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mahatmakanejeeves

(60,993 posts)
Tue Jul 5, 2022, 08:43 AM Jul 2022

wsj.com: Americans Tap Pandemic Savings to Cope With Inflation

Americans are dipping into the huge pile of savings they accumulated over the first two years of the pandemic

wsj.com
Americans Tap Pandemic Savings to Cope With Inflation
With wage gains lagging behind soaring inflation, U.S. households are starting to dip into the huge pile of savings they accumulated over the first two years of the



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wsj.com: Americans Tap Pandemic Savings to Cope With Inflation (Original Post) mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2022 OP
We're cutting back on what we purchase. CrispyQ Jul 2022 #1
How convenient Magoo48 Jul 2022 #2
Why is this a story? snowybirdie Jul 2022 #3
Because Rupert Murdoch is paying me to post it. NT mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2022 #4
This message was self-deleted by its author mahatmakanejeeves Jul 2022 #5
Huge Pile of Savings????????? Farmer-Rick Jul 2022 #6
Here's the Personal Savings Rate according to BEA by way of FRED progree Jul 2022 #7
So, it includes people like Bill Gates, Zuckerberg, Walmart and the Koch Bros Farmer-Rick Jul 2022 #8
Yup. And so... progree Jul 2022 #9
But here's the thing Farmer-Rick Jul 2022 #10
Oh I know. I'm sure the top 10% got well over half of it /nt progree Jul 2022 #11

CrispyQ

(38,287 posts)
1. We're cutting back on what we purchase.
Tue Jul 5, 2022, 08:57 AM
Jul 2022

We're definitely buying less. I cut back on the variety of products in my pantry. Instead of three types of flour & four types of sweetener, I'm cutting back to just all-purpose flour & granulated sugar & maple syrup. I will miss my ginger syrup in my hot tea & in my lemonade, but c'est la vie. I have a roof over my head & a pantry, so I can't complain.

Kitty, however, still gets what variety she likes that I can find.

Magoo48

(5,381 posts)
2. How convenient
Tue Jul 5, 2022, 08:59 AM
Jul 2022

Inflation hit right after a period of saving.
Inflation hit right after a period of rising wages.

Our overlords can’t abide even the possibility of us even repossessioning ourselves under the thumb of debt.

snowybirdie

(5,633 posts)
3. Why is this a story?
Tue Jul 5, 2022, 09:13 AM
Jul 2022

Regular folks use whatever funds are available to keep things going. They don't have trust funds or unlimited money around the house to pay for needs. But it gives WSJ a chance to talk about "soaring inflation" doesn't it?

Response to snowybirdie (Reply #3)

Farmer-Rick

(11,423 posts)
6. Huge Pile of Savings?????????
Tue Jul 5, 2022, 12:07 PM
Jul 2022

Where's my huge pile of savings?

I didn't save over the pandemic neither did my children. They had tough enough time just making ends meet.

WTF are they talking about?

Maybe little old Murdoch was talking about the filthy rich with their huge pile of savings that they stole from the US government by promising not to lay off workers, when they did layoffs anyway, and when they got the Trump tax giveaways while raising the middle and lower class and self employed taxes.

Oh well Murdoch has never been very good with the truth. He just likes to spin and manipulate and lie. Why doesn't he just go back to Australia?????

progree

(11,463 posts)
7. Here's the Personal Savings Rate according to BEA by way of FRED
Tue Jul 5, 2022, 02:27 PM
Jul 2022
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/PSAVERT

Here's an IMGUR of it I made back in May --



Personal income also shows a big jump during the pandemic, but that bump has long passed.This from April 30
https://www.democraticunderground.com/111693154

Farmer-Rick

(11,423 posts)
8. So, it includes people like Bill Gates, Zuckerberg, Walmart and the Koch Bros
Wed Jul 6, 2022, 12:59 PM
Jul 2022

The very rich gulping up the free dollars from the US government, through rent, promises not to do layoffs and interests and dividends from government loans would make that number jump. It's based on BEA's personal income statistics.

BEA's personal income statistics show the income that U.S. residents get from paychecks, employer-provided supplements such as insurance, business ownership, rental property, Social Security and other government benefits, interest, and dividends. (Personal income doesn't include capital gains from changes in stock prices, however.)

https://www.bea.gov/resources/learning-center/what-to-know-income-saving

progree

(11,463 posts)
9. Yup. And so...
Wed Jul 6, 2022, 02:02 PM
Jul 2022

It includes me too, and my income and savings went up (not counting any capital gains). My spending went way down too (savings = income minus spending)

Maybe Saez and Zucman and Pikety will come along and do a breakdown by deciles or something. I certainly would be very interested in seeing it.

I'm not real eager to spend my "pile of savings" giving that its purchasing power has been eroded about 90% by inflation since January 2021 (when inflation started heating up), and my equities are down in both nominal and especially inflation-adjusted dollars.

Farmer-Rick

(11,423 posts)
10. But here's the thing
Wed Jul 6, 2022, 09:11 PM
Jul 2022

I save $1 you save $10 and Bezo saves $10,000 in one day. That makes our average savings $3,337 in one day but who actually saved more than $1,000? Not you or me.

Averages are deceiving. They can hide scewed data. When the filthy rich pocket our tax dollars, they make it look like everyone in the US is doing just fine. And that's what they want you to believe.

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