Prompt Interest credit @ 8.25% for 2025-2026 in CITES 2.01: EPFO Order | StaffNews
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Prompt Interest credit @ 8.25% for 2025-2026 in CITES 2.01: EPFO Order | StaffNewsPrompt Interest credit @ 8.25% for 2025-2026 in CITES 2.01: EPFO Order dated 09.07.2026 |
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3 comments:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9D7FZSHYNTA
Unbelievable Scene in Shenzhen — Massive Homeless Surge
China Deep Dive Hello, this is China Deep Dive. We have all the information you need to know about China at present. Today's topic is:
Shenzhen, once considered a model of China's reform and opening up, was renowned for its speed, innovation, and prosperity. However, recently, Shenzhen is facing unprecedented economic pressure: foreign investment withdrawal, manufacturing contraction, service sector slump, and population outflow.
On the streets of Shenzhen, a scene unimaginable in the past is beginning to appear—large numbers of unemployed people sleeping on the streets.
A video circulating online shows many people sleeping wrapped in simple blankets in bus stations, squares, and parks in the Longhua area, Shenzhen, with their luggage placed nearby. One interviewee said, "I've been homeless in Shenzhen for over twenty years. I used to sleep under bridges, in parks, and now I sleep in squares."
These homeless people are no longer just migrant workers in the traditional image; they are unemployed individuals from diverse social strata, including software engineers, construction workers, and food delivery riders.
During the day, they wander the city looking for work; at night, they sleep on cardboard sheets laid out under bridges, in parks, and in squares. To save money, some eat instant noodles, drink tap water, and can't even afford a $2 bed per night. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7Cp2i-KoBQ China’s Economic Collapse: More and More Young People Survive on Leftover Food
China Deep Dive We have all the information you need to know about China at present. Today's topic is:
Amid China's sluggish economy and persistently high unemployment, a so-called "leftover food scavenging trend" has emerged nationwide. Many young people, in an effort to save money, flocked to farmers' markets to scavenge leftover vegetables discarded by vendors.
@j562gee0hdeewestsdegethemuLa
Sad . In California the homeless / no income people get 300 usd a month in food stamps .. which is probably as much as some make in China a month .
These videos circulating online show participants from various regions, including provinces such as Guangdong and cities such as Hangzhou, Chengdu, and Guizhou. Among them are university graduates, unemployed youth, and stay-at-home mothers.
@nmaddpnmaddp7333
meanwhile sons , daughters relatives of the CCP official are studying in USA , Australia , Canada , EU etc.... they are living in luxury over here from their father , mother , uncle 's etc.... corruption money . (So there is no difference between India and A land of Paradise in the world created by so called working class during the past century.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2aJCzugsno
China’s Middle Class Is Collapsing Fast, 100 Million Falling Back into Poverty
China Observer Recently, the term “Seven Ways the Middle Class Goes Broke” went viral online in China. On June 7, it sparked heated discussions and hit Weibo trending. On that day, headline article author and Weibo influencer Internet Analyst Yu Bin wrote: “We’re witnessing history again. The speed at which middle-class families go bankrupt is accelerating like never before. The old ‘three ways to go broke’—buying a house with loans, a non-working wife, children in international schools—are no longer enough. Now, the bankruptcy patterns have upgraded to seven.”
@zoebbb1623
China has entered the earn-spend cycle that the West entered decades previously - an economy built on entrapping citizens into debt - all for the sake of 'stuff' which has no meaning or no real value and brings stress, loneliness and empty souls @williambinkley8879 I see the exact same thing happening in the USA. @thewhopper411
You're not alone. Middle class is dying here in the U.S.
Living in your car is a thing here in the U.S.
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