1, obligatory
Duty-bound, Chinese idiom, pinyin is zé wú páng dài, which means that one's responsibility cannot be shirked to others. Mostly used to refer to what you should do. From the tenth time of Qing Wenkang's Biography of Heroes of Children.
2. Serious consequences
Hell to pay is a Chinese word, pronounced as yán chéng bédàI, which means hell to pay and cannot be tolerated. It comes from a historical story.
There is no way to get a loan.
There is no way to apply for a loan. China's idiom, pinyin is gào dài wú mén, describes that the economy is very difficult and there is no place to borrow money. From Ming Qu Shizhen's "Showing a gentleman in a hurry".
4,100 different loans
A hundred different IOUs, a Chinese idiom, the pinyin is bǐ iǐ yǐ dǐ i, which means if hell is unforgivable and there is a price to pay. From New Tang Book, Biography of Corrupt Officials and Lai Junchen.
5. Relief for the poor and people lacking loans
Lack of loans to help the poor, a China idiom, pinyin is zhèn pín dài fá, which means helping the poor. From Liu Chuan, a Book of the New Tang Dynasty.
Step 6 borrow money to do business
It is individual capital who borrows money to do business. It is one of the important sources of capital for Huizhou merchants to engage in commercial operations by usury. Jin Sheng's Happy Family Book with Xu pointed out: Huizhou people "are not their own wealth, but they all say that they lend money to others on all sides and pay their interest. If the wealth is in hand, it will be like their own wealth and the wealth of the people." Jiang Ruyuan, a native of Wuyuan, started his business with loans and eventually became rich.