Seryosha's current investment in Japan can really be described as a daily investment, but the foundation of the Gorky Brotherhood has always been on the European continent, so running Europe well is a major matter related to the future development of the Gorky Brotherhood.
Seryosha now has money in his hands, and his wealth will continue to increase.
So much money actually brings more of a risk, and Seryosha is trying to reduce these risks by all means.
Therefore, the plan to diversify investment in the infrastructure and livelihood of European countries, so as to control the national economy of these countries to a certain extent, has become Seryosha's new goal.
At present, the European countries have not yet found new economic growth points, and among the countries of Western Europe, with the exception of the Federal Republic of Germany and a few countries in Northern Europe.
Some of the old capitalist industrial countries are now experiencing miserable economies.
In this context, after the Second World War, the path of welfare and nationalisation established by the left-wing Labour Party's long stay in power has come to an end.
The right-wing conservative forces, represented by Margaret Thatcher, began to gradually regain power in Western European countries.
One of the most important ways in their economic policy is to privatize the big companies that Labour has nationalized for decades, so that the government can get rid of the financial difficulties caused by the losses of these companies.
Speaking of Margaret Thatcher's economic policy, it is impossible to mention the Chicago School of Economics, the original source of Thatcher's economic policy.
When it comes to the Chicago School of Economics, it is even more difficult to avoid Chile, a long, narrow country in Latin America known for its dictatorship.
If we talk about the country of Chile, then both the Colombian drug cartel and Margaret Thatcher's economic policies are actually due to the country's current ruler, Pinochet.
In fact, Pinochet was the earliest executor of Margaret Thatcher's economic policy.
To be fair, if it weren't for Pinochet's bad reputation, Thatcherism would be more appropriately called Pinochetism.
Today, Chile is one of the best in Latin America under Pinochet's leadership.
The average annual growth rate of the economy is more than eight percent.
GDP per capita is more than $5,000.
Although it cannot be compared with the old industrial powers such as the United States, if you compare it with Pinochet ten years ago, when he first came to power, this is a world of difference.
Speaking of which, Pinochet came to power through a bloody military coup d'état that overthrew the democratically elected president.
His predecessor, Allende, was a well-known politician and socialist with a doctor's turn.
Allende narrowly became Chile's new president in the 1970 election, and with his accession, Chile began the reform of Chile's socialist path.
In addition to his reforms, Chile's copper mines and large banks, which were controlled by foreign capital, were forcibly nationalized, free health care for all was established, and Allende reformed the education system to ensure that education was fair to every child in Chile.
He gave free milk to children, gave land to landless peasants, and strengthened the power of the guilds to ensure that workers would not lose their jobs.
It can be said that Allende's policies perfectly fulfilled the promises he made during the campaign, but only one thing went wrong: where the money came from Allende can take away the assets of foreign capitalists, and he can at the same time refuse to repay the debts of international creditors.
Although Allende had a strong economic performance during his first year in office, by 1971 Chile's economic situation began to plummet.
Chile's Allende government can no longer borrow a dime from international creditors and foreign governments, because he has ruined Chile's credibility with his own hands, and while he is aggressively egalitarian at home, he is forcing Chile's foreign investors and property owners to move their property and get out of the land of right and wrong.
In just one year, Chile's inflation rate reached 120 percent, and Allende's supporters were surprised to find that their wages would never be able to keep up with skyrocketing prices.
With the withdrawal of domestic capital, the country's industry and economy came to a standstill, and nationalization instead caused more unemployment.
At that time, Chilean housewives launched the empty pot movement because they had no rice to cook, and they took their empty pots to the streets to demand Allende's resignation, which Allende saw as a provocation by capitalism and imperialism.
He froze prices in Chile, but although prices are no longer rising, ordinary people cannot buy what they need.
While Allende was still dying, Pinochet led the army in a coup d'état and began his own dictatorship in 1973, while Allende ended his life with an AK47.
Pinochet immediately suspended the implementation of the constitution, dissolved the National Assembly, imposed severe censorship, banned left-wing parties, and suspended all political activities.
The junta's crackdown on left-wing political activities has resulted in at least 3,000 people killed or disappeared and more than 27,000 imprisoned or tortured, many of whom have been forced into exile.
It was then that the first cocaine dealers in Chile were forced to leave their homes and start a new life in Colombia to escape the bloody repression of Pinochet.
If we look at Pinochet's actions after coming to power, then there is no doubt that he is a complete bloody dictator.
But Pinochet did not rely on his own iron-fisted policies to stay on the throne.
He soon recruited students of the famous economist Milton Friedman from the United States to serve as his economic advisers.
These "Chicago kids" helped a collapsed Chile rediscover its economic path, transforming a country that was torn apart and on the verge of falling into a situation like Colombia's, into a benchmark for Latin America's economy.
Pinochet's first act was to abolish all the welfare systems established during the Allende period, dissolve the trade unions, and prohibit workers' strikes and demonstrations.
At the same time, Pinochet sold off all the big companies that Colombia had nationalized, and even the pensions of government officials were handed over to private companies.
Over the years, European politicians like Margaret Thatcher have been scolding Pinochet as a Nazi and a dictator, while salivating over Chile's economic rise.
Friedman's neoliberalism has also been a cure for the economy of other countries through the reforms in Chile. t1706231537: