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18:45, 25 maj 2021: 91.199.42.85 (dyskusja) uruchomił(a) filtr 1, wykonując „edit” na The Financial System Limit. Podjęte działania: Ostrzeżenie; Opis filtru: Link spamming (sprawdź)

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How I realised there is afinancial system limit, and wrote a book of the same name:-<br><br>In 2018, I wondered how much economic output was being spent on interest.  Occasionally, when I had time for research, I looked for economic studies relating the cost of interest to economic output.  But I foundnothing.  Nobody seemed interested in investigating the connection between cost of borrowing and economic growth.<br><br>After a few months I tried collecting my own data.  Economic output (GDP, gross domestic product) was easy.  And I found many statistics about government debt.  Private sector debt?  One could find borrowing figures for particular types of debts, but no interest expense.  How much do people and businesses actually spend on interest?  There is little reliable data.<br><br>Therefore I formed my own estimates.  The result: a calculation that one-fifth of economic activity is defrayed on interest.  It’s an awful figure.  Yet nobody thinks about it.  Journalists and politicians run after government debt data, but are quiet about how much the private sector wastes.<br><br>I then tried to find a trend, which produced another surprise: using sample credit card costs, interest rates paid by households and businesses have been rising even though interest paid to depositors has fallen to nil.  Again, a problem that nobody is concerned about.  Is the cost of interest a brake on economic progress?<br><br>Some eight years ago, I gave a couple of talks based around another concept.  Central banks stimulate to escape downturns, creating extra private sector debt that itself causes the next economic upset perhaps ten years later.  This central banking cycle, the cost of private sector interest, and one-fifth of economic output wasted interest, set out the basics of the theory.  All that remained was to establish the shortcomings of popular solutions to excess debt, add some case studies, and a book was born.  There are two case studies, a country (Puerto Rico) and the UK company Carillion.<br><br>You can read the first chapter free, with no registration requirement, on the publisher’s website.  The text is non-technical so that anyone can follow the argument.  A modestly-priced e-book is available now and a paperback edition is on sale in some countries.  The hardback edition will be published in the USA on 21st June and in Britain on 23rd August.<br><br>DK<br>For more information visit https://www.sparklingbooks.com/the-financial-system-limit.html

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'How I realised there is afinancial system limit, and wrote a book of the same name:-<br><br>In 2018, I wondered how much economic output was being spent on interest. Occasionally, when I had time for research, I looked for economic studies relating the cost of interest to economic output. But I foundnothing. Nobody seemed interested in investigating the connection between cost of borrowing and economic growth.<br><br>After a few months I tried collecting my own data. Economic output (GDP, gross domestic product) was easy. And I found many statistics about government debt. Private sector debt? One could find borrowing figures for particular types of debts, but no interest expense. How much do people and businesses actually spend on interest? There is little reliable data.<br><br>Therefore I formed my own estimates. The result: a calculation that one-fifth of economic activity is defrayed on interest. It’s an awful figure. Yet nobody thinks about it. Journalists and politicians run after government debt data, but are quiet about how much the private sector wastes.<br><br>I then tried to find a trend, which produced another surprise: using sample credit card costs, interest rates paid by households and businesses have been rising even though interest paid to depositors has fallen to nil. Again, a problem that nobody is concerned about. Is the cost of interest a brake on economic progress?<br><br>Some eight years ago, I gave a couple of talks based around another concept. Central banks stimulate to escape downturns, creating extra private sector debt that itself causes the next economic upset perhaps ten years later. This central banking cycle, the cost of private sector interest, and one-fifth of economic output wasted interest, set out the basics of the theory. All that remained was to establish the shortcomings of popular solutions to excess debt, add some case studies, and a book was born. There are two case studies, a country (Puerto Rico) and the UK company Carillion.<br><br>You can read the first chapter free, with no registration requirement, on the publisher’s website. The text is non-technical so that anyone can follow the argument. A modestly-priced e-book is available now and a paperback edition is on sale in some countries. The hardback edition will be published in the USA on 21st June and in Britain on 23rd August.<br><br>DK<br>For more information visit https://www.sparklingbooks.com/the-financial-system-limit.html'
Diff wszystkich zmian dokonanych podczas edycji (edit_diff)
'@@ -1,0 +1,1 @@ +How I realised there is afinancial system limit, and wrote a book of the same name:-<br><br>In 2018, I wondered how much economic output was being spent on interest. Occasionally, when I had time for research, I looked for economic studies relating the cost of interest to economic output. But I foundnothing. Nobody seemed interested in investigating the connection between cost of borrowing and economic growth.<br><br>After a few months I tried collecting my own data. Economic output (GDP, gross domestic product) was easy. And I found many statistics about government debt. Private sector debt? One could find borrowing figures for particular types of debts, but no interest expense. How much do people and businesses actually spend on interest? There is little reliable data.<br><br>Therefore I formed my own estimates. The result: a calculation that one-fifth of economic activity is defrayed on interest. It’s an awful figure. Yet nobody thinks about it. Journalists and politicians run after government debt data, but are quiet about how much the private sector wastes.<br><br>I then tried to find a trend, which produced another surprise: using sample credit card costs, interest rates paid by households and businesses have been rising even though interest paid to depositors has fallen to nil. Again, a problem that nobody is concerned about. Is the cost of interest a brake on economic progress?<br><br>Some eight years ago, I gave a couple of talks based around another concept. Central banks stimulate to escape downturns, creating extra private sector debt that itself causes the next economic upset perhaps ten years later. This central banking cycle, the cost of private sector interest, and one-fifth of economic output wasted interest, set out the basics of the theory. All that remained was to establish the shortcomings of popular solutions to excess debt, add some case studies, and a book was born. There are two case studies, a country (Puerto Rico) and the UK company Carillion.<br><br>You can read the first chapter free, with no registration requirement, on the publisher’s website. The text is non-technical so that anyone can follow the argument. A modestly-priced e-book is available now and a paperback edition is on sale in some countries. The hardback edition will be published in the USA on 21st June and in Britain on 23rd August.<br><br>DK<br>For more information visit https://www.sparklingbooks.com/the-financial-system-limit.html '
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[ 0 => 'How I realised there is afinancial system limit, and wrote a book of the same name:-<br><br>In 2018, I wondered how much economic output was being spent on interest. Occasionally, when I had time for research, I looked for economic studies relating the cost of interest to economic output. But I foundnothing. Nobody seemed interested in investigating the connection between cost of borrowing and economic growth.<br><br>After a few months I tried collecting my own data. Economic output (GDP, gross domestic product) was easy. And I found many statistics about government debt. Private sector debt? One could find borrowing figures for particular types of debts, but no interest expense. How much do people and businesses actually spend on interest? There is little reliable data.<br><br>Therefore I formed my own estimates. The result: a calculation that one-fifth of economic activity is defrayed on interest. It’s an awful figure. Yet nobody thinks about it. Journalists and politicians run after government debt data, but are quiet about how much the private sector wastes.<br><br>I then tried to find a trend, which produced another surprise: using sample credit card costs, interest rates paid by households and businesses have been rising even though interest paid to depositors has fallen to nil. Again, a problem that nobody is concerned about. Is the cost of interest a brake on economic progress?<br><br>Some eight years ago, I gave a couple of talks based around another concept. Central banks stimulate to escape downturns, creating extra private sector debt that itself causes the next economic upset perhaps ten years later. This central banking cycle, the cost of private sector interest, and one-fifth of economic output wasted interest, set out the basics of the theory. All that remained was to establish the shortcomings of popular solutions to excess debt, add some case studies, and a book was born. There are two case studies, a country (Puerto Rico) and the UK company Carillion.<br><br>You can read the first chapter free, with no registration requirement, on the publisher’s website. The text is non-technical so that anyone can follow the argument. A modestly-priced e-book is available now and a paperback edition is on sale in some countries. The hardback edition will be published in the USA on 21st June and in Britain on 23rd August.<br><br>DK<br>For more information visit https://www.sparklingbooks.com/the-financial-system-limit.html' ]
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Unixowy znacznik czasu „timestamp” dla zmiany (timestamp)
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