Newfie wrote:There are many forms of slavery. In the USA health care come gia your job. So here slavery has 3 shackles: marriage and kids, mortgage, health care. That pretty well ties you into the system.
Newfie wrote:There are many forms of slavery. In the USA health care come gia your job. So here slavery has 3 shackles: marriage and kids, mortgage, health care. That pretty well ties you into the system.
AgentR11 wrote:Even if you're done with kids and mortgage, there's still property tax or rent, no escape there either.
Newfie wrote:As to health I have been astonishingly lucky, so far. We are all one cancer diagnosis or stroke from catastrophe.
AgentR11 wrote:Probably not a bad benchmark, though I'm far short of that extreme. My docs seem kinda weird though, more interested in reducing meds where possible and trying to get me to eat keto... I've not done anything to select them that way, just the luck of the draw.
What's happening: Instead of the robust bounceback much of the world experienced with its pandemic reopening, the Chinese economy is muddling along with weak growth, falling prices, a popped real estate bubble, and mass unemployment among young adults.
Cracks have been evident in the Chinese growth juggernaut for years, as its government exerted a heavier hand with businesses, constricting private-sector investment.
The French leader stated that the rebels put Niger’s population at risk by "refusing to fight terrorism and moving away from beneficial economic policy"
China's economy is turning into a big black blob.
This transformation means that while the country's economy will still be significant to global business, it will no longer be the lodestar for growth. It will still advance, but much more slowly. And while those on the outside will still be able to observe the economy, it will become increasingly difficult to truly understand what's going on within.
Newfie wrote:More China financial news.It will still advance, but much more slowly. And while those on the outside will still be able to observe the economy, it will become increasingly difficult to truly understand what's going on within.
japan, South Korea, and Vietnam all have the same mentality that a resurgence of China means that they would be again to be dominated by China. For millennium, China was the sole great power in East Asia. Many of kings of South Korea and Vietnam would need to seek China's recognition for legitimacy.
Therefore, from their prospective, a powerful China is not in their interests.
Besides the Indian rupee, India’s trade payments to Russia have been a mix of UAE dirhams and the Chinese yuan so far.
Brazil continues to import Russian refined products while decreasing imports from the US, market data and sources indicate, pushing the price of diesel in Brazil lower.
AgentR11 wrote:Don't have a cool article link, but China is dumping USD treasuries at a colossal rate, more than enough to disturb the exchange rate. That may explain much of the deflation, and if so, its a temporary thing once they stop (or run out of USDT ). Once done, it'll reveal the true USD/Yuan exchange rate, and barring war and weirdness will likely be moderately stable.
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