiled a policy of “austerity” — substantially cutting social spending and services across the board.

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