Sanctions!!!

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ธ.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 45

  • @ТатьянаСлесаренко-д3ы
    @ТатьянаСлесаренко-д3ы 29 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Nice honeymoon, I hope🎉. Thank you for your desire to discover and experience something new. Being a Russian, I always watch your videos and admire the way you speak about my country. Those who respond in a negative way definitely stay home and do nothing, but you broaden your mind and horizons! Let them be their own judges. Relax and enjoy your new married life. Sanctions? Prices? Come to Russia, and you will be welcomed. Russians are generous people. The only sad thing is that we don't have a chance to admire the beauty of the UK now, but I strongly believe that everything will be fine! Be Jammy!

    • @BritishChef436
      @BritishChef436  29 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@ТатьянаСлесаренко-д3ы Thank you for such a wonderful comment. There will be videos from England coming next year. My wife is planning a trip to England soon.

  • @ЕгорАндреев-э1у
    @ЕгорАндреев-э1у หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Incomes grow faster than prices, that's the point. Prices can grow due to different reasons: a shortage or dependency on import (like the energy source, if a middle man appeared there, the prices grow, the incomes don't - incomes grow for the middle man, but that's a different story) or due to the fact that people produce more, sell more, sell more expensive, have more money and the other seller seeks to earn more from them too. It's never "high" or "low", it's always a relation or a combination of several factors. It's self-evident: if there's nothing there, a shortage, and / or a lot of people, too many people want that - that will be expensive. The other example is, if a rich man there, it'll also be expensive, just because he has money, compare the price of land on Rublevka to the price of land in the middle of nowhere - it is absolutely the same soil, neither golden nor nothing. If one eats a lot and stores are full of everything, what do interest rates matter (interest rates is not what people eat, though some have nothing else left for breakfast that's true), i.e. food with high prices simply sits in the shelves, nobody buys it because "so expensive" and it simply keeps showing up there over and over again, just to sit in there for no reason, houses being built, cars getting sold, etc. KGB stocks it up? High interest rates are due to economy being close to "overheating" point. A growth has its limits, physical limits. In order not to fall into a debt hole (the ultimate reason of all problems of the west), one has to bar people from borrowing on every nonsense, even if they have money, on a "bussiness" to start like "sale of LGBT flags". There are "preferential rates" - on mortgage, commercial loans, etc. it is from 1-2% for housing, 6-7% for bussiness, etc., for those who matter and make sense. For the rest, it's 21% (and as the head of the Central Bank said: "there's really no limit for increasing it"), to make them think, or, in case they didn't or aren't capable of thinking, to stop them on time, saving the whole economy from so many traps.

  • @annshansa
    @annshansa หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Цены на продукты питания, топливо и тд растут во всем мире и в тех же европейских странах где санкций нет. Это мировая тенденция
    А санкции, действительно, не работают так, как надеялись враги России, когда их вводили. И слава Богу

  • @v1ncy_vinny406
    @v1ncy_vinny406 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    The sanctions worked for sure. But I think the western media's narrative that Russia will be so devastated by the sanctions is exaggerated. What better way to demonstrate this than to show well stocked shops. You have a point thought and bloggers should not deminish the impact of sanctions

  • @ЕгорАлексеев-л3л
    @ЕгорАлексеев-л3л หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Prices were rising before the sanctions. Yes, they began to grow a little faster for some imported goods. But basic food and gasoline are produced domestically.

    • @BritishChef436
      @BritishChef436  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Current inflation is 9.1%, and interest rates are 21%. Just for context, England's interest rates are 4.9%

    • @ЕгорАндреев-э1у
      @ЕгорАндреев-э1у หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@BritishChef436 Japan's have been "negative" for a while, if aren't still. You know what Japan is?

    • @ЕгорАндреев-э1у
      @ЕгорАндреев-э1у หลายเดือนก่อน

      A very simpleton-explanation for what "Japan" is (which has, if I remember correctly, 250%, or something, debt): "I'll pay you a little, you just take this thing from me, take it for free" (still nobody really takes that), all of that in Japan - doesn't it sound fishy? Even if one has no education, etc.. Somewhat fishy? Well, in a well-educated manner it's called "debt sharing". This game is called "dry up an indebted cow but do not let it die (or a calamari for that matter), because a dead cow doesn't pay its debts or is basically useless for anything".

    • @user-cn8yl3br9k
      @user-cn8yl3br9k หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@BritishChef436Если в Англии ставка в 2 раза меньше почему вы здесь? Только не рассказывайте про лгбт

  • @user-di4yk4ak47
    @user-di4yk4ak47 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Чувак, оставайся в своей Британии, там цены не повышаются, там всё "отлично"! Там нет санкций. Мы здесь справимся как нибудь сами с санкциями

    • @BritishChef436
      @BritishChef436  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Ты не понимаешь.

    • @Alineus
      @Alineus หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@user-di4yk4ak47 отлично, я смотрю, справляетесь. В голову вам, таким "умникам" не приходит, что проблемы России надо искать в России.

  • @user-cn8yl3br9k
    @user-cn8yl3br9k หลายเดือนก่อน

    Prices have also increased in the USA and the EU. Did they put them on themselves too?

    • @BritishChef436
      @BritishChef436  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Do your research

    • @ЕгорАндреев-э1у
      @ЕгорАндреев-э1у หลายเดือนก่อน

      They did. And they increased differently. If 10-of-10 increase by 10% - it's terrible (or much worse, if everything of necessity increases by 30% and useless trash remains what it was, useless trash). On the other hand, if 1-of-10 increased by 100% (and 100 / 10 = "everything" or "in total" by 10% as well) and that 1 was dumped (and not only 1 dumped, but the other 9 improved in whatever it could be: quality, affordability, etc. turning into 10 even)... it's, well, what even I heard something on TV but oh yawn

    • @user-cn8yl3br9k
      @user-cn8yl3br9k หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@BritishChef436 Salaries and pensions are also indexed

  • @ЕгорАлексеев-л3л
    @ЕгорАлексеев-л3л หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It is still unknown who suffered more. Europe is also suffering from rising energy prices and, as a result, falling production.

    • @BritishChef436
      @BritishChef436  หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ЕгорАлексеев-л3л 100% And like I said. This isn't a negative video. But more of an information video for TH-camrs who don't understand what sanctions are

    • @BritishChef436
      @BritishChef436  หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@ЕгорАлексеев-л3л England expecially are feeling these high energy prices

    • @Alineus
      @Alineus หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​​@@BritishChef436 Only 4% of gas was imported to the UK from Russia in 2021. The main supplier of gas for the UK was Norway, Quatar and US

  • @alexanderkostiaev8484
    @alexanderkostiaev8484 หลายเดือนก่อน

    "Sanctions are designed..." is a fally to say. The so called sanctions are utterly illegal under international law and are a form of economic aggression. The aggressors do not design so called sanctions, they simply try to destroy a country's economy. So that you know none of your so called sanctions ever destroyed any country's economy or bent their will, even those who are not self sufficient, unlike Russia, which is.
    Whilst you claim to be motivated by the wish to inform, unfortunately the effect is the opposite. Your video was emotional but low on facts and analysis. It is due to ignorance that one would attribute inflation to so called sanctions. You are falsely crediting western aggression. Inflation is an indelible part of an economic cycle. Look at Turkey, NATO country next door to Russia. It is not under any sanctions but inflation is running at 50%. Look at the Baltic states next door, or Romania with 5%. The illegal sanctions are not the cause of price rises as western propaganda trumpets. The illegal sanctions were supposed to stime the economic growth and in this sense they utterly failed.

  • @НатальяШ-г7п
    @НатальяШ-г7п หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sweetheart, lot of money goes to the military operation ,the sanctions won't affect prices as much as you think, but to run whole country during war, that would spike the prices, just to run military complex alone 24×7, don't you think, moreover food prices, well not a significant change, for past 3 and half years ln the summer prices gone bit down in the winter up, overall Russia not the cheapest country in the world, that how it was B4 sanctions and nothing changed, so who ever said sanctions not working is right, because if it would of ,it would create a deficit, which we don't have, it's just small salaries and lack of jobs for qualified specialists, right now people after 45, especially women hard to find a well paid jobs, look at sources, they have to stay with low paying jobs, so don't get discouraged, who knows what gonna happen in near future ,we expats and regular Russian people may end up in WW3, this time it's going to be serious. Good luck with everything.

  • @criztaliz3413
    @criztaliz3413 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Could you explain why uk obsession to with russia is all about?
    Brexit but care soo much to Ukraine's which will join eu, why??

  • @Alineus
    @Alineus หลายเดือนก่อน

    Why would you think the economy of huge country which was making billions on oil&gas before sanctions should be ruined quickly? The sanctions doing it's job. I'm sure noone who put it in place was silly enough to think they will ruin economy in couple of months time.
    I love Russia to bits..but about 80% of population who supported that cruel war should experience something to make them think what they are doing. As 3 years of hell for Ukraine thousands of dead people from both sides are clearly is mad. For the sake of one mad person.

    • @ЕгорАндреев-э1у
      @ЕгорАндреев-э1у หลายเดือนก่อน

      Your memory is very short, isn't it? 3 years... Well, oh well, the one incapable of thinking is definitely not the one "to make someone think".

    • @vallystar
      @vallystar หลายเดือนก่อน

      Фу, как это лицимерно! Либо вы отрабатывает здесь пропаганду либо находитесь в заблуждении. Да, поддерживаем, потому что правду знаем. О том, как США и НАТО в целом накачивало Украину оружием, обрабатывало население, подталкивая к ненависти и войне. Знаем, что все это сделано с целью ослабить Россию. А сколько человек Украина убила с конца 2013 года? Мы не из новостей знаем, люди бежали оттуда и рассказывали.
      Политику фашизма - ненависти и вреда для населения России мы тоже видим. Можно это оболваненным европейцам внушать, а не нам. Фу на вас, и на вашу ложь. Стыд и позор.

    • @Alineus
      @Alineus หลายเดือนก่อน

      @ЕгорАндреев-э1у lol you can't offence me with your sarcastic comments. If I have short memory, I would be still living in Russia. Luckily, I'm not. Gave up on that in 2014.
      My comment regards the very last 3 years, you should think a bit wider, love.

    • @НатальяШ-г7п
      @НатальяШ-г7п หลายเดือนก่อน

      Good for you , we are not going to miss you anyway. 😅​@@Alineus

    • @ЕгорАндреев-э1у
      @ЕгорАндреев-э1у หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Alineus you do not live in Russia, yet are a big expert on "what job what does"? Russia is lucky you do not live in Russia. No longer interested in chatting on here.