One very common political point that is often discussed is the strength of the 'economy', but just what measure does that respond to?
economy: the wealth and resources of a country or region, especially in terms of the production and consumption of goods and services.
in the US, we measure production with something called GDP, which since the recession has stuck between 1.5 and 3.0 ( a recession is generally a decline in GDP of two or more quarters, it becomes a depression if it lasts two or more years)
2010 up 2.57
2011 up 1.61
2012 up 1.47
2013 up 2.61
2014 up 2.70
2015 up 2.0
2016 up 1.88
2017 up 2.47
2018 up 2.89
http://www.multpl.com/us-real-gdp-growth-rate/table/by-year
these are much lower than other times when we reached a growth in the four percent range(Under Clinton)
or the 5 and 6.6 increase reached(under Carter)
or the 7.9 reached that ONE YEAR (under Reagan)
on the other hand, many people also highlight increase in debt, which doesnt line up with whether an economy has seen growth, being that under Reagan, though we did reach a record gdp growth of 7.9, we also increased debt nearly 200 percent.
All this is just to show how many details can be picked or overlooked when discussing the 'economy' and how numbers can be used to hype or to dismiss certain details when discussing the 'economy' (and all the details involved in it, which are rarely discussed collectively)
Its really not the simple talking point politicians and pundits make it to be, but such is life.
this site has many non partisan details about different aspects of our economy over time
http://ig.ft.com/sites/numbers/economies/us/
Edited by
msharmony
on Thu 09/20/18 05:34 AM