2024-06-12 18:21:21
This chart is not true. The actual data is from the real FRED site can be found here: [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(6-1-14) Author
2024-06-12 18:49:45
NNN. The proposed note links to the graph for total construction in the US, but the chart references construction spending on manufacturing, which is a different dataset. The ad's chart matches up with the data on FRED. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(5-1-0) Author
2024-06-12 19:07:38
The data is correct however the reason for the increase is not proven. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(1-3-3) Author
2024-06-12 19:09:19
Graph is factual. Link to source of data: [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(6-0-2) Author
2024-06-12 19:36:55
This is not adjusted for inflation. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(0-0-11) Author
2024-06-13 02:23:41
This chart is a stylized and annotated reproduction of the following chart on FRED: [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(0-1-10) Author
2024-06-13 11:11:01
This is not inflation-adjusted, but inflation would not account for the changes in the data. Prices have increased about 26% since 2017, the beginning of the graph. But the graph shows construction spending increasing by about 300% over that same period. [Link][Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(2-1-3) Author
2024-06-13 16:08:47
This graph is not indicative of a healthy economy and is misleading. As the poster themselves point out, this increase in construction for manufacturing is due to government spending, not private investment. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(1-0-6) Author