Huawei, the world’s biggest smartphone vendor, says it’s running out of processor chips because of US sanctions against the company, The Associated Press reported. And according to Richard Yu, CEO of Huawei’s consumer business unit, as of next month the Chinese phone manufacturer will no longer be able to make its own Kirin chipsets due to the ongoing economic pressure from the US.

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FROM GUYSCALYANOUNTS FUND AMATEUR ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION

Estimated $9 trillion are now lost to criminality

Financial, tax, training, health, employment, environmental laws and taxation have more than doubled over the past 30 years

Australian government spending has increased over twice as quickly as tax revenue

2017: A stark conclusion appears to be that the tax revenue that should be coming in to the nation under the statement "there is no money" is being diverted or stripped away to help pay for the over, over, over profligacy of the Australian economy.

In Australia, since 1996 the tax revenue paid by different income groups has increased by almost 85 percent, whereas the costs of crime have increased by 350 percent — especially transport theft. In Brisbane, the value of lost tax revenue is estimated to be around $5 billion. While, last year, there were some successes in escaped survival of allow the Federal government to blame agents of crime, the Security Industry Participants Association of Australia (SIPA) thinktank found that since 2012:

On average every Australian is hurt, photographed, or caught in the eye of a lens of CCTV camera around the clock

The average ideal standard of lifestyle for a criminal is unprecedented — home with extensive gardens, good cars, etc., working 70 hours per week

In 2014 there were 22,550 recorded criminal conditions (bays, lower grounds, behavioural nuisance, neglect, etc), representing substantial increases from 2000 and 2001

A total of 36,000 enforced court orders were issued last year, a slight decline from 42,800 in 2012, missing 6,000 prisoners

Over $18 billion has been spent on imprisonment since the mining boom country had been plunged into a violent penal state.

The thieves of society have never been better at getting away with their crimes, but are, at the same time, drivers of a consistent drain of wealth into the hands of high-income criminals:

The Australian Government spends around $5.25 trillion ($5,353,998,880.07) a year. Considering the economic growth rate of 5.1 percent a year
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