a large majority of the populace of the richest nation in the history of the world don't have anything in the way of savings.
man proposes, god disposes.
man proposes, god disposes.
Larssen wrote:
There's definitely fatigue already and it's only been two months. I hope the leaders across the globe are aware that a second total lockdown will not be pretty.
Why is that insane? They shut down people's place of employment and told hundreds of millions of people they couldn't go to work.Larssen wrote:
Well maybe it'll be the push the united states needs to reform its labour market and social services. It's insane that so many people have been forced to apply for unemployment benefits in such a short time.
Yeah?SuperJail Warden wrote:
Well then I hope this goes on just long enough to wipe out middle class Republican business owners, landlords, real estate groups and related services. Those are much bigger drivers of inequality and suffering than places like McDonald's.
What's insane is the numbers applying for unemployment benefits. In European countries these are in the tens of thousands, in the US it's some 20 million. The ease with which people can be let go and the fact that so many businesses operate on such small capital reserves are both worrying. Policy at state and federal levels could prevent/alleviate these things, if properly organised and organised quickly enough.Jay wrote:
Why is that insane? They shut down people's place of employment and told hundreds of millions of people they couldn't go to work.Larssen wrote:
Well maybe it'll be the push the united states needs to reform its labour market and social services. It's insane that so many people have been forced to apply for unemployment benefits in such a short time.
Yup.Jay wrote:
Yeah?SuperJail Warden wrote:
Well then I hope this goes on just long enough to wipe out middle class Republican business owners, landlords, real estate groups and related services. Those are much bigger drivers of inequality and suffering than places like McDonald's.
A lot of it is normal. Construction workers, in particular, are laid off nearly every winter as the weather turns bad. They're mostly out of work right now. Restaurant workers all got laid off because the businesses shut down. There's millions of people right there.Larssen wrote:
What's insane is the numbers applying for unemployment benefits. In European countries these are in the tens of thousands, in the US it's some 20 million. The ease with which people can be let go and the fact that so many businesses operate on such small capital reserves are both worrying. Policy at state and federal levels could prevent/alleviate these things, if properly organised and organised quickly enough.Jay wrote:
Why is that insane? They shut down people's place of employment and told hundreds of millions of people they couldn't go to work.Larssen wrote:
Well maybe it'll be the push the united states needs to reform its labour market and social services. It's insane that so many people have been forced to apply for unemployment benefits in such a short time.
I don't think you'll see a magical reversal in August with all these people suddenly back at work. You're weathering a storm and this is still just 'phase 1' jay. Hopefully the worst phase, but there's a unanimous consensus that the virus is here to stay and will come back in waves. You'll see government act accordingly.
With that many people out of work and an economy that unstable, I don't know what will happen.
Last edited by Jay (2020-05-10 12:41:28)
Businesses are as much part of our societies as anyone else. They're not charities, but to lay people off in the midst of a pandemic as soon as it hits is very unethical. Provided the business had reserves to begin with.Jay wrote:
Why would a business carry someone that can't work at a pure loss?
Yeah, Bernie! Those darn socialists and their *checks notes* underpaying their labor force for personal economic gain.Jay wrote:
I expect our unemployment rate is going to stay sky high until around August 1st. A lot of people are making more money on unemployment than they do at their job right now. Way to go Bernie with the economic poison pill!
This is why we companies pay into the unemployment insurance program in the first place.Larssen wrote:
There's a lot of people in restaurants and construction that's for sure, but I would be surprised if that totals some 20 million in the states that locked down. That number is staggering.
I don't think a lot of businesses will be able to just rehire all their personnel. The amount of value lost and money out of circulation is hitting every sector and will translate in (much) higher unemployment rate for the foreseeable future. There already was a fear that we were heading for a recession the beginning of this year, it's a foregone conclusion that we're going to hit the worst economic crisis anyone alive today will experience.Businesses are as much part of our societies as anyone else. They're not charities, but to lay people off in the midst of a pandemic as soon as it hits is very unethical. Provided the business had reserves to begin with.Jay wrote:
Why would a business carry someone that can't work at a pure loss?
One of the consequences of the crisis we're seeing now is probably that the F500 will grow even larger as only companies that size have the reserves to deal with this longer term.
Last edited by Jay (2020-05-10 13:09:17)
They're capped up to a certain percentage of income.Larssen wrote:
Fair enough - are unemployment benefits flat or based on people's last salaried months?
How long do you reckon they can be paid if some 15% of the population is on them?
It's lower than minimum wage on purpose.Larssen wrote:
I thought it was 600 a month, a week is generous. But the normal capped rate - 504$, that sounds like a tiny amount for living in NY. No way.
No shit. Which is why I've been saying it's most important to reopen the economy.Larssen wrote:
Jay, if the unthinkable happened and you & your peers became unemployed - how would you cope?
If the crisis hits the american middle class it will be an unmitigated disaster.