Disaster U.S. economic collapse unprecedented - Fall in GDP has "no comparison since records began in 1947"

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Associated Press
A “for rent” sign hangs on a closed shop July 13 in Miami Beach, Fla.
The gross domestic product is estimated to have shrunk by an unprecedented 32.9% annual rate during the second quarter.


Friday, July 31, 2020 1:00 am
U.S. economic collapse unprecedented
MARTIN CRUTSINGER and PAUL WISEMAN | Associated Press

WASHINGTON – The coronavirus pandemic sent the U.S. economy plunging by a record-shattering 32.9% annual rate last quarter and is still inflicting damage across the country, squeezing already struggling businesses and forcing a wave of layoffs that shows no sign of abating.
The economy's collapse in the April-June quarter, stunning in its speed and depth, came as a resurgence of the viral outbreak has pushed businesses to close for a second time in many areas. The government's estimate of the second-quarter fall in the gross domestic product has no comparison since records began in 1947. The previous worst quarterly contraction – at 10%, less than a third of what was reported Thursday – occurred in 1958 during the Eisenhower administration.

So steep was the economic fall last quarter that most analysts expect a sharp rebound for the current July-September period. But with coronavirus cases rising in the majority of states and the Republican Senate proposing to scale back aid to the unemployed, the pain is likely to continue and potentially worsen in the months ahead.
The plunge in GDP “underscores the unprecedented hit to the economy from the pandemic,” said Andrew Hunter, senior US economist at Capital Economics. “We expect it will take years for that damage to be fully recovered.”

That's because the virus has taken square aim at the engine of the American economy – consumer spending, which accounts for about 70% of activity. That spending collapsed at a 34.6% annual rate last quarter as people holed up in their homes, travel all but froze, and shutdown orders forced many restaurants, bars, entertainment venues and other retail establishments to close.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed more than 200 points down – though earlier it had seemed set for a much bigger fall.
Tentative hopes for a swift recovery have been diminished by a resurgence of viral cases in the South and the West that has forced many businesses to close again or reduce occupancy. Between June 21 and July 19, for example, the proportion of Texas bars that were closed shot from 25% to 73%. Likewise, 75% of California beauty shops were shuttered July 19, up from 40% just a week earlier, according to the data firm Womply.
Many states have imposed restrictions on visitors from the states that have reported high levels of cases, hurting hotels, airlines and other industries that depend on travel.
That has led to mammoth job losses. In a sign of how weakened the job market remains, more than 1.4 million laid-off Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week. It was the 19th straight week that more than 1 million people have applied for jobless aid. Before the coronavirus erupted in March in the U.S., the number of Americans seeking unemployment checks had never exceeded 700,000 in any one week, even during the Great Recession.

An additional 830,000 people applied for unemployment benefits under a new program that extends eligibility for the first time to self-employed and gig workers. All told, the government says roughly 30 million people are receiving some form of jobless aid, though that figure might be inflated by double-counting by some states.
The pain could soon intensify further: A supplemental $600 in weekly federal unemployment benefits is expiring, and Congress is squabbling about extending the aid, which will probably be done at some reduced level of payment.

“The risk of temporary job losses becoming permanent is high from repeated closures of businesses,” said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics. “That could result in an even slower pace of recovery.”

Last quarter's economic drop followed a 5% fall in the January-March quarter, during which the economy officially entered a recession, ending an 11-year economic expansion, the longest on record in the United States.
The Trump campaign said in a statement that the GDP report reflected a period “when much of the economy was essentially closed down to save millions of American lives.”
 
I mean is it really the boomers pushing this shit? Most old people I know don't give one red fuck and hate masks It is just the (((WOKE))) people who are reeing about keeping shut down forever and masks.
It's definitely the 40-70 bracket pushing it. They are hyper-fixated on case count and they have no use for the bars and restaurants where the younger generations congregate, so fuck it, lock it down forever because I don't have anything to lose. They don't give a shit about the societal and cultural damage because they're already checked out of it.
 
It's definitely the 40-70 bracket pushing it. They are hyper-fixated on case count and they have no use for the bars and restaurants where the younger generations congregate, so fuck it, lock it down forever because I don't have anything to lose. They don't give a shit about the societal and cultural damage because they're already checked out of it.
Well you must live in a vastly different area than I do. The only boomer I know who is "worried" about it has her parents living with her. Heck my stores "Senior Hour" had 10 people come in this week.
 
Everyone talks about learning from South Korea, maybe we should learn from North Korea now. I'm sick of this weakass-yet-persistent virus that didn't even end the world; can we just start shooting the infected already?
 
I'm glad Warren Buffett could join the comment section and go against what every economist was saying about a crash in 2019, before corona existed. Truly unique and well formed take.
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The fact you think "experts" who have been wrong about mostly everything for the past four decades know what they are talking about is autistic in and of itself.
 
Everyone talks about learning from South Korea, maybe we should learn from North Korea now. I'm sick of this weakass-yet-persistent virus that didn't even end the world; can we just start shooting the infected already?
This is a good idea.

We Americans have been too moral as of late. Fuck morality, bros. Anarchy and degeneracy must run rampant in order for a peaceful society to occur.
 
At least granny got to love for another couple years in her retirement home while on respirator.

Gotta look at that silver lining :optimistic:
One of the most fucked-up realities of US healthcare is that if you go to any goddamn hospital, there's always a ward of super-old fucked up vegetables who are just kept alive for the sake of bilking medicare. People kept screaming about the possibility of hmo "death panels," but our culture of "keep old people alive at any cost [so we can get their money]" is gross because apparently doing cost-benefit analysis on where this healthcare is going is anathema to American culture. Which would you rather have, free college for everyone, or machines that keep elderly comatose vegetables' bodies running so hospitals can bill medicare ten thousand dollars a day?
 
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