Economic information and don't forget they exist

Day 1,115, 10:16 Published in Canada Canada by Etemenanki

I realized the other day when I posted my 10 day update that I had forgotten one important thing to include in the article, but by the time I remembered it had already been up for quite some time so I thought it better to simply write another article in a couple of days. As such, you are now presented with this article. Below can be found the link for the google doc I was using during the entire course of November 5th until December 5th to track the finances and various dealings of the government of eCanada. Most of the information revolves around the treasury, but also included are snapshots of the National Bank of Canada, NBC Vault, and the small amount of information I can actually get on the Canadian National Defense organization (said org is bugged and donations cannot be viewed).

This months: https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AiqJdLt5DugkdFBJUlFfU2ZIZ0NRZzRELVV2VjM5Z0E&hl=en&authkey=CLK92LwK

Last Months: https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AiqJdLt5DugkdEN4OUM3b3AxbEZ1OG5IbkFoWGk2Tmc&hl=en&authkey=CIu2740O

This is the same form of spreadsheet which I operated for the previous month and released to you guys shortly after that term. In one way I have found it quite enjoyable to compile this information for the Canadian Government and the people of Canada, and in another I have found it tedious to say the least because it is quite mind boggling and in the end unnecessary to acquire this information. One of the reasons which I have been acquiring this information though is for future forecasting in terms of governmental income. For the previous budget I forecast that the Canadian government would make approximately 4537.70 CAD a day, while in reality the Canadian government raked in approximately 4518.54 CAD a day. That is a difference of 19.16 CAD for the record. I think that is pretty fricking accurate myself.


Etemenanki Realty

Please don’t spam me saying you want to buy a house. It’s mostly a little joke really. I did want to remind people though that with the cost of food having gone up considerably lately, what with the war that has been raging on Canada's shores for several days now, as well as the weeks that we have pillaged the UK, the housing market does indeed still exist. I worked for over a year in the construction business, and I know that for quite some time houses were often over looked or considered to be too expensive. Some this day and age still are, I wouldn’t argue that. Some though are quite worth it, and would help to alleviate some of the pressure that has been put on the food market. To aid people, and myself, in making the right choice of home though, I did as I always do and turned to spreadsheet to help myself out.

https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AiqJdLt5DugkdHJhSEEzaE9zQkFtcXR4U2VJcS12Umc&hl=en&authkey=CPz50fUK

To briefly explain what you are looking at I will run through a description of what each column represents.
Column A is of course the amount of health you get back per day.
Column B is the number of days the house will last, while column C is the overall cost. These are the 3 primary columns you need to fill in, the rest will take care of itself save one thing.
Column E is the overall amount of health you will get back with a full run of the house.
Column F is a rating for the house, the higher the better, and is determined by the cost of the house and the amount of health you get back.
Column H is the current cost of half of a Q1 food. I have used Q1 food because it is currently the cheapest, or tied for it on the market. You need to remember though to HALVE the market cost though, because it is the cost of ONE point of health increase from food, not 2.
Column I gives you the cost it would be to get back the health gained from the house in food terms, and Column J gives you the difference between the cost of the same amount of food, and the house. If the text here is red you’re not getting a good deal given the current food costs. Naturally the higher in the black the better the deal you are getting. As a note, the lowest cost I remember for one point of health return for food on the market is approximately 0.26 CAD.

So if the house is still in the black when you put that into the food cost, you defiantly have a winner. Of course some people want houses which are higher in wellness return than others and may be willing to accept less return for the buck, but this should give you a good idea if that is the case.

I have made this spreadsheet FULLY editable by anyone, and at present the bulk of the housing market offers have already been entered for most of the cheapest of the various forms of house. Just remember, the only columns which you need to actually alter are A, B, C and H. The rest of them take care of themselves. I hope this helps some people move into homes.

Major congressman etemenanki, Minister of Finance.

P.S. No, I don't own a housing company or anything like that.