CDZ SWAGs on annual GDP are Increasing at an Insane Rate

william the wie

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Nov 18, 2009
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The kind of forecasts that Jamie Dimon (4%) and the Atlanta Fed (5.4%) are making and the twinges of wage push inflation already present in the economy would indicate bank rates are going to sky-rocket. Credit card debt and mortgage rates are going to go way up. Vocational training is going to be big and non-STEM education of any sort is going to shrink rapidly. But that will take 2-5 years to kick in fully even with most skilled workers fleeing the blue wall for the red edge. How fast and how bad will it get inside the blue wall?
 
The kind of forecasts that Jamie Dimon (4%) and the Atlanta Fed (5.4%) are making and the twinges of wage push inflation already present in the economy would indicate bank rates are going to sky-rocket. Credit card debt and mortgage rates are going to go way up. Vocational training is going to be big and non-STEM education of any sort is going to shrink rapidly. But that will take 2-5 years to kick in fully even with most skilled workers fleeing the blue wall for the red edge. How fast and how bad will it get inside the blue wall?
Just to clarify terms, what exactly do you consider the “blue wall”? Because if you’re thinking of the contemporary colloquialism, it may not even exit:
There Is No ‘Blue Wall’ (Nate Silver, 2015)
 
Credit card rates are legal theft and need to be reined in. You cant get 2% on a savings account meanwhile they want 20% .......insanity
 
The kind of forecasts that Jamie Dimon (4%) and the Atlanta Fed (5.4%) are making and the twinges of wage push inflation already present in the economy would indicate bank rates are going to sky-rocket. Credit card debt and mortgage rates are going to go way up. Vocational training is going to be big and non-STEM education of any sort is going to shrink rapidly. But that will take 2-5 years to kick in fully even with most skilled workers fleeing the blue wall for the red edge. How fast and how bad will it get inside the blue wall?
Just to clarify terms, what exactly do you consider the “blue wall”? Because if you’re thinking of the contemporary colloquialism, it may not even exit:
There Is No ‘Blue Wall’ (Nate Silver, 2015)

However, and it could very well be by gerrymandering, states run by the Ds dominate the worst 25 states in financial stability but not as much as they do the 20, 15, 10 and 5 worst states financially.
The two states in technical insolvency, IL & CA, are both D dominated.
 
That insolvency could and would dissolve the Blue Wall if the 2000 election reforms were enforced is extremely probable. But short of defaults sending most prominent Ds to Jail for malfeasance and/or voting fraud that can't happen.
 

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