Recently, I came across a very interesting economic observation: Americans are generally shouting "I can't make it," but the data tells a different story.
Let's look at some key figures first. Since before the 2019 pandemic until now, U.S. prices have increased by about 20%. It sounds alarming, but the median hourly wage for workers has increased by 25-30% during the same period. After adjusting for inflation, the goods and services that an average American worker can buy with one hour's work are actually more than before the pandemic. This is the so-called "mirage" phenomenon — it seems unaffordable, but in reality, financial conditions have improved.
What is the most direct evidence? Americans are still consuming. If they really couldn't make it, they would have tightened their wallets long ago. But the reality is that consumption data continues to strengthen, indicating that most people's actual purchasing power has not declined.
Comparing this to Taiwan is interesting. Similarly benefiting from AI and semiconductor industry-driven GDP growth, asset values are also rising, but the problem lies in uneven wage growth, coupled with high housing prices and income-to-price ratios, leading most people to not feel the economic dividends. Americans' "can't afford" might be a psychological illusion, while Taiwan's problem seems more tangible — income can't keep up with the rise in asset prices.
What this actually reflects is the structural differences of different economies. Sometimes data and feelings are out of sync, but in the long run, actual purchasing power is the most reliable indicator to understand the situation.
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TokenRationEater
· 20h ago
The American trick of "pretending to be poor to buy more" is really just a mindset issue, the data is right there.
Taiwan is truly struggling now; money is being drained by housing, no wonder young people are lying flat.
Consumption data doesn't lie; people who are willing to spend money are not really that poor, it's purely psychological.
The metaphor of a mirage is perfect—American wages actually outpace inflation, but the feeling is always that you're losing.
Actual purchasing power is the real indicator; everything else is nonsense.
It seems that the US still has a strong ability to resist inflation, while structural issues in Taiwan are the real fatal flaw.
Wages can't keep up with asset appreciation, and that's the true divide between rich and poor.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 01-08 12:51
Americans are shouting bankruptcy month after month, yet consumption data is still soaring. This is unbelievable.
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LayerZeroHero
· 01-08 07:59
Americans have really built up this mindset: even when wages outpace inflation, they still cry poor. Wake up, everyone.
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Web3ExplorerLin
· 01-08 07:59
hypothesis: the oracle problem here isn't about data vs sentiment—it's about whose data we're reading. us wage growth looks great until you zoom into the actual distribution... then it gets messy 🤔
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ChainDetective
· 01-08 07:35
Data contradicts reality: Americans are shouting poverty, but their pockets are actually fuller? That logic is a bit extreme; the perception of the economy and the actual economy are completely two different things.
Recently, I came across a very interesting economic observation: Americans are generally shouting "I can't make it," but the data tells a different story.
Let's look at some key figures first. Since before the 2019 pandemic until now, U.S. prices have increased by about 20%. It sounds alarming, but the median hourly wage for workers has increased by 25-30% during the same period. After adjusting for inflation, the goods and services that an average American worker can buy with one hour's work are actually more than before the pandemic. This is the so-called "mirage" phenomenon — it seems unaffordable, but in reality, financial conditions have improved.
What is the most direct evidence? Americans are still consuming. If they really couldn't make it, they would have tightened their wallets long ago. But the reality is that consumption data continues to strengthen, indicating that most people's actual purchasing power has not declined.
Comparing this to Taiwan is interesting. Similarly benefiting from AI and semiconductor industry-driven GDP growth, asset values are also rising, but the problem lies in uneven wage growth, coupled with high housing prices and income-to-price ratios, leading most people to not feel the economic dividends. Americans' "can't afford" might be a psychological illusion, while Taiwan's problem seems more tangible — income can't keep up with the rise in asset prices.
What this actually reflects is the structural differences of different economies. Sometimes data and feelings are out of sync, but in the long run, actual purchasing power is the most reliable indicator to understand the situation.