Which means governments can print or they can spend, but they can’t do both simply because production buys goods, services, and labor, not printed money. Markets are wise.
"Rich Dad Poor Dad" author Robert Kiyosaki says printing more money will lead to its devaluation which, in turn, will raise ...
And well: 2025 is one of the strongest years for global money printing, only trailing behind 2017 and 2020. We all know what happened in 2020: a large global fiscal stimulus was set in motion to ...
The Monopoly board is based in Atlantic City, New Jersey. More than six billion houses and 2.25 billion hotels have been made ...
The author of the personal finance best-seller Rich Dad Poor Dad, Robert Kiyosaki, says the so-called “everything bubble” is ...
It begins with Bourassa’s teenage criminal hustle and follows his transformation from a mechanic to a drug dealer before his ...
HoldCo Bros are back! @NikonomicsPodcast and I talk about three ideas in this episode, following up from Episode #86. We ...
Abraham Lincoln was three years away from being elected president when the half-cent coin was discontinued as an official ...
For more than 125 years, the United States had a gold-coin, silver-coin monetary system. No, it was not a paper-money system ...
The Sign Printing Industries Association, an organisation representing flex printing units, has committed to buying back the ...
Mike Maharrey argues that decades of artificially low interest rates and nearly $9 trillion in quantitative easing, combined ...
After the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed expanded its balance sheet from $900 billion to $4.5 trillion through multiple rounds of QE, creating roughly $3.6 trillion out of thin air. By the end of that ...