Economic data shows that the social safety net has expanded significantly, and consumer spending is picking up pace. That's the good news. But here's the reality check: with an aging population pressing down on budgets, merely expanding current programs won't cut it. Both safety net investments and household consumption need to grow substantially more to put the economy on a truly sustainable footing. Otherwise, the math doesn't add up long-term.
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Lonely_Validator
· 9h ago
The challenge of an aging population cannot be overcome just by expanding the welfare network; it depends on whether consumption can keep up.
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PretendingToReadDocs
· 12-14 05:53
Huabei credit limit has increased again, but what about my parents' pension? The data looks good, but how do we actually calculate the real account?
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MetaverseMigrant
· 12-12 18:20
To be honest, I'm tired of the routine of just expanding the welfare network; aging populations are the real ticking time bomb.
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SatoshiSherpa
· 12-12 18:15
just another cycle, innit... safety net expands but aging population keeps eating the gains. classic ponzi math that never actually balances out fr
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GateUser-addcaaf7
· 12-12 18:15
That's right, just expanding the welfare network is useless; the hole of an aging population needs to be filled.
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LiquidationOracle
· 12-12 18:09
They all seem like empty promises; the aging population challenge is truly insurmountable.
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BearMarketBuyer
· 12-12 18:09
Bro, this logic is a bit hard to reconcile. Which will win between consumption growth and population aging... I bet on aging.
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MidnightSnapHunter
· 12-12 18:03
Bro, these data look quite impressive—expanded safety nets, consumption rebound... But the real issue is aging population, the money burning never stops.
Economic data shows that the social safety net has expanded significantly, and consumer spending is picking up pace. That's the good news. But here's the reality check: with an aging population pressing down on budgets, merely expanding current programs won't cut it. Both safety net investments and household consumption need to grow substantially more to put the economy on a truly sustainable footing. Otherwise, the math doesn't add up long-term.