Unfortunately what is often seen as a one - time solution turns into an on -
going debt cycle that is hard to break.
Not exact matches
[16:00] Pain + reflection = progress [16:30] Creating a meritocracy to draw the best out of everybody [18:30] How to raise your probability of being right [18:50] Why we are conditioned to need to be right [19:30] The neuroscience factor [19:50] The habitual and environmental factor [20:20] How to get to the other side [21:20] Great collective decision - making [21:50] The 5 things you need to be successful [21:55] Create audacious goals [22:15] Why you need problems [22:25] Diagnose the problems to determine the root causes [22:50] Determine the design for what you will do about the root causes [23:00] Decide to work with people who are strong where you are weak [23:15] Push through to results [23:20] The loop of success [24:15] Ray's new instinctual approach to failure [24:40] Tony's ritual after every event [25:30] The review that changed Ray's outlook on leadership [27:30] Creating new policies based on fairness and truth [28:00] What people are missing about Ray's culture [29:30] Creating meaningful work and meaningful relationships [30:15] The importance of radical honesty [30:50] Thoughtful disagreement [32:10] Why it was the relationships that changed Ray's life [33:10] Ray's biggest weakness and how he overcame it [34:30] The jungle metaphor [36:00] The dot collector — deciding what to listen to [40:15] The wanting of meritocratic decision - making [41:40] How to see bubbles and busts [42:40] Productivity [43:00] Where we are in the
cycle [43:40] What the Fed will do [44:05] We are late in the long - term
debt cycle [44:30] Long - term
debt is
going to be squeezing us [45:00] We have 2 economies [45:30] This year is very similar to 1937 [46:10] The top tenth of the top 1 % of wealth = bottom 90 % combined [46:25] How this creates populism [47:00] The economy for the bottom 60 % isn't growing [48:20] If you look at averages, the country is in a bind [49:10] What are the overarching principles that bind us together?
* Information efficiency * Economic slack * Coordinated central banks * The dominance of China and India and their increased purchase of US
debt * USD and US assets as a continued safe haven * Rates have been
going down for 30 + years in a row, the trend is telling us we're more adept at managing inflation with each new
cycle
People have to
go into
debt for emergencies and then the
cycle of the rich getting richer starts.
In a July 2011 CapTon interview, back when the DSCC was about $ 2 million in the hole, Gianaris confidently predicted the Dems would be able to fully retire their
debt in time for this election
cycle, and then
go on to be sufficiently competitive to win back the majority.
Don't
go over this number unless you want to start dealing with the
cycle of
debt.
I started
debt - free life with nothing and
went into
debt, and the
cycle repeated.
But now we're
going through a turning point of the long - term
debt cycle and moving into the deleveraging phase.
But the U.S. has completed its deleveraging
cycle; personal
debt was reined in, real estate
went through its precipitous decline and Washington hit its
debt ceiling.
But with annual interest rates upwards of 400 percent, that could mean most, if not all, of your next paycheck
going straight to your lender, forcing you to continue borrowing more money and entering a
cycle of
debt you can't escape.
When each future paycheck is
going toward paying off your payday loans, you could very easily get stuck in an endless
cycle of
debt.
Since we began
going into CO2 deficit with regard to the Carbon
Cycle at an increasing interest rate — to extend omnologos» utterly incompetent analogy way beyond its scope of reasonable use — by what is now agreed to be almost 3 % more than the rate the Carbon
Cycle can pay it down, compounded annually, we have seen our CO2
debt shoot up as measured at Mauna Loa.
-- So it must
go up, the short
cycles of the 20th century have created a
debt that must be paid.
But with annual interest rates upwards of 400 percent, that could mean most, if not all, of your next paycheck
going straight to your lender, forcing you to continue borrowing more money and entering a
cycle of
debt you can't escape.