#1 Farm loan delinquencies just hit the highest level that we have seen in 9 years.
#2 We just learned that U.S. exports declined by 4 billion dollars during the month of December.
#3 J.C. Penney just announced that they will be closing another 24 stores.
#4 Victoria's Secret has just announced plans to close 53 stores.
#5 On Thursday, Gap announced that it will be closing 230 stores over the next two years.
#6 Payless ShoeSource has declared bankruptcy and is closing all 2,100 stores.
#7 Tesla is also closing all of their physical sales locations and will now only sell vehicles online.
#8 PepsiCo has started laying off workers and has committed to "millions of dollars in severance pay".
#9 The Baltic Dry Index has dropped to the lowest level in more than two years.
#10 This is the worst slump for core U.S. factory orders in three years.
#11 We just witnessed the largest decline in the Philly Fed Business Index in more than 7 years.
#12 In January, sales of existing homes fell 8.9 percent from a year earlier. That was the third month in a row that we have seen a decline of at least 8 percent. This is an absolutely catastrophic trend for the real estate industry.
#13 U.S. housing starts were down 11.2 percent in December compared to the previous month.
#14 Compared to a year earlier, home sales in southern California were down 17 percent in January.
#15 In December, home sales in Sacramento County fell a whopping 22.5 percent compared to a year earlier.
#16 Pending home sales in the United States have now fallen on a year over year basis for 13 months in a row.
#17 More than 166 billion dollars in student loan debt is now "seriously delinquent". That is an all-time record.
#18 More than 7 million Americans are behind on their auto loan payments. That is also a new all-time record, and it is far higher than anything that we witnessed during the last recession.
It appears that "the recovery" has finally come to an end. After seeing all of those numbers, there is no way that anyone can possibly claim that economic conditions are "getting better".
And even though the official government numbers are highly manipulated, we never even had one "boom year" throughout the entire "recovery".
The final numbers for 2018 are now in, and last year was the 13th year in a row when U.S. GDP growth was below 3 percent.
The last time we had a "boom year" when economic growth was above 3 percent was all the way back in 2005. That was in the middle of the Bush administration.
We have never seen a bad streak like this before in modern American history. The following comes from CNS News...
But prior to the current 13-year period when real GDP has failed to grow by 3.0 percent in any year, there has been no stretch (in the years since 1930) when the United States went as long as five straight years with real GDP failing to grow by at least 3 percent.Even though the Federal Reserve pumped trillions of dollars into the financial system over the last decade, and even though we added nearly 12 trillion dollars to the national debt, the best that the authorities have been able to do is to stabilize the system for a while. Now it is starting to sputter once again, and many believe that the next crisis will be far worse than the last one.
By contrast, the Great Depression of the 1930s featured some really bad years, but following those bad years the U.S. experienced a tremendous economic boom...
By contrast, after the stock market crash in 1929, the United States saw four years of negative annual GDP-1930 (-8.5), 1931 (-6.4), 1932 (-12.9) and 1933 (-1.2). But then in the nine full years from 1934 through 1942, real GDP grew by an average of 9.75 percent.We should have had some boom years too, but we didn't, and now things are going to get bad again.
The Democrats are going to blame the Republicans and the Republicans are going to blame the Democrats, but all of that arguing isn't going to solve anything.
What is coming next has been a central focus of my work for a very long time. The last recession was very painful, but it did not fundamentally alter life in America.
This next crisis will.
The "Everything Bubble" is bursting, the "Perfect Storm" is coming, and all of our lives will never be the same again.
But that doesn't mean that there isn't hope. In fact, once things really start getting crazy hope is going to be one of the major themes in my work because people are really going to need it.
There will be great challenges, and life will be very different, but that doesn't mean that life is over.
America is about to experience the consequences of decades of exceedingly foolish decisions, and the pain will be extreme. But difficult times also offer an opportunity for dramatic change, and that is something that we will need to embrace.
Michael Snyder is a nationally-syndicated writer, media personality and political activist. He is the author of four books including Get Prepared Now, The Beginning Of The End and Living A Life That Really Matters. His articles are originally published on The Economic Collapse Blog, End Of The American Dream and The Most Important News. From there, his articles are republished on dozens of other prominent websites. If you would like to republish his articles, please feel free to do so. The more people that see this information the better, and we need to wake more people up while there is still time.
Reader Comments
Actually, I think he's under estimating how bad it's going to be - there is a real potential for violent civil war on a national scale. Not like the last one where it was clearly defined states vs. states, but between segments of the populations of towns and cities all over the country. At least initially, the segments will consist of those who produce more than they consume and those who consume more than they produce.
There is a large segment of the population that works for a living and pays taxes that is already finding it not so easy to get by. As their income drops, not only will their tax liability (and thus gov't receipts) decline, they will be less inclined to allow their wealth to be confiscated by gov't and given to others. Gov't tax receipts from businesses will also fall and gov't will be forced either to "print money" (welcome to Weimar or Zimbabwe) or to drastically cut expenditures (issuing ever more debt to maintain the status quo is not a viable option). Those who have been living off other people's money (e.g., welfare, SNAP, section 8, etc., etc.) will see drastic cuts in, or even elimination of, benefits. Once that happens, I expect that they will attempt to take by force what they no longer have the ability to buy. And, naturally, those who still have something will resist.
It won't be pretty. IMO, Snyder is being very optimistic (and I don't mean that sarcastically like Dog!).
Here's a great article from Alex Krainer explaining the obsessive need for another war to save the US economy from falling apart: [Link] No wonder the military industrial complex is so desperate for a regime change in Venezuela and constantly pushes Russia's buttons.
Trump is a swamp dweller now. I actually wonder whether they talked him into supporting their war-based economy by appealing to his business mind: if war is good for the economy, he might have agreed to play along to save the failing US enterprise. If the Venezuela coup goes ahead, he'll be just as bad as the presidential war criminals before him. "Make America Great Again" by screwing everyone else over cannot possibly be a sustainable strategy.