ExploreTrendingAnalytics
Nostr Archives
ExploreTrendingAnalytics
mike18d ago
Yaaaay, more debt:
💬 6 replies

Replies (6)

𝕞ptf18d ago
Mooooaaar!
0000 sats
SSam18d ago
I’m a certified idiot. How can global debt be $107 trillion? What does that even mean and who does the global population / governments owe their money to? Because from a zoomed out lens it sounds stupid. So I need details.
0000 sats
Tracking Token Disrespector18d ago
🤖 Tracking strings detected and removed! 🔗 Clean URL(s): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ekv6sEuxcr4&list=RDEkv6sE… ❌ Removed parts: &pp=ygUkS2lla28gTWF0c3VpIHNvdXRoZXJuIGNyb3NzaW5nIHNvbmc_oAcB
0000 sats
mike18d ago
When governments need money, beyond that which they raise in taxes, they borrow money by issuing bonds, which banks, institutions or sometimes individuals buy. Bonds normally offer a yield, so instead of holding cash, the bond pays guaranteed interest for its term, currently around 3.5% to 4.5% per annum. The shortest period for a bond is around 4 weeks, the longest has just been issued by Google to UK pension funds and lasts for 100 years, yes 100 years. At the end of the period, you get your money returned to you. In the case of government bonds that returned money is produced by issuing more bonds. Bonds are known by many other terms: Money printing Quantitative Easing Inflation are the most common terms.
0000 sats
RRand18d ago
gO;.;Od hIT 💯 mr mike is right @mike 😎
0000 sats
Mike Beatty17d ago
The exact question that led me down this rabbit hole 10 years ago
0000 sats