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True Economic Engines of Growth

July 8, 2019 By Kevin J Palmer

The True Economic Engines of Growth

    • By Kevin J. Palmer under American Dream  accumulated wealth, american income, China

Kevin J. Palmer

Economic projections for muted growth in China have thrown global markets into a frenzy. Volatility and fast markets have been the order of business for global exchanges as of late. On Wall Street last week stocks suffer their second worst mid-year low since 1928.

News that China’s manufacturing sector shrank to its lowest level in two years put an abrupt end to an oil price surge that left Brent and U.S. crude finishing down 8- percent on fears of China’s slacking demand. And if China was not enough economic paranoia, Canada is murmuring the word recession at America’s back door.

 

In this country as political ambitions heat up, issues like immigration may take a back seat to economic worries that make wealth disparity in America a flash point for the 2016 elections. In two weeks alone American investors lost hundreds of billions in stock net worth after the unprecedented 1,000-point decline and subsequent instability. But despite the huge losses the gap between upper-income and middle-income families is still at its highest level on record, slowly eroding the middleclass. Today the rich have nearly seven times more than median income earners in America.

In the world’s second largest economy things look even worse as the financial fallout continues. The Chinese central government has been unyielding in attempts to bolster its stock markets to enhance presence on the world stage. Over the past two years the government has aggressively urged the buying of stocks and in many cases people of average means in China borrowed to do so. Now as prices decline they are forced to sell their stock savings to meet margin calls.

Of the 1.4 billion Chinese residents the top 1 percent in made up of households with average annual incomes of about $80,000 in US dollars. That pales in comparison to the top 1% in American, who earns a minimum of $380,000. The bigger impending problem however is that China has nearly 500 million people living on less than $2 a day.

If the central government of China is determined to prove their economy can work. They must embrace the essence of capitalism by focusing not on stock markets, but on its people, the true economic engines of growth and let accumulated wealth be re-productively employed in a middle class.

Kevin J. Palmer

The Quiet Rich

Kevin J. Palmer

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The information contained herein has been obtained from reliable sources however may not be accurate and is not guaranteed by us.  Readers are encouraged to undertake their own independent investigation and evaluation of the relevant facts.  All claims and allegations are subject to adjudication, decisions may be subject to appeal, and no inference is intended, nor should any inference be made from any information contained herein from any source. This posting and the information on our website is for general information purposes only.  This content should be not considered legal advice, and any responses, comments, e-mails, other communications do not form any attorney client relationship.

As Frank Burns said, “If I made any mistakes in this article, they are God’s will or someone else’s fault.”

Kevin J Palmer

Economic Justice

Economic Oppression

Peace through Prosperity

Financial Freedom Activist

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Filed Under: Behavioral Finance Strategist Tagged With: Kevin Palmer, Kevin Palmer Arizona, Kevin Palmer Scottsdale

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