Font Size
15px

545: Chapter 90 MAGA!

(Daily Thousands!) 545: Chapter 90 MAGA!

(Daily Thousands!) Human history is a constant search for the right social system.

At different historical stages, there will always be those who claim they have found a perfect system.

One that could disregard factors such as the level of productive forces, technological conditions, cultural backgrounds, and be applicable to all societies.

On December 25, 1991, as the red flag slowly descended from atop the Kremlin, many once again believed that history had provided an answer.

Arica, as the victor of the highest intensity competition in human history, the Cold War, ca to be regarded as the model and ultimate form of human society, leaving other nations with no need to explore, but only to learn and emulate.

However, the evolution of human society did not stop with their praises.

The Bahamas, a flowerbed tightly controlled in Arica’s backyard, has never held its fate in its own hands.

When the Bahamas began to bet on cryptocurrency, it was actually representing an underlying trend that was hidden beneath the surface.

So people, the end-users feeding off the modern financial system, were attempting a different path.

Planes flew over the Bahamas and began to circle downwards.

In the cabin, Cheng Daqi took Mi’er’s hand, educating her about the underlying logic of cryptocurrency.

“The history of human currency can be simply summarized in three stages: the primitive stage of bartering, with actual goods serving as a universal equivalent.

Then ca the stage of physical currency, which, strictly speaking, encompasses even the Bretton Woods system.

But the US dollar pegged to physical gold lacked imagination; the value of assets had to be anchored to real monetary collateral, capping the limit to capital proliferation.

Then, the credit system and fiat money appeared, capitalists began plundering wealth from the future, all-encompassing debts mortgaged future production for current value.”

19th century Aricans could not possibly imagine, before the ’08 financial crisis, that to buy a house in New York, only a few thousand dollars down paynt or even zero down paynt was necessary.

With the help of fiat currency, humans achieved the most rapid developnt in history in the 21st century, as technological progress and social developnt unfolded at an unprecedented pace in various countries around the world to varying degrees.

However, this developnt gained through debt expansion ca at a cost.

When the national debt beca insurmountable, corporate debt took on the responsibility to alleviate the pressure.

When corporate debt also reached its limit, personal and household debt beca the last reservoir.”

Cheng Daqi thought of Hua Country, whose developntal path perfectly fits the trajectory of debt expansion: state – enterprise – individual.

In the future, when Hua Country’s private household sector debt reaches its limit, Hua Country’s economy will completely enter a period of slow growth.

After Japan’s household debt was detonated by Arica, it faced a lost thirty years.

After Arica’s household debt reached its limit, it was the ’08 financial crisis (from which it has not recovered to this day, the balance sheet contraction has not outpaced the growth of debt…)

(Here’s data from Arica, as real estate debt is the main form of household debt and is representative.

I won’t include dostic figures as I’m not establishing policies or inserting private goods, because this matter is simply a fact…)

“Chan, you have a loophole here.

It’s not actually a problem with the debt but with the design of the system; debt itself is not wrong.”

The dark-haired wealthy woman, after all, is a big capitalist.

The sum of her debt and her family’s may be in the tens of billions, and to her, the notion that debt causes problems is nonsense.

“Of course, do you know about Arica’s monetary history during the Civil War?”

Cheng Daqi discussed Arica’s currency during the Civil War, which left Mi’er confused.

“The details are a bit vague; was there anything special about that ti?”

“During the Arican Civil War, the Great Commander, President Lincoln, issued a type of currency called greenbacks, a state-issued and endorsed fiat currency.

However, the monarchs of Europe had already bonded with private bankers, who would not allow such a state-backed currency to erge, as it challenged the rights of private banks to issue money.

(The nationalization of the Bank of England occurred only after it played Arica’s lapdog, which is absolutely preposterous).

At that ti, London newspapers explicitly wrote, ‘If this financial policy, which started as a joke from North Arica, becos entrenched, then governnts will have cost-free money.

This money can be used to pay off debts.

This system will provide enough money to support comrce.

This will lead to unprecedented economic prosperity.

The wealthy and intelligent from around the world will go to North Arica.

This country will be destroyed or will destroy any monarchy.’

Later on, the greenbacks, influenced by various factors, beca a failed experint, and the pattern of currency issuance dominated by Arica and Europe’s private banks was set in stone, up to the present.

But a few years ago, so people realized the US dollar hegemony might dissolve, hence they tried to promote the Paris Climate Agreent, aiming to build an energy-based currency in the next stage after fiat currency.”

The dark-haired wealthy woman knew about the Paris Climate Agreent and understood it as a tool developed countries use to exploit developing ones, but she hadn’t realized the twists and turns involved.

“Chan, the oil-dollar system is already an energy-currency binding, and the Federal Reserve even backs it with Arica’s national debt-paying capacity as credit endorsent.

If a new currency is created, wouldn’t that be digging our own grave?”

You are reading My American magical life Chapter 545 - 545 90 MAGA! on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.