Current major policies focus on several core areas: tariff policies, tax reforms, immigration controls, and industry deregulation. These measures are producing tangible economic feedback.
Data shows a clear trend—inflationary pressures are easing, which is crucial for asset prices. Meanwhile, real wages (purchasing power adjusted for prices) are beginning to rise, indicating an improvement in the standard of living for ordinary people. Gains in productivity also reflect increased efficiency within the economic system.
Of course, these are just the fundamentals. The resilience of the economic system still needs further validation, and market participants should continue to monitor the subsequent developments of these indicators, especially their long-term impact on the pricing of risk assets.
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ETHReserveBank
· 10h ago
Inflation easing and real wages rising sound good, but I don't know how long this data can last. It still depends on how things develop later.
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Tariffs and deregulation are coming together. If this wave can stabilize, it's a win, but we definitely need to keep a close eye on asset pricing risks.
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Actual wage increases are definitely good news, but I'm worried it might just be pretty data that doesn't match reality.
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Productivity improvements sound attractive, but as for resilience verification, it's still just talking in circles.
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Inflation easing is also a positive for the crypto world. Asset pricing logic will change accordingly, so we need to pay close attention.
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Improvement in the quality of life for ordinary people? Then why do I still feel so broke? Maybe this data doesn't really apply to me.
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So the core issue is whether policies can be maintained long-term. There are many good news in the short term, but the key is how things look after six months.
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Immigration controls and tax reforms are being pushed forward together. This combination is interesting; the economic system will face quite a few shocks.
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SatoshiSherpa
· 01-13 20:11
Inflation easing and wages rising sound good, but it still depends on how things develop later.
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Liberalizing regulations can save the economy? I feel like that's just the beginning...
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Have ordinary people really felt the increase in real wages? I'm a bit skeptical.
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Resilience needs to be verified. Basically, it means we're still uncertain, so we'll keep observing.
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The long-term impact on asset pricing is the key; everything else is just surface-level talk.
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Productivity improvement? Then why is my bag still falling?
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It feels like no matter how good the economic data is, it can't stop the market from this move. Is that true?
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The relief from inflation is indeed good news, but could the tariffs backfire?
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As long as risk assets can outperform, who cares about the rest?
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Real wage increases sound good, but has purchasing power truly recovered?
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SlowLearnerWang
· 01-13 20:09
Oh no, here we go again... Inflation has eased, wages have increased, and efficiency has improved—nice words indeed. I just want to know when I can truly feel this wave of "improved quality of life" in my wallet, not just look good on paper.
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HashRatePhilosopher
· 01-13 20:00
Inflation easing and real wage growth sound pretty good, but can it really last...
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Tariffs, tax reforms, deregulation—these policy measures are quite aggressive. It all depends on the follow-through.
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The increase in real wages is interesting; it depends on whether it's a real rise or just good data. Honestly, for the average person's wallet...
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Productivity improvement sounds sensitive; could it just be algorithm adjustments and data games...
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Asset pricing definitely carries risks. Anyone going all-in now should be cautious.
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The policy effects are showing so quickly? I'm a bit skeptical; we need to watch a few more quarters before drawing conclusions.
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I find it hard to believe that real purchasing power is improving; they haven't even mentioned the pressure on offline consumption.
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Resilience verification... Basically, it's still uncertain. If everyone gets hyped up, it could collapse tomorrow.
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Inflation easing is good, but could immigration controls block the supply chain?
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Feels like they're just trying to boost market confidence, waiting to cut the grass and harvest the chives.
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ShadowStaker
· 01-13 19:58
ngl the wage gains are real but the real test is whether this holds once the policy tailwinds fade... we've seen this movie before tbh
Key Policy Directions and Economic Realities
Current major policies focus on several core areas: tariff policies, tax reforms, immigration controls, and industry deregulation. These measures are producing tangible economic feedback.
Data shows a clear trend—inflationary pressures are easing, which is crucial for asset prices. Meanwhile, real wages (purchasing power adjusted for prices) are beginning to rise, indicating an improvement in the standard of living for ordinary people. Gains in productivity also reflect increased efficiency within the economic system.
Of course, these are just the fundamentals. The resilience of the economic system still needs further validation, and market participants should continue to monitor the subsequent developments of these indicators, especially their long-term impact on the pricing of risk assets.