Sure, theoretically an economy can pivot without tanking its GDP numbers—but here's the catch: it demands a major uptick in consumer spending. Problem is, we've seen attempts at this for the past two decades with limited success. The structural headwinds are real. Either you accept softer growth during the transition, or you find a way to unlock consumption that's proven elusive so far. No easy answers when you're rebalancing an entire economic model.
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GamefiEscapeArtist
· 2h ago
In plain terms, it's a dilemma; the fundamental problem is that the consumer side can't be sustained.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 01-18 19:37
Basically, it's about wanting to have both fish and bear paws. After trying so many times over 20 years, it's still not working; the structural problems can't be bypassed.
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ProofOfNothing
· 01-18 09:59
Basically, it's about wanting the pie without the filling. Have you been dreaming about it for 20 years?
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WagmiWarrior
· 01-18 09:58
Basically, it's like trying to have both fish and bear paws at the same time—can you get both GDP and transformation simultaneously? Dream on.
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LiquidityWitch
· 01-18 09:56
lmao the consumption spell never worked, did it? twenty years of failed rituals trying to transmute gdp without the bleeding. structure always wins in the end, ngl
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LightningClicker
· 01-18 09:49
To put it simply, if the consumption potential hasn't been unleashed in twenty years, there's no point in talking about theories. Just slow down if needed; forcing GDP growth is only more embarrassing.
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FUD_Whisperer
· 01-18 09:36
Basically, it's about wanting to eat fish without the fishy smell. I still haven't figured it out after 20 years.
Sure, theoretically an economy can pivot without tanking its GDP numbers—but here's the catch: it demands a major uptick in consumer spending. Problem is, we've seen attempts at this for the past two decades with limited success. The structural headwinds are real. Either you accept softer growth during the transition, or you find a way to unlock consumption that's proven elusive so far. No easy answers when you're rebalancing an entire economic model.