The most important thing to understand about this is that, post 2008, the economy never got better, only the stock market did. That's because they didn't bail out the economy, they bailed out the stock market. Which is great for people who were already retired, or who were about to be, because something like 90% of the stock market is people's retirement funds.
And by "bail out the stock market" what I specifically mean is something they called "quantitative easing", a.k.a. the creation of fake digital dollars that they injected directly into the stock market, bypassing the economy. Of course, this has led to drastic inflation (that we can no longer ignore), but if you were, or are now, retired, you hardly noticed, because what was creating the inflation was also proportionally inflating your retirement fund...
People keep waiting for the stock market to do a massive correction. I'm not sure why, because it already did...in 2008...
The "correction" is all around you. Young people can't find jobs, young people not getting married, young people not having kids, young people this that and the other thing, because...
The stock market correction indeed did happen, they just deflected the affects of it away from, ironically, those already in the stock market, and onto those just trying to work, a.k.a. younger people. It had been Millennials, now it's Gen-Z because they're the one's just trying to start working now, but it's not new. And if you want to know what happened to those unfortunate Millennials, just look at the suicide/ overdose rates for men ages 25-45 right now. That's what happened.
Like I said, the correction is all around you, and, in many cases, 6 feet under...
There doesn't seem to be anything here yet