It's more complicated than that. The real issue is governments feel pressured to maintain high investment spending, but they've already exhausted most viable projects. Throwing money at increasingly marginal investments doesn't fix the problem—it just masks it. What actually needs to happen is a genuine reduction in investment levels, not a shuffle into fresh rounds of wasteful spending.
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Gm_Gn_Merchant
· 01-11 01:09
There's nothing wrong with that; right now, it's just burning money to fool around, and it can't solve the problem at all.
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GetRichLeek
· 01-10 20:15
Basically, it's the big players cutting the leeks, and the government is also taking a cut. Truly promising projects have already been drained, leaving only scraps. I think, instead of wasting time messing around, it's better to cut the budget directly, but who dares to do that?
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NoodlesOrTokens
· 01-08 08:55
ngl, this is the real truth. The government's trick of "keep spending money" to save the economy should have been exposed long ago. They can't even fund new projects anymore and are just messing around.
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LucidSleepwalker
· 01-08 08:54
Nah, this is a typical case of drinking poison to quench thirst. Who can't see through the false prosperity created by throwing money around?
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MevShadowranger
· 01-08 08:47
ngl that's a typical Ponzi scheme mindset... The government has long run out of liquidity but is still forcing new projects.
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GhostWalletSleuth
· 01-08 08:32
ngl this is a typical case of robbing Peter to pay Paul, the government has long run out of new ideas.
It's more complicated than that. The real issue is governments feel pressured to maintain high investment spending, but they've already exhausted most viable projects. Throwing money at increasingly marginal investments doesn't fix the problem—it just masks it. What actually needs to happen is a genuine reduction in investment levels, not a shuffle into fresh rounds of wasteful spending.