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[return to "Google's year in review: areas with research breakthroughs in 2025"]
1. fancyf+6d[view] [source] 2025-12-24 12:00:19
>>Anon84+(OP)
Google are really firing on all cylinders recently. It's almost shocking to read all they've done in the last year.

The fact they caught up with OpenAI you almost expect. But the Nobel winning contributions to quantum computing, the advances in healthcare and medicine, the cutting edge AI hardware, and the best in class weather models go way beyond what you might have expected. Google could have been an advertising company with a search engine. I'm glad they aren't.

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2. 10xDev+8g[view] [source] 2025-12-24 12:32:13
>>fancyf+6d
Meanwhile the economy is tanking. But yeah what a fantastic year it is to be a company worth trillions.
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3. andsoi+lo[view] [source] 2025-12-24 13:47:41
>>10xDev+8g
> Meanwhile the economy is tanking.

NYT: US GDP Grew 4.3%, surging in 3rd Quarter 2025 - https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/23/business/us-economy-consu...

WSJ: Consumers Power Strongest US Economic Growth in 2 years - https://www.wsj.com/economy/us-gdp-q3-2025-2026-6cbd079e

The Guardian: US economy grew strongly in third quarter - https://www.theguardian.com/business/2025/dec/23/us-economy-...

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4. cj+0r[view] [source] 2025-12-24 14:07:29
>>andsoi+lo
Meanwhile, consumer debt is at record highs.

https://www.newyorkfed.org/microeconomics/hhdc

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5. andsoi+bu[view] [source] 2025-12-24 14:34:00
>>cj+0r
> consumer debt is at record highs.

While consumer debt is at or near historical highs, it is in and of itself not a problem (broader economic risk).

What you need to look at as well is debt burden ratios and repayment behavior, not just raw totals.

Household debt service ratio (the share of disposable income spent on principal + interest payments) is well below historical crisis peaks (e.g., 2007–2008), suggesting households are currently spending a smaller share of income on debt payments than in past stress periods.

While total household debt is at record levels (~$18 trillion+), debt as a share of income or GDP has not reached past crisis peaks like 2008. That means debt growth hasn’t outpaced income growth as dramatically as in previous crises.

However, delinquency rates, especially for credit cards and student loans, are elevated, nearing or exceeding long-run highs outside recessions.

Mortgage delinquency rates remain lower than unsecured debt categories, but have ticked up slightly. Because they're relatively stable, it mutes broader systemic risk for now.

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6. jeffbe+Gw[view] [source] 2025-12-24 14:49:07
>>andsoi+bu
And you didn't even mention the population.
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7. andsoi+1C[view] [source] 2025-12-24 15:25:15
>>jeffbe+Gw
> And you didn't even mention the population.

household debt per capita is also trending up, so larger population is not the driver of increased consumer debt.

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8. jeffbe+ID[view] [source] 2025-12-24 15:38:17
>>andsoi+1C
It is nonetheless true that to interpret such a chart as the one the GP posted you must at least mentally discount it for both population (which is +11% since 2008, the last consumer credit calamity) and the value of dollars (which are now ~67¢ vs. 2008). Debt service as fraction of HH income is in some ways easier to interpret.

Anyway, even clicking through to the PDF linked from GP's front page shows that every metric of US consumer credit is at or near all-time bests.

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