Ray Dalio’s debt cycles are like how your piggy bank works when you keep borrowing candies from your friend to buy more toys.
Imagine you have a piggy bank (your money), and every time you want something cool, you borrow candies (money) from your friend (the economy). At first, it's fun, you get more toys, and life is great. But if you keep borrowing candies without saving any, one day your friend might say, "Hey, I need my candies back!" That’s like a debt crisis.
How the Cycle Works
- Borrowing Fun: You borrow candies every time you want something new, just like countries borrowing money to grow.
- More Toys, More Debt: Each time you borrow, your piggy bank gets fuller (the economy grows), but you also owe more candies (more debt).
- Time for Payback: When your friend asks for their candies back, if you don’t have enough saved up, things get tough, that’s a debt crisis.
- Reset and Repeat: After paying back the candies, you start again, borrowing to buy more toys.
It's like having a favorite game that you play over and over, but sometimes you need a break to rest and save up for the next round!
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See also
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- What do GPS and AGPS mean?
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- What is Temperatures between 60°C and 75°C?
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