Are we really creating more wealth?
Everyone else seems to think so. They keep buying it.
Doesn't the article and the other one I posted state that most of our economy is based on fake wealth that is all on paper and not backed up with anything real?
Services are "fake" only when no one will purchase them. So long as we continue to sell them, then they are real.
This fake economy has been driving real wealth out of our economy and replacing it with paper wealth (wall street).
If so, then dollars wouldn't be buying more stuff than before. But they are. The dollar is strong (i.e. other nations see the wealth backing it as greater than before) to the point that it's actually harming exports and manufacturing in the U.S.
This is a huge change from the 90s, when we had to work to strengthen the dollar. Now, one of the things Trump is doing right, is reconsidering the strong dollar policy we've had since then. It's the victim of its own success.
Our real wealth is in what we make and real services. We don't make anything anymore and now the only real economy we have is service based.
We don't make things that are easily made with unskilled labor. Nor should we. We can't compete with many other nations for cheap unskilled labor. And if we were to do so, we'd make those nations poorer, and less able to buy what we do sell.
We do better with high tech products, some minerals, and of course agricultural products which we produce more efficiently than any other nation on Earth.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_exports_of_the_United_States