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Saturday 02 May 2026 05:28:41 GMT
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m.38.tui.5.a.con
Kênh của hương . :
Đẹp quá
2026-05-02 07:02:15
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hongvan3637
hongvan :
Xinh 🥰
2026-05-03 05:07:40
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thanhnt2210
thanhnt2210 :
Hoa nhìn đẹp quá. Như thật ấy. Cái lo cũng hợp nữa
2026-05-02 05:33:27
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nguyenthibichthuy349
Mẹ Ý :
Đẹp lắm luôn
2026-05-02 05:41:17
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ori_likeyou
Órange 🍊 :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-02 05:55:24
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xaque2604
xaque2604 :
🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-05-02 13:48:37
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Is it all a scam? Professor Jiang Xuejin tackles a question that many people have asked at some point: if governments and central banks can create more money, why are there still poor people? The answer lies in understanding the difference between money and wealth. Money itself is simply a tool used to exchange value. Real wealth comes from things that people actually need and use every day, such as food, energy, housing, land, technology, infrastructure, and human productivity. These resources require time, effort, and capital to create, and they are not unlimited. Creating more money does not automatically create more homes, more food, or more opportunities. When the supply of money grows faster than the supply of real goods and services, prices often rise. As a result, the people with the fewest resources can end up struggling even more as the cost of living increases. This perspective challenges the common belief that poverty exists because there is not enough money in the system. The deeper issue is access to real resources, opportunities, education, and productive economic activity. Wealth is not measured by how much currency exists. It is measured by the value a society is capable of producing and distributing. The conversation shifts the focus from printing money to creating value. Reducing poverty is not about increasing the number of dollars in circulation. It is about expanding access to the things that improve people's lives and creating systems that allow more people to participate in that prosperity. Media: Predictive History (YT) Follow to expand your business mindset every day. #wealth #money #businesstips #ceo #finance
Is it all a scam? Professor Jiang Xuejin tackles a question that many people have asked at some point: if governments and central banks can create more money, why are there still poor people? The answer lies in understanding the difference between money and wealth. Money itself is simply a tool used to exchange value. Real wealth comes from things that people actually need and use every day, such as food, energy, housing, land, technology, infrastructure, and human productivity. These resources require time, effort, and capital to create, and they are not unlimited. Creating more money does not automatically create more homes, more food, or more opportunities. When the supply of money grows faster than the supply of real goods and services, prices often rise. As a result, the people with the fewest resources can end up struggling even more as the cost of living increases. This perspective challenges the common belief that poverty exists because there is not enough money in the system. The deeper issue is access to real resources, opportunities, education, and productive economic activity. Wealth is not measured by how much currency exists. It is measured by the value a society is capable of producing and distributing. The conversation shifts the focus from printing money to creating value. Reducing poverty is not about increasing the number of dollars in circulation. It is about expanding access to the things that improve people's lives and creating systems that allow more people to participate in that prosperity. Media: Predictive History (YT) Follow to expand your business mindset every day. #wealth #money #businesstips #ceo #finance

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