One Chart Depicts Economic Recovery 100% Fiction

Anything I've ever done that ultimately was worthwhile… initially scared me to death. – Betty Bender

They say a picture is worth a thousand words and this chart is probably worth a lot more.  It illustrates how the BLS has been lying through its teeth over the past seven years. Then again anyone with a grain of common sense could figure out that the retarded methodology the BLS employs is bound to create the illusion that all is well. They purposely discount individuals that have stopped looking for work in coming up with their unemployment numbers. Hence, the 5% figure is not an accurate reflection of the landscape. The chart below provides a more realistic view of the unemployed in the U.S and in some areas we believe that the numbers could be more than 30%

Another problem that is hardly addressed is that over 6.6 million Americans work Part-time , but are desperately seeking full-time jobs.  This figure is significantly higher than the 4.5 million individuals who were working part time before the Great Recession began.  A new phrase has been coined for this group of workers “involuntary Part- Time Workers”.

The final blow, Real wages have been declining for quite some time now. $22.41 today has the same purchasing power an hourly salary of $4.03 cents hand in 1973. Median Income continues to drop; the middle-class has been decimated since the financial crisis of 2008, and this trend is going to continue for the foreseeable future.

Game plan

Central bankers clearly understand the true nature of this so-called economic recovery, and that is why they will continue to inflate this asset bubble, and they will continue to do this till the masses revolt. The BOJ fired the latest shot in the “devalue or Die” currency war games that are rippling across the Globe and other central bankers are likely to take the same path as for now resistance is futile. The masses are too tired to revolt; they are overworked and underpaid, and so it will be a long winter before there is any hope of spring. The suggested strategy, therefore, is not to listen to the naysayers who predict gloom and doom at very twist and turn, but to use strong market pullbacks/corrections to open new positions in companies that are growing or in blue chips. For example, NTES, COST, RTN, MCD, etc. are stocks that will perform well over the long run.

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