Great insights into interest rate history and epochal-societal events imminent occurrence .Only, as one of the first so-called millennials born in 1981, I'm expecting an epochal-societal event in the form of a climate crisis mixed with peak hydrocarbons EROI. Only, perpetual real wage decreases and no investment availability signal a pretty epochal societal event in the form of the late 2000s great recession . Notwithstanding, if you want a pay rise you'll have to use science and technology and entrepreneurial skills over governments or private companies during these interest rate rises. A final point, real terms decreased living standards and interest rate rises go hand in hand with epochal societal shifts, do they not?
Why would the FED be mentioned? The FED didn’t exist for most of the data mentioned in this video. The FED just follows what the free market dictates the interest rates will be, they don’t make any meaningful decisions.
I'm sceptical of the methodology for mapping events onto the graph. I don't know what kind of methodology was used here, which is probably part of the problem. A good approach would have to evaluate all historical events as impactful/non-impactful, and then putting all the impactful ones on the timeline. Only then could you start inferring patterns. Was this (or something smarter) done? As a viewer i have no way to tell.
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Great insights into interest rate history and epochal-societal events imminent occurrence .Only, as one of the first so-called millennials born in 1981, I'm expecting an epochal-societal event in the form of a climate crisis mixed with peak hydrocarbons EROI. Only, perpetual real wage decreases and no investment availability signal a pretty epochal societal event in the form of the late 2000s great recession . Notwithstanding, if you want a pay rise you'll have to use science and technology and entrepreneurial skills over governments or private companies during these interest rate rises. A final point, real terms decreased living standards and interest rate rises go hand in hand with epochal societal shifts, do they not?
Fascinating study. I would like to see independent historians (open minded) comment on this after serious consideration.
No mention of the FED
Why would the FED be mentioned? The FED didn’t exist for most of the data mentioned in this video. The FED just follows what the free market dictates the interest rates will be, they don’t make any meaningful decisions.
I'm sceptical of the methodology for mapping events onto the graph. I don't know what kind of methodology was used here, which is probably part of the problem.
A good approach would have to evaluate all historical events as impactful/non-impactful, and then putting all the impactful ones on the timeline. Only then could you start inferring patterns. Was this (or something smarter) done? As a viewer i have no way to tell.