How Countries Go Broke: The Big CycleSimon and Schuster, 03/06/2025 - 400 من الصفحات #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER “Advance copies of Ray Dalio’s new book about how countries go broke have become a hot read in Washington.” —The New York Times “This book is a gift to humanity….Ray provides a solution to what is the biggest and most certain threat to our prosperity.” —Henry M. Paulson Jr. “An invaluable resource for policymakers, investors, and citizens.” —Lawrence H. Summers An urgent warning about the American economy from Ray Dalio, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Principles. Do big government debts threaten our collective well-being? Are there limits to debt growth? Can a big, important reserve currency country like the United States really go broke—and what would that look like? For decades, politicians, policymakers, and investors have debated these questions, but the answers have eluded them. In this groundbreaking book, Ray Dalio, one of the greatest investors of our time who anticipated the 2008 global financial crisis and the 2010–12 European debt crisis, shares for the first time his detailed explanation of what he calls the “Big Debt Cycle.” Understanding this cycle is critical for helping policymakers, investors, and the general public grasp where we are and where we are headed with the debt issue. Dalio’s model points toward surprisingly straightforward solutions for dealing with the debt problems that the US, Europe, Japan, and China face today. How Countries Go Broke also shows how these debt problems are related to the other forces—political within countries, geopolitical between countries, natural (droughts, floods, and pandemics), and technological (most importantly, AI)—that together are causing what Dalio calls the “Overall Big Cycle” changes in the world order. By reading this book, you will improve your understanding of what’s happening now and what to do about it. |
المحتوى
PART | 6 |
The Big Debt Cycle in a Tiny Nutshell | 13 |
The Mechanics in Words and Concepts | 35 |
The Mechanics in Numbers and Equations | 65 |
PART II | 92 |
The Private Sector and Central Government Debt Crisis Stages 14 | 105 |
From 1865 to 1945 in a Tiny Nutshell | 187 |
A Brief Review of the Big Debt Cycle from 1945 to Now | 195 |
Since 2020Pandemic and Big Fiscal Deficits Monetized | 255 |
Chinas Big Cycle from 194549 Until Now in a Tiny Nutshell | 267 |
The Japanese Case and the Lessons It Provides | 289 |
PART IV | 323 |
My 3 3Part Solution | 335 |
What the Future Looks LIke to Me | 359 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
and/or balance sheet Big Cycle Big Debt Cycle bond yield borrower-debtors borrowing bubble capital central bank central government Changing World Order chapter China Chinese classic conflict countries create cuts debt and debt debt assets debt burdens debt crisis debt levels debt monetization debt problems debt service debt-to-income debt-to-income ratio default deleveraging devaluation dollar domestic Donald Trump dynamic economic geopolitical global gold government debt government's GOVT DEBT happen increase inflation rate inflation-indexed bond inflationary internal investment investors Japan Japanese leaders leads lender-creditors long-term debt cycle look markets monetary policy monetary system money and credit nominal interest rates numbers period policy makers political print money private sector produce quantitative easing real interest rates real yield relative to incomes reserve currency restructuring revenue rise risk selling short-term debt cycle spending stage storehold of wealth technologies template things tightening typically world order yield curve
