Yeah, I read the topic and said to myself, "Whaaaaaaaaaaaat?" I work with 700 low income, single mothers who say it's never been this bad. In the seven years I've been there, it's the first time I've seen more than one or two riding bikes to work. There are MANY, meaning a couple dozen, doing it now. They are sharing food. We have started a coat bank, bring in your kids gently used coats so someone else's child can use them. At my son's school. the same thing-coat, hat, glove, shoe bank. We have several homeless families in our school community right now and we're trying to support them until they get back on their feet. These are single parent families, NOT families who got caught in the mortgage crises but people who can not make it on their benefitless jobs. We have had a homeless family before in our school community but today, there are four that we know of. Sorry Prof-I can't laugh about it with so many children caught in the crosshairs and people prepared to deny what is real.
BTW, OP, how much do we owe China now? That's a clear sign of our significant financial stability eh?
This is so sad.
While I am certainly not homeless, DH and I are feeling the squeeze in a very real way. We're young, nad have a young child. Things have never been tighter. We bought our house at a very low price (what we could afford), so we're lucky there- it's cheaper for us than renting our apartment was. BUT- we also had to move about 30 miles outside of the closest large town. Which, a couple of years ago was no big deal. But now, gas prices have doubled, which means we spend about $150/week to get back and forth to our jobs.

But we have to do it. The area we live in doesn't have anything for us job-wise that we would make what we are making at our current positions, plus my DH is going back to school for a 2nd degree because he has had no luck finding a job in his field. We're lucky that my mom watches DD 3 days/ week, and MIL has her one, because
cheap daycare around here would be about $125/week. My paycheck would be gone between gas for work and daycare, but I can't afford to stay home.
We have had plants close, and lay off hundreds of workers in and around the St. Louis area. And those workers have a tough time finding something else to go to, and have to start all over with seniority, benefits, etc.
The cost of groceries has killed us. WHen it was just me and DH, we'd live on macaroni or whatever was cheap. But now that we have our DD, we can't do that.
We are blessed in so many ways, and MANY, many people have it worse than we do.
But, I think it's ridiculous to think the economy is doing just dandy just because you aren't personally affected.