Post-Pandemic Economy

Be my financial planner then. Honestly, I'm scared of the stock market. What should I buy into? If it makes money I may invest. I'm not very business savvy so I need your help. I am a lucky man who has lived a charmed life.
Don't be afraid. As my 25yo ******** asked me recently: I keep hearing these are risky and uncertain times to invest. I told her: "It's always risky and uncertain. Just find reasonable mutual funds and ride the waves."
 
I have to decide on my guaranteed investment renewals soon. Interest rates are rock bottom, so I'm thinking of about a year. I think we can expect a huge spending spree once COVID restrictions are lifted, and with it, a rise in interest rates, and that would be a better time to lock in the investments for a little longer. Does that make sense?
 
Don't be afraid. As my 25yo ******** asked me recently: I keep hearing these are risky and uncertain times to invest. I told her: "It's always risky and uncertain. Just find reasonable mutual funds and ride the waves."
I'm addicted to Premium Link Upgrade

I keep discovering interesting and helpful features. And this is a fun sector to follow Premium Link Upgrade
 
I have to decide on my guaranteed investment renewals soon. Interest rates are rock bottom, so I'm thinking of about a year. I think we can expect a huge spending spree once COVID restrictions are lifted, and with it, a rise in interest rates, and that would be a better time to lock in the investments for a little longer. Does that make sense?
Indeed. Rates have much more upside than downside. That said, when the rates go up will be anyone’s guess.
 
Why There are Now So Many Shortages (It's Not COVID)
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Gwarosa: Working to Death in South Korea | Foreign Correspondent
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More Americans fell into poverty during the pandemic, and new data shows that low wage workers are struggling to bounce back
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Gwarosa: Working to Death in South Korea | Foreign Correspondent
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That's been happening in Japan since the 60s
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In an Premium Link Upgrade article about karoshi, Premium Link Upgrade the following four typical cases of karoshi were mentioned:

  1. Mr. A worked at a major snack food processing company for as long as 110 hours a week (not a month) and died from a heart ****** at the age of 34. His death was recognized as work-related by the Labour Standards Office.
  2. Mr. B, a Premium Link Upgrade , whose death was also recognized as work-related, worked 3,000 hours a year. He did not have a day off in the 15 days before he had a stroke at the age of 37.
  3. Mr. C worked in a large printing company in Premium Link Upgrade for 4,320 hours a year including Premium Link Upgrade and died from a stroke at the age of 58. His widow received workers' compensation 14 years after her husband's death.
  4. Ms. D, a 22-year-old nurse, died from a heart ****** after 34 hours of continuous duty five times a month.

Remember, these are "typical" cases...
In 2008, karoshi again made headlines: a death back in 2006 of a key Premium Link Upgrade engineer who averaged over 80 hours overtime each month was ruled the result of overwork.
 
The Great Resignation Is Accelerating
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A worker in Florida applied to 60 entry-level jobs in September and got one interview
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Kevin O'Leary: They're Never Coming Back | Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)
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Kevin O'Leary: They're Never Coming Back | Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)
It's true though. If I never have to go back to the office and work 100% exclusively from home, I'm not just ok with that, I'd prefer that.
No commute, using your personal toilet, not having to pack a lunch and just being able to focus on work without having to zone out the office chatter/noise... and that's just the start.

It's funny, in the first couple of months, most people were like "I can't wait to get back into the office", and within a year, it's like "No, I'm good working from home".
 
America's teacher shortage will outlast the pandemic
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Packed ports and empty shelves: Inside the issues behind the U.S. supply chain crisis
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WHY HEALTHCARE WORKERS ARE QUITTING IN DROVES
About one in five healthcare workers has left medicine since the pandemic started. This is their story—and the story of those left behind.
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At our local clinic(a subset of a big Medical group) they are down from 5 doctors and 9 nurses to 3 Doctors and two nurses. And the Doctors are ages 80, 71 and 60. They have been trying to hire for months with no luck. Many medical people are just done.
 
How millions of jobless Americans can afford to ditch work
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I'm starting to wondering when we're going to determine it's "post-pandemic". It seems like we're going to have variants for a while, and even IF we could get 100% vaccination rates (which we know won't happen), there seem to be enough breakout cases that we wont' see "pre-pandemic" activity for a long time to come.
 
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