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Topic: RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability (Read 1065 times) |
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Blunderov
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"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability
« on: 2006-01-10 02:04:35 » |
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[Blunderov] It's beginning.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2006/01/09/china-to-give-up-on-dolla_n_13535.h tml
Feed: The Huffington Post | Raw Feed Title: China To Give Up On Dollar, Invest In Yen, Euro... China has resolved to shift some of its foreign exchange reserves -- now in excess of $800 billion -- away from the U.S. dollar and into other world currencies in a move likely to push down the value of the greenback, a high-level state economist who advises the nation's economic policymakers said in an interview Monday.
As China's manufacturing industries flood the world with cheap goods, the Chinese central bank has invested roughly three-fourths of its growing foreign currency reserves in U.S. Treasury bills and other dollar-denominated assets. The new policy reflects China's fears that too much of its savings is tied up in the dollar, a currency widely expected to drop in value as the U.S. trade and fiscal deficits climb.
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MoEnzyme
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infidel lab animal
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RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability
« Reply #1 on: 2006-01-10 04:35:21 » |
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Or perhaps rather its been a long time coming, certainly since 2001 anyway.
-----Original Message----- >From: Blunderov <squooker@mweb.co.za> >Sent: Jan 10, 2006 1:04 AM >To: virus@lucifer.com >Subject: RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability > >[Blunderov] It's beginning. > >http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2006/01/09/china-to-give-up-on-dolla_n_13535.h >tml > >Feed: The Huffington Post | Raw Feed > Title: China To Give Up On Dollar, Invest In Yen, Euro... > >China has resolved to shift some of its foreign exchange reserves -- now in >excess of $800 billion -- away from the U.S. dollar and into other world >currencies in a move likely to push down the value of the greenback, a >high-level state economist who advises the nation's economic policymakers >said in an interview Monday. > >As China's manufacturing industries flood the world with cheap goods, the >Chinese central bank has invested roughly three-fourths of its growing >foreign currency reserves in U.S. Treasury bills and other >dollar-denominated assets. The new policy reflects China's fears that too >much of its savings is tied up in the dollar, a currency widely expected to >drop in value as the U.S. trade and fiscal deficits climb. > > > > >--- >To unsubscribe from the Virus list go to <http://www.lucifer.com/cgi-bin/virus-l>
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I will fight your gods for food, Mo Enzyme
 (consolidation of handles: Jake Sapiens; memelab; logicnazi; Loki; Every1Hz; and Shadow)
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Blunderov
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"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability
« Reply #2 on: 2006-01-11 01:38:42 » |
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[Blunderov] Gold is good. It may look a bit expensive now but later current prices may look like a thief's bargain. Get some today is my thinking.
The link below is a real eye opener Best Regards.
http://members.aol.com/_ht_a/tma68/griffin.htm
<snip> THE MANDRAKE MECHANISM The Method by which the Federal Reserve creates money out of nothing; the concept of usury as the payment of interest on pretended loans; the true cause of the hidden tax called inflation; the way in which the Fed creates boom-bust cycles.
In the 1940s, there was a comic strip character called Mandrake the Magician. His specialty was creating things out of nothing and, when appropriate, to make them disappear back into that same void. It is fitting, therefore, that the process to be described in this section should be named in his honor.
In the previous chapters, we examined the technique developed by the political and monetary scientists to create money out of nothing for the purpose of lending. This is not an entirely accurate description because it implies that money is created first and then waits for someone to borrow it. On the other hand, textbooks on banking often state that money is created out of debt. This also is misleading because it implies that debt exists first and then is converted into money. In truth, money is not created until the instant it is borrowed. It is the act of borrowing which causes it to spring into existence. And, incidentally, it is the act of paying off the debt that causes it to vanish.1 There is no short phrase that perfectly describes that process. So, until one is invented along the way, we shall continue using the phrase "create money out of nothing" and occasionally add "for the purpose of lending" where necessary to further clarify the meaning.
So, let us now...see just how far this money/debt-creation process has been carried -- and how it works...
... Summary
The American dollar has no intrinsic value. It is a classic example of fiat money with no limit to the quantity that can be produced. Its primary value lies in the willingness of people to accept it and, to that end, legal tender laws require them to do so. It is true that our money is created out of nothing, but it is more accurate to say that it is based upon debt. In one sense, therefore, our money is created out of less than nothing. The entire money supply would vanish into the bank vaults and computer chips if all debts were repaid. Under the present System, therefore, our leaders cannot allow a serious reduction in either the national or consumer debt. Charging interest on pretended loans is usury, and that has become institutionalized under the Federal Reserve System. The Mandrake Mechanism by which the Fed converts debt into money may seem complicated at first, but it is simple if one remembers that the process is not intended to be logical but to confuse and deceive. The end product of the Mechanism is artificial expansion of the money supply, which is the root cause of the hidden tax called inflation. This expansion then leads to contraction and, together, they produce the destructive boom-bust cycle that has plagued mankind throughout history wherever fiat money has existed. <snip>
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Blunderov
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"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability
« Reply #3 on: 2006-01-11 17:17:54 » |
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[Blunderov] 2006 threatens to be just as 'interesting' as 2005 was. "Looming privation" of energy resources?
"What a country calls its vital economic interests are not the things which enable its citizens to live, but the things which enable it to make war. Gasoline is much more likely than wheat to be a cause of international conflict." Simone Weil - 'The Need for Roots'.*
Another storm petrel.
http://www.SmirkingChimp.com/article.php?sid=24355
'2006: The year of oil collapse?'
<snip>
With the cratering of the housing bubble, the U.S. economy has to fall on its ass. The global economy is likely to fall on its ass, too, since so much of it depends on the decisions of Americans to take out exotic loans for buying houses they can't afford. Large numbers of jobs will vanish in construction, remodeling, real estate sales, and the various mortgage rackets -- those things precisely related to the recent gains in GDP.
The sheer falloff in new mortgages will send a tsunami through financial markets addicted to continuous supplies of new "money" to preserve the illusion of expansion. I'd called for a Dow-4000 late in 2005. I think that was just an error in timing, and I still call for the Dow to sink into that range, or worse, in 2006. This will represent a moment of painful clarity for market professionals, as they realize that an industrial economy and the finance that serves it must be based on the expectation of generating real future wealth, not on zero-sum rackets, games of monetery musical chairs, or casino legerdemain. Hedge funds, which depend on predictable stability, will be especially vulnerable. They will certainly take some large banks down with them when they go. I'll call for the so-called government sponsored entities of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to groan under and then drown in a sea of nonperforming loans, probably with overtones of criminal irresponsibility.
If these things occur, ugly things would happen to the dollar. I would predict an episode something short of hyperinflation -- say a rapid 30 percent drop in dollar value -- with a later deflation in the price of things like houses, paintings by Childe Hassam and many consumer goods. Which means that standards of living will fall across the board as incomes vanish with jobs, and food and energy prices rise -- while Americans try to shed their houses at the same time that consumer products sit unsold on the shelves of WalMart, Target and Best Buy. This will spell the beginning of the end for the chain store universe.
The commercial airline industry is already whirling around the drain. 2006 will send it decisively down that drain. Since we cannot do without aviation in a nation as large as the United States (with train service on the level with Bolivia), the government may have to take over the crippled air routes. If that happens, then service will certainly be greatly diminished. Fewer people will be flying under the circumstances, anyway, but there is no reason to believe that this will all occur smoothly. Among other things, huge pension obligations would remain to be worked out. </snip>
Jake Sapiens Sent: 10 January 2006 11:35 To: virus@lucifer.com Subject: RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability
Or perhaps rather its been a long time coming, certainly since 2001 anyway.
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Blunderov
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RE: virus: The dollar vulnerability
« Reply #4 on: 2006-01-13 16:50:21 » |
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[Blunderov] Another writer who is uneasy about the possibility of an economic tsunami is Patrick Doherty. News of the strategic alignment of China and India vis a vis oil have done nothing to diminish his misgivings.
The upside is that the now dawning realisation of where the epicentre of world affairs actually resides may offer the opportunity to change the narrative away from Iraq and the Middle East.
I have a feeling that the West is going to have to bite the bullet and go nuclear on a large scale. Already France generates something like 40% of its electricity with reactors. I can't imagine that Japan will have any option at all if things get tight.
I foresee very large public transport systems being built, where they do not already exist, and a growing problem of how to dispose of the waste from nuclear plants.
Happy w/e to all.
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/20060113/china_and_india_change_the_game.ph p
China And India Change The Game
What better to shake Washington out of its strategic tunnel vision than a new alliance over oil between the world's two most populous countries? An article that appeared last night in the Financial Times states that, "China and India, the world's two fastest-growing energy consumers, on Thursday set aside long-standing rivalries and agreed to co-operate in securing crude oil resources overseas."
That's a strategic bombshell. It's also a major opportunity.
First the story. China and India have been busy over the past few years attempting to secure oil fields and other energy assets for their domestic or state-owned oil companies. China, for instance, has secured a major deal to develop Alberta 's tar sands oil deposit, a deposit which places Canada above Iraq in terms of recoverable reserves. It has sealed deals in Africa, notoriously with fellow human rights violator Sudan. India has sealed major energy deals with Iran but, as reported in the FT, "lost out to Chinese rivals in the race to acquire fields in Angola, Nigeria, Kazakhstan and Ecuador." China, of course, was recently rebuffed by the U.S. Congress in its attempt to buy Unocal.
Faced with a market in which politics-be it the U.S. Congress or OPEC or Hugo Chavez-have an equal if not greater influence on price as economics, the two have agreed to coordinate their efforts to secure energy resources. The plan is modeled on their recent joint deal in Syria. India and China will essentially work together to secure their energy resources without unnecessarily bidding up the price of those resources. In other words, the Indians and Chinese have agreed to a consumer's cartel representing 2.3 billion potential consumers.
The significance of the alliance is hard to understate. India and China represent the two leading sources of increased oil demand globally. Each have enormous populations that are entering the modern economy at breakneck speed. As these populations increase their per capita income, they demand products and services that require higher and higher amounts of energy-particularly oil for the new cars their citizens want to drive.
Both the Indians and the Chinese are feeling the pressure of diminishing oil discoveries and flatlined oil production at a time when expansion of their domestic economies is rapidly increasing demand for energy. One unit of Chinese gross domestic product, for example, uses three times as much energy as a unit of American GDP. And 10 times as much as a unit of Japanese GDP.
It is clear is that this pact escalates the global competition for oil. Yet it does so in a fairly sophisticated way. The two nations have agreed to distort the market rather than continue to compete and lose to global market imbalances (India 's concern) or nationalistic politics (China 's). Together, their combined markets and purchasing power offer an extremely attractive partner to producing states-especially states like Syria, Iran and Sudan, who might otherwise feel pressure from Western concerns over human rights and democracy.
At the same time, the deal demonstrates that neither China nor India can, or have an interest in attempting to, secure access to oil through military means, as the British did through World War II and as the United States has done since. This pact is not a military alliance. However, strategic resources have a long and bloody history of attracting military protection, and none less than energy. If this pact does not produce results and if the balance between oil production and demand continues to weaken, we may in the future see an Asian equivalent of the Carter Doctrine.
Here in Washington, however, this news offers leading strategic advisers and their political clients a perfect moment in which to change the strategic narrative-a false narrative-which has been imposed on America since the attacks of 9/11.
In Washington, the conventional storyline is still that nuclear terrorism is the single greatest threat to the United States and should therefore be the center of our national security strategy. Indeed, John Kerry and George Bush agreed on this assessment in their debates during the 2004 election. As Col. Larry Wilkerson pointed out earlier this week, that assessment is wrong. And it has been since September 12.
This new alliance offers message-makers the out that they have been missing. Ever since the White House starting hyping its war on terror to a scared and underinformed American public as an existential conflict comparable to the World War II or the Cold War, politicians have refused to say otherwise. Now, with the failure in Iraq palpable, the arrogation of power so obvious, and now the rise of a real strategic challenge evident, it is time to change the story.
And yet, dangers lurk. The administration has released slides from its forthcoming Quadrennial Defense Review that place an enormous priority on preparing to deter the rise of a future "near peer" superpower. In other words, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld is salivating at the prospect of a rising China (and the massive weapons budgets such a foe would require).
To rush into the breech claiming China and India are the new grand strategic threat is to play into Rumsfeld's hands. It would also hasten the economic disaster that lies just over the horizon. Rather, it is time for really big-picture thinking to figure out just how we can prevent the increasing competition over oil to turn into a strategic threat that destroys the American economy, doing to America what we did to the Soviets. That will require a new grand strategy that bridges our economy and our foreign policy.
The time to start is now.
--Patrick Doherty |
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