The game has many
save points spread throughout its areas.
Not exact matches
The
point which Ben very appropriately emphasizes is that unmanaged secular stagnation in one place is contagious — that a higher level of
saving over investment leading to low interest rates in one place, leads to current account surplus, leads to a capital outflow, which then leads to currency depreciation, leads to currency appreciation in other places, and leads therefore to
spreading low demand and low interest rates everywhere.
Investors spend hours researching funds for expense ratios and
spreads, trying to
save a few basis
points here and there.
Kartono's field offices also double as package - drop
points to
save costs on last - mile deliveries, with roughly 100 now
spread across the country.
But I admit that each of these different motivations drives me in part to earn rewards currencies in lieu of cash back: there are rewards currencies that I know will invariably
save me money compared to cash back, there are rewards currencies like Hilton HHonors
points that are so easy to earn and redeem that I'm able to
spread my hotel spending evenly throughout the year, and there are currencies I accumulate just to give myself permission to book trips I might otherwise consider too expensive.
Somehow these auto -
saves are still
spread into some of the oddest places, leaving you to replay large swaths of the chapter at some
points and
saving every 30 seconds in others.
This lead to
spread out
save points and the addition of check
points for convenience's sake.
Save points are
spread out perfectly.
As Craven
points out, what will
save us isn't the
spread of personal shifts in consumption; it's the
spread, among well - meaning people, of a new way to think about the risks of climate change.
The
point is to better understand the science in a realistic way so we can
spread the word among the ordinary busy people who just want to live decent lives and
save the world by buying «green.»