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The current time is Tue Mar 17 15:53:49 UTC 2026
Utopia Talk / Politics / Q4: 0.7% GDP
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williamthebastard
rank | Tue Mar 17 12:42:54 Friday’s figure from the Bureau of Economic Analysis was revised down sharply from the 1.4 per cent initial estimate released last month and is well below the previous quarter’s 4.4 per cent growth rate. The revision suggests the world’s biggest economy ended 2025 in far weaker shape than economists had previously thought amid growing questions over the resilience of consumer spending and business investment." http://www...c8-d9d5-44ea-b772-06f85d57bad3 Unemployment is up, inflation is up, oil prices are up, gdp is down and he's just started a war to distract from the pedophile ring he's protecting. |
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murder
rank | Tue Mar 17 13:46:25 A looming recession is the least concerning thing going on in the US right now. - |
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jergul
rank | Tue Mar 17 13:53:01 There is always the z1.gov release on the 19th to spice things up with data on US government debt updated for 2025. |
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Habebe
rank | Tue Mar 17 13:57:22 I mean, shits fucked up, but, IDK if GDP is what a Euro should talk shit on.... |
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williamthebastard
rank | Tue Mar 17 13:59:36 I mean, your shits fucked up, but IDK if what you fantasize about what Euros do in their bedrooms is what you should be talking shit on in your other thread |
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Average Ameriacn
rank | Tue Mar 17 14:42:04 What that stupid, stupid, stupid WTB doesn’t get: we real Americans would probably benefit more from this than from higher economic growth under, say, a Joe Biden. Because if we kick out all the illegal immigrants now, our economic gains will be spread out among far fewer people. So each individual will get a much bigger share than before! Of course, to understand that, you need to know a little math, and wtb probably never learned math at his woke school. |
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Habebe
rank | Tue Mar 17 15:21:48 In 1990, the United States accounted for roughly 26 percent of global gross domestic product. More than three decades later, and after repeated predictions of China’s inevitable overtaking, the US share remains virtually unchanged at about 25.9 percent, assuming Beijing’s own growth figures are accurate. That consistency matters because the global economy is far larger today than it was at the end of the Cold War, with US output alone reaching an estimated $30.62 trillion in 2025. The contrast with America’s closest allies is stark. When the Cold War ended, Britain, France, Italy, Japan and Canada together represented around 32 percent of global GDP. Today, that combined share has fallen to below 14 percent. This relative contraction reflects weaker productivity growth, demographic pressure and prolonged underinvestment, particularly in Europe and Japan. https://ww.../amp_articleshow/126508653.cms |
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