Don't care. It was all inflated salaries from unprofitable companies who depended on pumping VC cheap capital every month. They need to now show that they are profitable.
We also will now see which startups can afford to hire developers at over $350K/yr + bonus + stock options in an adverse, unfavourable market without VC capital. Oh wait...
Honestly, on a national scale (never mind international) we're the lucky ones. A slowdown that mainly hits us is better than a crash that hits everyone.
Like how deflation totally wrecked the PC industry because nobody ever buys computers, knowing that tomorrow's model will be more capable and less expensive? Or how if we knew grocery prices were going to be lower in a year, most people would forgo buying food and starve? </s>
The prices of things naturally want to go down - this is exactly what market optimization aims to do. The Fed has been creating ever more new money to erase the gains of economic and technological progress. If this new money were being spent by congress on tangible projects, then at least we'd have something to show for it. But instead it has all been wastefully dumped into creating an asset bubble that's just a huge handout to the rich. If you want to know the cause of ever growing rich-poor divide, look no further.
What's somewhat bad for the <1-5% of the nation isn't also bad for the rest of the workforce. Sane interest rates benefit all especially when it comes to valuations.
We also will now see which startups can afford to hire developers at over $350K/yr + bonus + stock options in an adverse, unfavourable market without VC capital. Oh wait...