The video owner has disabled playback on external websites.

This video is no longer available on YouTube.

This video cannot be played right now.

Watch on YouTube

Desbloquea herramientas de aprendizaje con IA

Regístrate para acceder a herramientas potentes que te ayudan a aprender más rápido con cada video.

Explicación de escena Cazador de frases Repaso con tarjetas Práctica de imitación Responder
Regístrate gratis
B1 Intermedio Inglés 15:44 2,142 palabras News

Why global debt keeps growing ($345 trillion and counting)

VICE · 284,302 vistas · Añadido hace 3 días

Resumen IA

This video provides a comprehensive historical and economic overview of how global debt evolved into the foundation of our modern financial system. Viewers will trace the journey of debt from ancient personal promises to the 1971 "Nixon Shock," which transformed the U.S. dollar into fiat currency. By exploring how debt functions as a structural necessity rather than a last resort, you will gain a clearer understanding of the "closed loop" relationship between global lenders and borrowers. Ultimately, this summary helps learners grasp the mechanics of government bonds and the complex, interconnected nature of today’s global economy.

Estadísticas de aprendizaje

B1

Nivel MCER

2,142

Total de palabras

846

Palabras únicas

4/10

Dificultad

Diversidad de vocabulario 39%

Subtítulos (354 segmentos)

00:00

It's August 15th, 1971. President

00:04

Richard Nixon appears on live television

00:06

and announces that the United States

00:08

will no longer convert dollars into

00:10

gold.

00:11

>> I have directed Secretary Connley to

00:13

suspend temporarily the convertability

00:15

of the dollar into gold or other reserve

00:18

assets.

00:19

>> It seems like a minor technicality, but

00:21

what follows is monumental. Money once

00:24

anchored to something physical becomes

00:26

pure fiat currency backed by nothing

00:29

more than government decree.

00:32

Immediately thereafter things begin to

00:34

change. Global debt takes a life of its

00:37

own and over the next few decades it

00:39

balloons from billions to trillions.

00:42

Today it stands at $345 trillion give or

00:47

take. That's three times the size of the

00:49

entire global economy. America alone

00:52

accounts for 38 trillion of that. But

00:55

there's something strange about all

00:57

this. You see, the US owes China roughly

01:00

$770 billion. Yet, China itself is

01:04

drowning in $18 trillion worth of debt.

01:07

Much of it sits with Chinese banks, the

01:11

same banks that also own American debt.

01:14

American banks, in turn, are holding

01:16

debt from China, Europe, and just about

01:18

everyone else. But here's the paradox.

01:22

If everyone owes money to everyone else,

01:25

then who is all that money actually

01:27

going to? The answer isn't what you

01:30

think. Follow the money far enough, and

01:32

the trail circles back to where it

01:34

started. The world essentially owes

01:37

money to itself, and it works so long as

01:40

no one checks the math. Today's video is

01:44

sponsored by Sift. Every day, we're

01:46

flooded with information. There are too

01:48

many headlines, too little context, and

01:51

half the story is happening in languages

01:54

most of us don't even see or understand.

01:57

Sift takes a completely different

01:59

approach. Instead of chasing headlines,

02:02

you start with a topic you actually care

02:04

about. SIFT then scans trusted local and

02:08

global sources across countries and

02:10

languages and translates and summarizes

02:14

the key developments into one clear

02:16

readable feed. So you're not just seeing

02:20

how a story is framed, you're seeing

02:22

what's actually happening, often before

02:24

it reaches mainstream coverage. It's

02:27

less about comparing headlines and more

02:29

about following how a topic actually

02:32

evolves around the world. It's loved by

02:34

thousands of people and is even the

02:37

number one ranking news app in several

02:39

countries. Sift builds a personalized

02:42

feed around whatever you want to follow.

02:45

And because it pulls from local sources

02:47

worldwide, you get broader coverage,

02:50

real context, and clarity you won't get

02:53

from just one country's media without

02:55

bouncing between the apps. It also stays

02:58

on top of updates with realtime coverage

03:00

and notifications. And if you want the

03:03

full context, [music] you can always

03:05

click through and go deeper. So if you

Subtítulos completos disponibles en el reproductor

Vocabulario clave (45)

you A1 pronoun

Used to refer to the person or people that the speaker is addressing. It is the second-person pronoun used for both singular and plural subjects and objects.

people A1 noun

People refers to a group of human beings or the general public. It is the standard plural form of the word 'person'.

keep A1 verb

To continue to have or hold something in your possession or at your disposal. It also means to remain in a specific state, condition, or position without changing.

Practica con ejercicios

Genera ejercicios de vocabulario, gramática y comprensión de este video

Vocabulario y gramática Test de comprensión Examen IELTS Práctica de escritura
Regístrate para practicar
¡No hay comentarios todavía. Sé el primero en compartir tus ideas!

Regístrate para desbloquear todas las funciones

Sigue tu progreso, guarda vocabulario y practica con ejercicios

Aprende idiomas gratis