Wednesday, 3 August 2022
[Post 146] How a 16-year-old is making a fortune by purchasing from Walmart and reselling on Amazon | CNBC make it
Monday, 1 August 2022
[Post 145] Making $44K A Year As A Sanitation Worker In NYC | On The Job
Sunday, 31 July 2022
[Post 144] Why I Left My $116K Law Job To Work A $15/Hour Firefighting Job | On The Side
Tuesday, 26 July 2022
[Post 137] Young Investors | Channel NewsAsia Connect
Monday, 25 July 2022
[Post 136] A Singapore family's tips for fighting inflation | CNA
Sunday, 24 July 2022
[Post 135] The economic of IKEA:How they keep you in it's store? | WSJ
Summary
Counterintuitive though it may seem, part of furniture giant IKEA’s success stems from its policy requiring its customers to build its products. In this video, WSJ explains the behavioral psychology behind the “IKEA effect.”
Personal Takeaway
1.Flat furniture packing to reduce shipping and transportation costs
2.Design of the store layout to allow customers to spend the day testing out the product.
3.Affordable and low-cost furniture
4.When a customer builds something themselves, they become more attached to it.
Saturday, 23 July 2022
[Post 134] How does raising interest rates control inflation? | The Economist
Summary
When central banks raise interest rates, the impact is felt far and wide. Mortgages become more expensive, house prices might fall and unemployment can rise. So why do central banks do it? This film tells you why.
Personal Takeaway
1.A higher interest rate encourages people to save money and spend less. Lower interest rate = more spending; do not want to leave money in the bank
2.A central bank is a bank for banks; a commercial bank can deposit its reserves at an central bank
3.High inflation rate= higher interest rate
4.Difficult to predict when inflation will fall when interest rates are raised.