webnovel

Harry Potter: The-Boy-Who-Lived in a cage

Author: Laylanna04
Fantasy
Ongoing · 3.5K Views
  • 1 Chs
    Content
  • ratings
  • N/A
    SUPPORT

What is Harry Potter: The-Boy-Who-Lived in a cage

Read Harry Potter: The-Boy-Who-Lived in a cage novel written by the author Laylanna04 on WebNovel, This serial novel genre is Fantasy stories, covering harrypotter, merlin. ✓ Newest updated ✓ All rights reserved

Synopsis

Tags
2 tags
You May Also Like

The Lost Existence And His Immortal Lover

He is a person who walks through different worlds to find the one he craves and needs. To find the person he has been searching for over a thousand years. He is exhausted, tired and is on the brink of losing control but he still goes on, searching for him, searching for his other half, the only one who can remember him. The only one who can remember Jing Xuan, the prince who lost his existence. This is a story about love, separation and reunion. A story about overruling fate! Jing Xuan - Quiet like the spring Shang Cheng - Clear noble esteem Main subject | Sweet Text | Quick Transmigration | Quick Wear | Fast Wear | 1v1 Original World: Jing Xuan was betrayed by his friend and uncle who had an affair with each other. His family was killed, leaving him behind with only a soul fragment of his elder brother, Shang Cheng. Shang Cheng is an Immortal King wandering in the three thousand worlds, he decided to go into eternal sleep because he lived too long that there was no meaning. Eternal sleep causes one’s soul to be fragmented and scattered across different worlds in different identities with their memories sealed. The fragment in Jing Xuan’s world is the main soul fragment which represents the original soul. Jing Xuan always picks bodies that are closely related to the protagonist because Shang Cheng is a powerful existence and will always either be the protagonist or someone that is part of the main world line.

ChangYun · LGBT+
Not enough ratings

Soul Bound by Spirits

What happens when we die? Well that’s the big mystery. No one knows. For some, we go to heaven and hell, for others we get brought back as an animal. It all depends on who you talk to. We learned in my Psychology class that the afterlife, whatever it may bring, is full of mysterious beliefs and can be scary once you think about it. I personally love thinking about who I'd be in another life. Would I be an artist, a teacher, a unicorn, or maybe an astronaut? If there is an afterlife, who did my mom come back as? Where did she go? My mom died when I was very young and I hardly remember her but the parts I do remember about her is that she loved music. She would sing me to sleep every night with her amazing voice and her fancy little guitar. My mom was going to be a big music star until she got in this big accident at work. The building she worked at was just collateral damage due to the next door building blowing up from a major gas explosion. From then forward I was an orphan. I never knew my father so they put me in the system. And here I am. Just a regular human being in college. “Myra?!”The loud sound coming from my laptop wakes me up from zoning out, which I tend to do a lot recently. I was in a zoom meeting with my psychology professor, Mrs. Smith. She’s cool but she seems a little uptight and she’s really strict on deadlines, but she’s really easy to talk to about my personal life. “Yes, sorry” I responded in a very self critical tone. Mrs. Smith knows I've been having a hard time focusing lately so she doesn’t push for much out of me but she still tries to get me to participate with the rest of the college freshmen in my class. “Myra, I would like to set up a meeting with you tomorrow night. How about coming to my class at seven”, when she says ‘“class”’, she means her zoom classroom. We don’t have physical classes anymore due to the pandemic that has been out for quite some time now, “and we will discuss what we can do to help you focus better in class. How does that sound?” I really don’t want to talk about it but my grades are so bad I will fail by the end of the semester if I don’t bring them up. All my other classes aren’t as bad because they don't expect much out of me so they just give me good grades on everything so they don’t have to grade my papers. I told her it was fine and we ended the zoom meeting. I proceed to stare off into space until I drifted off into a deep sleep. *****

Tiny_human22 · Fantasy
Not enough ratings
3 Chs

Developing countries of all countries In 2018, government spending in

Today’s low-income countries spend more than twice on average than today’s advanced economies spent more than a century ago (Figure 1). To be sure, this difference reflects the lack of the tax instruments and systems we have today. From 1850 until the early 1900s, customs duties and excises provided the bulk of government revenues, while the personal income tax and VAT were not introduced in countries until later. Moreover, society’s expectations from the government were much different then. In 1900, for example, spending on unemployment, health, pensions, and housing amounted to only 1.1 percent of GDP in the Scandinavian countries on average and to 0.7 percent of GDP in the U.S. Even with low level of government spending, economic development was brisk in most of the Advanced 14 at the turn of the 20th century, with infrastructure improvements financed by private capital and the strong expansion of primary and secondary education. And here lies the lesson for today’s developing economies: While working on strengthening domestic taxation and raising more revenues to finance public goods, the priority needs to be on improving the business environment to attract private capital—mobilizing private finance for development. Figure 1. Governments of today’s low-income countries spent more on average in 2018 than today’s advanced economies did in 1900 (in percent of GDP) Governments of today’s low-income countries spent more on average in 2018 than today’s advanced economies did in 1900 Source: IMF Prudence and Profligacy Database, IMF Fiscal Monitor 2018, World Bank WDI, and authors’ estimates. Note: LIC = low-income countries; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa; A14 = the average of the Advanced 14 in the figure. GDP per capita of the Advanced 14 in our sample averaged $2,722 in today’s prices during the last decade of the 19th century; In 2016, per capita GDP in sub-Saharan Africa averaged $2,757.Government spending in the Advanced 14 increased substantially since 1960 as they reevaluated the role of government amid rapid industrialization and globalization and new taxes became commonplace (Figure 2). The shift from agrarian to industrial to post-industrial economies required different worker skills. Economic disruptions reshaped governments in the past, as is happening now with the changing world of work, leading to a large expansion of social insurance and protection spending.Government spending among the advanced economies has increased, but so has its variability. Before 1913, spending among the advanced economies ranged from less than 2 percent of GDP in Japan to 13 percent in Italy, or a span of 11 percentage points. Today, the span of spending among the advanced economies is 39 percentage points: from 17.3 percent in Hong Kong to 56.4 percent in France. Development paradigms vary among today’s advanced and developing countries. Robust growth can happen with a smaller or a larger government, in general. Too large of a redistribution, however, may create substantial disincentives to work and invest, or lead to tensions between formal and informal workers, employees of large companies or state-owned enterprises and small private firms. This danger now is clearer than ever: The changing world of work is clashing with persistent informality in developing countries and social protection systems that cover only part of the population.must for today’s developing countries, especially for those with abundant natural resources. However, there is overwhelming evidence that fiscal policy has been consistently pro-cyclical in developing countries, resulting in profound macroeconomic imbalances, unproductive debt build-ups, and ongoing instability.any of today’s poorest countries do not collect adequate revenues to build the human capital, infrastructure, and institutions needed for stronger growth and faster poverty reduction. In sub-Saharan Africa, for example, 15 of the 45 countries have revenues lower than 15 percent of

Jawaad_Raja_6897 · Book&Literature
Not enough ratings
2 Chs

ratings

  • Overall Rate
  • Writing Quality
  • Updating Stability
  • Story Development
  • Character Design
  • world background
Reviews

SUPPORT

empty img

coming soon

More about this book

Parental Guidance Suggestedmature rating
Report