{"unit":"https://weblate.duniter.org/api/units/7034/?format=json","component":"https://weblate.duniter.org/api/components/trm/preface-de-la-version-10-par-yoland-bresson/?format=json","translation":"https://weblate.duniter.org/api/translations/trm/preface-de-la-version-10-par-yoland-bresson/en_US/?format=json","user":"https://weblate.duniter.org/api/users/PifPafPouf/?format=json","author":"https://weblate.duniter.org/api/users/PifPafPouf/?format=json","timestamp":"2023-03-24T17:35:09.813435Z","action":2,"target":"The answer is what the author calls “the Optimal Universal Dividend”: the money supply must grow annually according to a :math:`c` factor, which of course is inversely proportional to the life span – meaning the duration of the population's renewal rate, or the time to put the system in place completely – and that money surplus must be equally and unconditionally distributed among all population members. This :math:`c` factor is roughly equal to 5% for a life span of 80 years.","id":11246,"action_name":"Translation changed","url":"https://weblate.duniter.org/api/changes/11246/?format=json"}