📢⚽️ ¡Esto ya se descontroló! Marcas nacionales e internacionales se suman al Tri y publican en español para alentar a México frente a Inglaterra. 🇲🇽🔥 https://t.co/DUVaBdngwA
El Banco de México acaba de habilitar, mediante la Circular 8/2026, la posibilidad de comprar bonos del gobierno en el mercado secundario a través de subastas. Hasta ahora, su principal herramienta era vender estos instrumentos para retirar liquidez del sistema. Ahora también puede comprarlos, inyectando pesos nuevos directamente a la economía.
En la práctica se trata de un mecanismo que permite al banco central sostener los precios de los bonos gubernamentales cuando los inversionistas no quieran hacerlo. Esto ocurre en un momento en que la deuda pública sigue creciendo.
El principal riesgo es que esta facultad facilita la monetización indirecta del déficit
Al comprar bonos, el Banxico crea dinero para financiar el gasto del gobierno. El resultado es un aumento en la oferta de pesos, lo que genera mayor presión inflacionaria. Además, al inyectar liquidez y reducir el atractivo de los bonos mexicanos para los inversionistas que hacen carry trade, se incrementa el riesgo de salidas de capital y una mayor depreciación del peso, lo que a su vez alimenta la inflación importada.
En esencia, se está priorizando el financiamiento del gobierno por encima de la estabilidad de la moneda. En lugar de que el gobierno ajuste sus cuentas, se le da al banco central una herramienta para evitar que las tasas de la deuda suban demasiado.
El costo de esta decisión lo terminará pagando la economía en forma de más inflación y un peso más débil.
En resumen: El Banco de México se está convirtiendo en la caja chica del gobierno. Van a quebrar al país para rescatar las finanzas del gobierno.
Imágenes de @GabySillerP.
Michael Jackson didn't invent the moonwalk. The dance was on film in 1932, 26 years before he was born. He did it on TV in 1983 and stamped his name on 51 years of dance history.
The first person on tape was Cab Calloway, a jazz singer who led one of the most famous big bands of the 1930s. In a 1932 film called The Big Broadcast, he slid backwards while looking like he was walking forwards. He called the move The Buzz.
A tap dancer named Bill Bailey did it on film in 1943. The movie was called Cabin in the Sky. He did it again in 1955 at the Apollo Theater in Harlem and called it the backslide.
Marcel Marceau, the French mime, used the move from the 1940s into the 1980s. His version was called "Walking Against the Wind." He pretended a strong wind was blowing him backwards while he tried to step forwards. Dick Van Dyke did a comedy version on TV in 1958, in a sketch called "Mailing a Letter on a Windy Corner."
In the late 1970s, a dancer named Jeffrey Daniel started doing the same move every week on Soul Train, a Black music show that aired on Saturdays. Jackson watched it. He loved Daniel's version, had his manager call the show, and asked Daniel to come teach him. That was 1980.
Two other Soul Train dancers, Caszper Canidate and Cooley Jaxson, gave Jackson private sessions in June 1981. Caszper says he still has the check. Jackson wrote in his autobiography that three kids taught him the move, and one was Bobby Brown of New Edition.
The clip in the tweet is from The Little Prince, a 1974 movie based on the children's book. Bob Fosse plays the Snake, dancing alone in the desert in all black. Jackson grew up on Fosse's movies. The bowler hat, the jazz hands, the toes turned inward, the freezing in pose. All of that came from Fosse. Jackson loved him so much he later asked him to choreograph the Thriller music video. Fosse said no.
What Jackson got from Fosse was the look. The slide came from the Soul Train dancers, who got it from a Black dance tradition going back to the 1930s, when Cab Calloway was already calling it The Buzz.
On May 16, 1983, Jackson did all of it on prime-time TV in front of 47 million Americans, one in five people in the whole country, wearing a black sparkly jacket and one sparkly glove. He renamed the backslide the moonwalk. After that night, the dance belonged to him.
📊 List of famous economists and their contribution in economics 📕
1. 🇬🇧 Adam Smith (1723–1790) 📖 Famous book: The Wealth of Nations (1776) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Absolute Advantage, Division of Labor, Invisible Hand, Free Markets ⭐ Key contributions: Father of Economics. Laid the foundation of modern economics and classical liberalism. Emphasized free trade, competition and limited role of government.
2. 🇬🇧 David Ricardo (1772–1823) 📖 Famous book: On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (1817) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Comparative Advantage, Rent Theory, Diminishing Returns ⭐ Key contributions: Developed theory of comparative advantage. Explained distribution of income (rent, profit, wages). Strong advocate of free trade.
3. 🇬🇧 Thomas Malthus (1766–1834) 📖 Famous book: An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Population Theory, Malthusian Trap ⭐ Key contributions: Argued that population grows faster than food supply. Highlighted poverty and checks on population growth.
4. 🇬🇧 John Stuart Mill (1806–1873) 📖 Famous book: Principles of Political Economy (1848) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Utilitarianism, Harm Principle, Role of State in Economy ⭐ Key contributions: Combined classical economics with social reform ideas. Supported individuality, education and limited government intervention.
5. 🇩🇪 Karl Marx (1818–1883) 📖 Famous book: Das Kapital (The Capital) (1867) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Labor Theory of Value, Surplus Value, Class Struggle, Historical Materialism ⭐ Key contributions: Critiqued capitalism and explained exploitation of labor. Father of Marxian socialism and communist theory.
6. 🇬🇧 Alfred Marshall (1842–1924) 📖 Famous book: Principles of Economics (1890) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Supply and Demand, Consumer Surplus, Elasticity of Demand ⭐ Key contributions: Founder of modern neoclassical economics. Integrated demand (utility) and supply (cost) analysis.
7. 🇬🇧 John Maynard Keynes (1883–1946) 📖 Famous book: The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Aggregate Demand, Fiscal Policy, Multiplier Effect ⭐ Key contributions: Father of macroeconomics. Argued for government intervention to manage demand and employment.
8. 🇺🇸 Milton Friedman (1912–2006) 📖 Famous book: Capitalism and Freedom (1962) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Monetarism, Quantity Theory of Money, Free Market Capitalism ⭐ Key contributions: Advocated limited government, free markets and low inflation. Emphasized role of money supply in the economy.
9. 🇦🇹 Joseph Schumpeter (1883–1950) 📖 Famous book: The Theory of Economic Development (1911) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Innovation, Creative Destruction, Entrepreneurship ⭐ Key contributions: Highlighted role of entrepreneurs and innovation in economic development. Introduced concept of “creative destruction”.
10. 🇮🇳 Amartya Sen (1933–) 📖 Famous book: Development as Freedom (1999) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Capability Approach, Welfare Economics, Social Choice Theory ⭐ Key contributions: Nobel Laureate (1998). Focused on human development, freedom and reducing inequalities.
11. 🇦🇹 Friedrich Hayek (1899–1992) 📖 Famous book: The Road to Serfdom (1944) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Market Order, Spontaneous Order, Limited Government ⭐ Key contributions: Warned against central planning. Advocated individual liberty and free-market order.
12. 🇺🇸 Paul Samuelson (1915–2009) 📖 Famous book: Economics (1948) 💡 Major theories/concepts: Neoclassical Synthesis, IS-LM Model, Public Economics ⭐ Key contributions: First American Nobel Laureate in Economics (1970). Integrated micro and macro economics.
No habéis visto a un batería con esta precisión.
De Jonathan Moffet, Michael Jackson decía lo siguiente:
«Mi bajista se equivoca,
Mi teclista se equivoca,
Yo, a veces, me equivoco…
Jonathan Moffet nunca se equivoca».
Con ustedes, Smooth Criminal
65 jueces y magistrados con casi tres décadas de carrera cada uno acaban de lograr algo que pocos consiguen: que la @CIDH, que recibe miles de quejas al año, priorice la suya y le exija respuesta al Estado mexicano en cuatro meses. Esto constituye una señal clarísima de que desde afuera ven lo que aquí nos quieren hacer creer que no existe.
El fondo del asunto es brutal: México bloqueó todos los mecanismos internos para cuestionar la reforma judicial, así que la vía interamericana no es un recurso más, es el único que quedó. Y la CIDH lo sabe. Por eso activó el principio de no regresividad: no puedes desmantelar un sistema judicial profesionalizado y sustituirlo por uno de elección popular sin violar los compromisos que México firmó en 1981 con el Pacto de San José.
Lo que viene puede ser histórico. Si la Comisión concluye que hay violaciones a la Convención Americana, el caso sube a la Corte IDH, y ahí las sentencias son vinculantes, no son recomendaciones, no son sugerencias diplomáticas. México tendría que reformar su reforma. El gobierno puede ignorarlo, claro. Pero el costo político y reputacional de hacerlo frente al Sistema Interamericano es otro nivel de problema.
Una maestra en México, pide a sus estudiantes que no digan “presente” al ella pasar lista. Les pide que usen frases populares Mexicanas.
Súper interesante!
Cuando una mujer fue a adoptar un nuevo perro después de perder el suyo ... Y encontró a su propio perro allí. El momento de la reunión es la magia del derretimiento del corazón.
📉 El Banco Mundial recortó los pronósticos de crecimiento de México durante el primer trienio de Sheinbaum. Los retos económicos se intensifican en medio de un escenario global complejo.
👉 Lee la nota completa aquí: https://t.co/4EtFV33baN