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UE University

317 members • $20/month

2 contributions to UE University
About money attraction/ positive thinking
Hey guys! I've been following UE for a few years now and joined the skool a few weeks back. I have to say I don't necessarily keep up with all the videos, but I do find what Simon says very interesting, the way he understands economics, and especially when he gives us "samples" of wisdom about life and money. So, not considering myself either rich or poor, I'm willing to make this post to learn a bit more about YOUR wisdom on how to be relaxed about "money" (I know it's a very wide term). So, here is my question for you: how, when you think about finances and it stresses you out because of whatever reasons, at your own personal scale, or on a worldwide scale, where all the leaders are taking the decisions for us, how do you get that stress down? Also, some people I know always tell me that I should ask for things, and those things will come to me (obviously, I'd have to work my way to them, one way or another, but if I ask, I shall receive). I've had a few conversations with religious people about that, Christians mainly, and they all said the same thing; Ask god, he'll give you more than you expected. How do you guys manage all that? Do you talk to yourself? Do you talk to God? And in the real world, do you talk to friends about your financial situation and ask for advice? Or a financial advisor? Do you have a kind of "through the day strategy" when it comes to thinking about things positively, saying thank you/blessings, praying etc...? Excuse the long message, but I'm just at this turning point in my life where I feel I'm onto something, and need to work at it for me to be able to provide without counting for myself and the ones I love. It's like finding a big treasure but there's a cage around it and the key's of the cage has been thrown into a small lake just next door, it's up to me to dive deep and find it😄 Thank you again Simon for helping us out with understanding the economical world around us, and thank you guys for posting interesting things every day 🙂
0 likes • 16d
I don't really watch the mainstream medias, only independent ones, and not people who don't have a clue of what they are talking about and just engage in conspiracy theories. But I do understand that the future that is awaiting is not really all flowers and glitters 🙃 Being a 33 year old male, thinking about buying a property with my partner and not having much savings behind me, it makes it quite stressful sometimes as I'm just asking myself the question "what if the world goes to crap because of all the bad political decisions taken?" (I think maybe the fact that I'm living in Australia puts that stress in me too as I meet so many people who can't buy themselves a house because the prices are just way too high) But I can't let that feeling take over on my life so, all I can do is just work at it, every day, and get the right opportunity when it comes. And it will come, I know it! 😃
0 likes • 15d
@Mike K Hey Mike, thanks for the link! Was just wondering, is it 2 books or just "awaken the giant within"? Because I just have that one appearing on the link you sent me
The Taylor Rule
In one or two of the papers, the “Taylor rule” is referred to. I didn’t know what it meant, so I asked Grok, and thought I would share what it told me: The Taylor Rule is a simple formula that suggests how a central bank (like the Federal Reserve) should set its main short-term interest rate — the federal funds rate — to keep inflation stable (around 2%) and the economy near full employment. Simple Version of the Rule It basically says:Recommended interest rate = neutral rate + inflation + adjustments for high/low inflation + adjustments for strong/weak economy - If inflation is above target → raise rates more than one-for-one to cool things down. - If the economy is overheating (e.g., low unemployment, positive output gap) → raise rates. - If there’s slack (high unemployment, negative output gap) → lower rates. Main Applications (Why It’s Used) 1. Guide / benchmark — Central banks calculate what the rule “recommends” and compare it to the actual rate to see if policy is too loose, too tight, or about right. 2. Evaluate past decisions — Economists check if the Fed followed something like the rule historically (it fit well in the 1990s–early 2000s). 3. Forecast future policy — Analysts and tools (e.g., Atlanta Fed’s Taylor Rule Utility) use it to predict likely rate moves. 4. Promote predictable policy — It encourages systematic (rule-based) decisions over pure discretion, helping anchor expectations. Current Context (February 2026) The Fed’s federal funds rate is in the 3.5–3.75% range (held steady at the late January 2026 meeting).Many Taylor Rule variants (original, balanced-approach, shortfalls versions) prescribe rates around 3.7–4.2% right now, depending on exact inputs like inflation (~2–2.7% range recently), unemployment gaps, and estimates of the neutral real rate. The actual rate is roughly in line with — or slightly below — most prescriptions, meaning policy looks broadly appropriate or mildly accommodative to some observers.
1 like • Feb 3
@Brody Alden thanks Brody!
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Quentin Minet
1
1point to level up
@quentin-minet-1060
33 year old trying to navigate the tumultuous waters of the present economy and find my place in the world

Active 2d ago
Joined Jan 26, 2026
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