What impact do you think it will have on you?

Are there critical items to purchase now that will be too expensive to afford next year?

Are you changing your savings or investments?

  • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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    17 hours ago

    Can’t do much but pay bills. If things get harder then they already are it will slow down or reverse my plan to drop 1 or 2 of my part time jobs.

  • TheOubliette@lemmy.ml
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    24 hours ago

    Tariffs amount to a higher inflation rate / a regressive tax, as they will not subsidize local industry to any significant level. You will not see wage increases or more jobs from it. Probably the opposite.

    This will be a quantitative change, it will look like 2022-2024 but with a higher effective inflation rate, translating into a transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich.

    More people will experience what it’s like to earn 10-20% less money and have fewer job prospects. One would hope that this teaches humility and solidarity, but in a country that only knows how to punch left, that will be an uphill battle that must nevertheless be fought.

    • PresidentCamacho@lemm.ee
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      18 hours ago

      As long as the rich get richer, the system is working as intended. Voting will not change anything other than how fast the wheels fall off this bitch.but we still have to, so we crash later rather than sooner.

  • GHiLA@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    I bought two 16TB hard drives that I intend to fill with the content I generally pull down as I need it. Game roms, books, videos, a backup of Wikipedia(real). I’m already about 80% of the way there with preserving what I want to preserve. The other 16TB drive will be a copy. I can keep it in or around my toolbox at work just in case anything happens at the house, fire or flood, whatever.

    I don’t seriously consider content being harder to acquire in the Trump presidency considering that’s mostly the Middle East, India and Romania if SoulSeek is anything to go by, but it gives me peace of mind.

    As for spending… what spending?

    I’m poor, but I already only spend on utility and literally nothing else. It’s helpful, really. I don’t buy crap and always have money for what I need, but I know I’m the minority, here. I’m always willing to suffer if it means I have headroom, to my family’s constant worry.

    I cook constantly. I bake about two loaves of bread a week. My house generates baked goods on a constant basis for everyone around it, and I sell here and there. Flour is cheap, making variety is easy and everyone loves it.

    You wanna survive this shit?

    • quit streaming anything, pirate everything
    • effort is money
    • you don’t need it
    • only pay bills that can’t be garnished or risk repossession
    • name brand means poison
    • see an ad? Never buy the product. Fuck em.

    Run as close to the grain as possible. Don’t buy their shit. Don’t buy anything they’re associated with and if they try to control something, starve yourself of it. Fuck em. Don’t let the bastards win.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I grabbed a four-bay RAID and some drives for the same reason. I highly recommend you also get a UPS if you can so that random power outages (which are more likely) don’t crash your drives.

      • GHiLA@sh.itjust.works
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        9 hours ago

        I already have a setup at the house. This 16TB is basically the master cold storage for everything(~12GB of content and personal files) and gives me peace of mind. I can restore the server apps in twenty minutes with its local backups, but… the Jellyfin content, my books, roms, etc, need some parity.

        A few months later I might get another and make another copy. I usually buy refurb drives and test them out a bit before running them. I have pretty good luck with them. Most of the time, I’m writing the entire drive on first use so if there’s a problem, I’m gonna find it.

  • themurphy@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Somebody should make a website that tracks prices on goods and other items from the day Trump becomes president and throughout his term.

    He said he would lower prices. His politics says the opposite. Let’s see.

      • Plastic_Ramses@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        If you think government metrics during trumps presidency will be accurate, i have a bridge to sell you.

        Most .gov websites are essentially useless the moment trump takes the throne.

        • kinttach@lemm.eeOP
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          23 hours ago

          The CPI is a key economic indicator. It’s unlikely that banks and markets would tolerate that kind of meddling.

          But, if the CPI was changed for political reasons, there are other similar stats.

          In plain language: Wall Street can make or lose billions of dollars based on correctly/incorrectly forecasting this stat, so you can bet your ass they have accurate data. Some of it is private; some is available to paying customers. Even if the data is not public, it is often publicly characterized, for example, in economic forecasts and in publications like The Economist.

          Some examples of alternative CPI sources are: PriceStats and The Economist’s Intelligence Unit. Both require paid access.

          Be aware that freely-available stats may be published with political agendas, by Fox News conspiracy theorists, etc.

        • 3ntranced@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Funny that you think they’re accurate now. Doesn’t matter WHO is in office, the feds tell you what they want you to hear.

      • themurphy@lemmy.ml
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        23 hours ago

        Well, yeah, but he’s made it a big part of his campaign. In reality somebody should make a list of ALL promises they make, and then see who’s trustworthy.

  • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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    1 day ago

    Moved forward large purchases that cannot be delayed 5 years.

    I am not changing my investments. My predictions on market impacts tend to be wrong. The stock market and the economy are not the same thing (market can be up during recession).

    I am working to get healthier and update vaccinations. I don’t know what is coming but being able to run, climb, and lift are versatile.

  • NeoToasty@kbin.melroy.org
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    1 day ago

    I think it’s going to hurt me as a retail worker. Any retail worker knows, that your pay is usually based on how well your store is doing. And your store’s profit is tied to the purse of the corporation that in turn, pays you. Now if Trump is dead set serious on wiping Immigrants out of the workforce and not willing to raise the wage and combat inflation (we know he won’t). That just means the corporations will start cutting jobs than doing what’s right.

    And if hundreds of retail jobs are cut, so there will be store closures. Store closures happen, you’re out of work because people will not want to pay the high prices of inflation once everything is in full swing.

    So, I don’t know how I’m preparing for this. It’s going to upset a lot of my plans going into next year if my store is affected. I work at Wal-Mart and basically their stance is they’re going to raise prices so we can expect to see jobs cut and store closures because of underperforming profits of said stores. Simply because a so-called “businessman” doesn’t know how the fuck tariffs work.

    As a shopper. I guess it’s back to relying on Dollar Tree again…

  • EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    If you are an American, how are you preparing for the upcoming tariffs and possible trade war?

    I’m not. I would love to, but there’s not really much I can do as far as I can see.

    What impact do you think it will have on you?

    Are there critical items to purchase now that will be too expensive to afford next year?

    Probably a lot of things. Contrary to what a lot of MAGA morons would like to claim, tariffs very rarely ever benefit the country establishing the tariff. Very few things are actually wholly made in America nowadays. With such a global economy, even things that are marketed as “made in America” are typically not made 100% in America. And even if they are, the parts are often sourced from around the world since, with modern shipping, that’s actually cheaper typically than sourcing it in-country. (Not to mention that some parts can’t be sourced in-country simply because no one exists to provide that service anymore.)

    Are you changing your savings or investments?

    Bold of you to assume that I have any extra money to put into either of those. I put in the same amount of money every week as I have the last while: whatever I can, which isn’t much. I don’t get paid shit for my job, yet prices keep going up. It’s not like I have much money to adjust.

    • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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      1 day ago

      tariffs very rarely ever benefit the country establishing the tariff.

      Well. It depends.

      If tariffs are sustained, then it can make sense to establish domestic companies that can supply the goods that were previously being outsourced. In that respect, over the long term–and I’m talking, like 20-30+ years–it could be positive. One of the things that made the US economy strong in the 60s was the fact that we had strong labor, and strong manufacturing; outsourcing our manufacturing has harmed labor and the middle class.

      But that’s all very long-term stuff. It’s taken us 40 years to get to where we are now, and bringing manufacturing, and strong unions, back can easily take just as long. In the short term, it’s going to be super-bad for the working poor and the middle class.

      • kibiz0r@midwest.social
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        1 day ago

        over the long term–and I’m talking, like 20-30+ years–it could be positive. One of the things that made the US economy strong in the 60s was the fact that we had strong labor, and strong manufacturing

        Looks to me like the strong economy of the 1960s coincided with ending 20-30 years of high tariffs… Sooo…

        • HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          Absolutely.

          But the loss of the manufacturing base, and the subsequent decrease in number of people covered by labor unions, has been one of the single largest factors that’s harmed the middle class. It’s not the only thing, but a manufacturing base ends up being a pretty important part.

  • MoonMelon@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Finally getting a generator. I live in a rural area. Not having a generator was a huge hole in my setup. We also got a wood stove earlier this year for backup heat. I had longer term plans for solar but now it looks like that may be impossible since China makes all the equipment, and it’s already difficult to balance the utility with the expense.

  • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    My husband finally bit the bullet and upgraded his computer. I’m planning to upgrade my phone before the year is out, because mine is 6 years old and probably not getting security updates for another 4 years.

    Not that these things didn’t need to happen, but having it forced on us last minute has sucked.