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How Much Does Drug Rehab Cost in New Jersey?

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Drug addiction is a pervasive issue that affects individuals and families across New Jersey. Seeking treatment is a crucial step towards recovery, but the cost of drug rehab can be a significant barrier for many. Understanding the financial aspects of rehab is essential for those considering treatment, as well as for their loved ones who want to support them. This article aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the costs associated with addiction treatment, helping you make informed decisions about your path to recovery. 

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Addiction Problems And Smart Ways To Deal With Them

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Addiction is a serious problem that affects millions of people around the world. It can cause physical, emotional, and financial devastation to those struggling with it as well as their loved ones. Despite its wide reach, there is still hope for recovery from addiction. 

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Did You Get Injured? Here Are Some Helpful Tips

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There are many ways a person can get injured. A person can get injured while playing sports, working, or even just going about their day-to-day activities. Some injuries are more serious than others, and some can take longer to heal than others. However, sometimes another person can be held responsible for your injury. For example, if you’re involved in a car accident, the person who caused the accident could be held responsible for your injuries if they were negligent. Or, you may be injured due to someone else’s carelessness in another situation, such as working on a construction site. It’s important to know that if you are injured due to someone else’s negligence, you may be entitled to financial compensation. This article will discuss some tips you can follow if you have been injured.

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Seven Years Later, Recovery Remains the Weakest of the Post-World War II Era

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Despite longevity, total growth during this economic expansion is lower than for much shorter business cycles

By ERIC MORATH
Jul 29, 2016 10:39 am ET

Even seven years after the recession ended, the current stretch of economic gains has yielded less growth than much shorter business cycles.

In terms of average annual growth, the pace of this expansion has been by far the weakest of any since 1949. (And for which we have quarterly data.) The economy has grown at a 2.1% annual rate since the U.S. recovery began in mid-2009, according to gross-domestic-product data the Commerce Department released Friday.

https://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2016/07/29/seven-years-later-recovery-remains-the-weakest-of-the-post-world-war-ii-era/

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Which Cities/States Will Be The First To Default When The Economy Rolls Over?

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Which Cities/States Will Be The First To Default When The Economy Rolls Over?

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

What happens to local governments when the economy rolls over?

Though we’re constantly reassured the “recovery” that’s stumbled for five years has years of strong growth ahead, history suggests the “recovery” is due to roll over. Few recoveries last longer than 5 or 6 years, and the business cycle is graying fast: subprime auto loans are not exactly the foundation of “strong growth.”
 
So what might push the economy over the cliff? The strong U.S. dollar is crimping overseas sales and profits, the global economy is already recessionary, mortgage applications have dried up, auto sales are being driven by subprime loans, and the valuation bubbles in stocks and real estate are due for a breather, if not an outright reversal. Retail sales are flat, and with all these headwinds, growing profits by 10% to 20% a year becomes impossible for the vast majority of enterprises.
 
So what happens to local governments when the economy rolls over? Tax revenues decline.
 
The consensus is that local governments are sitting pretty: sales and property values have risen smartly, pushing tax revenues higher, and the cost of borrowing money via tax-free municipal bonds has fallen. Nice, but these are all functions of expansion and rising tax rates.
 
The uneven nature of the “recovery” has left some cities and states more vulnerable to a downturn than others.Let’s catalog the various risk factors that might become consequential as the global and U.S. economies weaken.

1. Those dependent on foreign tourism. The weak dollar made America a bargain destination for the past decade. As the dollar strengthens and other currencies lose purchasing power, America is no longer a bargain–especially as job cuts decimate the number of people who can blow a few thousand dollars on overseas vacations to the U.S.
 
2. Auto manufacturing-dependent locales. Vehicle sales have been strong, and the cheerleaders claim sales will keep rising for years to come. Really? With what money? As soon as layoffs hit the marginal workforce and the subprime auto loan bubble implodes, vehicle sales will follow suit.
 
3. Cities and states that depend heavily on capital gains taxes. Once the current housing and stock bubbles deflate–or simply stop expanding–tax revenues from the enormous capital gains reaped in the past five years will wither.
 
4. Locales dependent on high income taxes. Given that most of the job growth of the past five years has occurred in low-wage sectors, adding jobs hasn’t boosted income taxes much. High income-tax states have jacked up rates on high-income earners, but there is no law of nature that says high-income jobs will survive a global downturn.
 
Rather, enterprises desperate to tighten operating costs will want to jettison high-cost employees first.
 
5. Local governments with enormous debt burdens. With interest rates low, municipalities and states went to the bond market over the past few years for “free money.” Once tax revenues plummet, the interest on all that “free money” will take a larger percentage of tax revenues, heightening the cost of new bond debt as buyers start adding in the risk of eventual default.
 
6. Locales with high fixed costs. These include high healthcare costs for homeless, elderly, government employees, etc., interest on all those bonds, government employee pensions, etc. The fixed costs only increase every year, regardless of tax revenues. Every local government with high fixed costs is in a tightening fiscal vice once tax revenues plummet.
 
7. Local governments with generous employee benefits and pensions. Once the stock market rolls over, the big capital gains that have funded public pension plans dry up, and the annual contribution has to be paid out of declining tax revenues.
 
Should interest rates actually rise, pension fund bond portfolios would plummet in value, too.
 
8. Local governments dominated by self-serving entrenched interests. That is, all of them: sclerotic, self-serving, entrenched interests resolutely refuse to accept any cuts in their swag. As tax revenues fall off a cliff, government managers will face a dilemma: they can’t cut costs because the self-serving interests have made that politically impossible, and they can’t borrow money for operating expenses.

That leaves defaulting on debt as the only choice left. And since that’s the only choice left, that’s what they’ll do.
 
The vice will close on some cities and states sooner than others, but it will eventually squeeze every city and state with declining revenues and rising fixed costs into default.

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-11-12/which-citiesstates-will-be-first-default-when-economy-rolls-over

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This Alarming Map of How Deep in Debt Americans Are Shows Us the Real Strength of Our ‘Recovery’

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This Alarming Map of How Deep in Debt Americans Are Shows Us the Real Strength of Our ‘Recovery’


The USA Today published a map based on Urban Institute figures that give us a perfectly clear idea about how deep in debt Americans are.

According to the Urban Institute, as many as 35% of Americans are currently in debt collections. The USA Today reports that the 77 million people in debt collections owe an average of $5,200 in debt.

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Accompanying this is a map of the average debt of each American by state:

Most of the debt being accumulated is due to the hangover of the housing market crisis, when the American people lost a third of their wealth. In addition, college students now owe a collective $1 trillion, the U.S. government currently owes $17.6 trillion, and future generations owe at least $100 trillion.

The states with the highest debt loads tend to be southern states, along with Washington D.C. and Nevada.

The U.S. government’s attempt to prevent voters from facing the consequences of their decisions is leading to an unsustainable economy. Our system is falling prey to the popular delusion that it is possible to maintain the American Dream without everyone having to work hard to achieve it.

Those citizens who are most willing to work hard to achieve the American Dream have to face a tough reality: the government is working as hard as they are to confiscate their earnings and to redistribute them.

The economy gets increasingly inefficient due to government intervention, and more debt is needed to patch it over. The cozy dream that massive debt can be prolonged in perpetuity is a comfortable one – one that is always followed by a rude awakening.

At what point do Americans look at debt for what it is: a sign that the current economic system isn’t working?

https://www.ijreview.com/2014/07/162503-see-map-deep-debt-americans-youll-doubt-recovery/