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doesn't represent the entire economy, and often lags good or bad trends. Eventually, it catches up with reality, but never look at little blips as anything other than little blips. Actually, it doesn't really represent the entire market, either so the S&P and NASDAQ numbers have to be looked at, too. Other things, like machine tool orders, inventories on hand, durable goods orders, housing starts, etc. are better indicators of how the economy might be going.
There's plenty of money around, although it's more concentrated now,and we don't have what's usually called a "liquidity crisis." Money tends to go where it expects the greatest return, and that could be the stock market, real estate, venture funding, mortgages, bonds, precious metals, pork bellies... Right now, stocks seem to be the best investment for a lot of that money.
Oil is fungible. We still have to import over half of what we use, and it makes no difference where it comes from. Perhaps "trading" oil for our expenses over there will reduce our costs a bit, but it ultimately will probably mean little.
Employment figures are always seasonally adjusted. Summer workers are often teachers, starving artists and actors, and others who can take time off during the summer and some collect unemployment after the seasonal work is done. Or they find other seasonal work. Full-time students are not considered unemployed by the bean counters-- they are students and not in the workforce yet.
Employment numbers are always fishy. Some come from surveys, some come from the unemployment rolls, and some wqorkers are uncountable because of "contract" and under-the-counter cash work. The BLS really tries to be accurate, but a lot gets lost. This is a big country. Note that illegal earnings are probably huge, but for obvious reasons, no one knows just how huge, or how many people are involved. (Could car thieves, bookies, and pot farms be keeping the economy afloat?)
Not enough is known about underemployment. Multiple income families are often not starving when one loses a job, but they hurt, and obviously spending goes down. Sometimes they decide that the expenses, including taxes, don't make it worth while for the unemployed one to go back to work at a lower-paying job. Sometimes, though, an extra $200 a week means they keep a roof over their heads, or health insurance. Singles and one-earner families may be forced into a shit job, or maybe two, or three, to keep alive.
Lots of small businesses starting, often people contracting to do what they used to do on payroll.
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