Stocks dropped as the selling pressures that dragged Wall Street last week persisted, while investors braced for a slew of economic data reports this week.
Ultimately, it’s a numerical abstraction. A number can always go up. It does not mean it’s materially better than the number from last year, just that the number is bigger. When inflation goes high but people’s investments do not, that indicates bad stuff.
If inflation and wages and investments and savings all go up consistently, it’s not necessarily unsustainable, it’s just quirky math.
Ultimately, it’s a numerical abstraction. A number can always go up. It does not mean it’s materially better than the number from last year, just that the number is bigger. When inflation goes high but people’s investments do not, that indicates bad stuff.
If inflation and wages and investments and savings all go up consistently, it’s not necessarily unsustainable, it’s just quirky math.