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Dept store Quartermaster
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: I'm right here Tati
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I want to know what China is or is not doing now that would be different if they owned none of our debt.
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Cornpoppin' Pony Soldier |
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Anyway, I just got it. Your last post talks about "investment." What you call investment, I call squandering our children's' futures on loans to pay for a war resulting in negative ROI. that's our difference. But please, go back and reread all my posts, then yours.
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Tru6 Restoration & Design |
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Dept store Quartermaster
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: I'm right here Tati
Posts: 19,869
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Cornpoppin' Pony Soldier |
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Ok, I'll bite. What is my claim?
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Tru6 Restoration & Design |
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Dept store Quartermaster
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: I'm right here Tati
Posts: 19,869
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I asked:
"There is no global enforcing body, China doesn't own us in the least. They expect and pray we honor their investments. Do you expect a repo man to come at some point? Look at they various countries that have defaulted on our investments(and those of other countries), we didn't get anything but the shaft." Then you replied: Quote:
"You suggest those votes would have been/gone differently if China had less investment in the US? If anything they have a greater vested interest in our well being." So once again, how did/does China holding our debt motivate/empower them to screw us on foreign policy? You said the repo man already came with the UN vote and you should probably clarify why that would have gone differently had they no interest in our debt.
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Cornpoppin' Pony Soldier |
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When party A owes money to party B, B has the power in the relationship especially when party B has options that lessen the value of party A.
you are mixing cause and effect here. but you already answered your own question and just don't know it: "...we got the shaft." Did our economy crumble when they went belly up? no. Just as China's won't if we try to negotiate from our traditional source of strength because every day that we borrow more and more and the trade deficit increases while the rest of the world strengthens it's own currencies and one-time manufacturing economies cross the line to consumer economies means our economy has less and less value on the world stage. Will it happen tomorrow? no. 5 years from now. yes. India and China will both be buying more goods from within and from each other than selling to the U.S. What does that give China? Leverage. Leverage to align themselves with our enemies because they have oil. Perhaps you haven't noticed, but for the past 3 years China has been making friends all over the world and buying up raw material assets all based on checks coming in from Walmart. What have we been doing? Congratulating Moldava for their part in the Coalition of the Willing while making enemies all around the world. I'm sending you a game of RISK for Christmas.
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Tru6 Restoration & Design Last edited by Shaun 84 Targa; 11-05-2007 at 10:44 AM.. |
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Gon fix it with me hammer
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actually , the global enforcing body is called the free market on the free market, your currency is what gives you strength if your currency turns to mush then so does your strenght the US has had a historical superior currency due to WW2, lend-lease, control of the blanc cheque oil/dollar thingie, superior production capacity and so on superior production capacity... gone oil/dollar thing ... soon to be gone how do you think it will work out, if the oil becomes disconnected from the oil? here's a few hints you will be paying some serious moolah for the gas in your car perhaps you'll end up with prices like we have in Europe now difference being, we in Europe, might actually see our gas prices go down from what they are now, and we are actually used to them, while the average American get's depressed just thinking about those kinds of prices how good is your public transport?? NYC i think is fine, Chicago, Boston too but how about SoCal? FL? the rest? US still relies mostly on road transport for goods not so good when gas prices go that high, you'll need a lot of rail transportation, in a dense network to overcome that it goes well beyond gas in your car, anything you want to buy, becomes hugely expensive, since most companies produce it where labor is cheap China doesn't need you to actually pay back what you loan, to reap the benefits of what the US owes it, on the contrary, the more you owe them, the more they own you... businesses can be bought for cheaps, goods, resources... whoever owes a lot, has no strong arm in the world market the US has had the strong arm for the last 50 or so years, but at this rate, that strong arm will turn to jelly the only thing y'all will have left, is military power what do you suggest? take what you want by force? Do you think China will just give in under threat? Russia? Iran? or even Europe? think about it , military force,is nothing if there's no moral ground from which to use it... economic force has been the ideal tool to actually force things without morals... but the US is bleeding, draining via Afghanistan and I-wreck if the dollar crashes completely, then you'll be either poor, or waging offensive war, which might just as well be the end... either way, it's going to suck Bush and the ADD crew in the WH , are giving it away, i'm sure they'll have enough wealth built up to kick back at the ranch while everybody else in the future will be busy "taking one for the team"
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Stijn Vandamme EX911STARGA73EX92477EX94484EX944S8890MPHPINBALLMACHINEAKAEX987C2007 BIMDIESELBMW116D2019 |
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Too big to fail
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The sad thing is, their supporters among the rank-and-file think that somehow they'll get to share in the spoils.
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"You go to the track with the Porsche you have, not the Porsche you wish you had." '03 E46 M3 '57 356A Various VWs |
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Last week Bear Stearns announced that Citic Securities, a top state-controlled investment bank in China, is planning to invest $1 billion in Bear Stearns. If you think countries like China and India have a major influence on US policy as holders of US securities, just watch as these countries shift from holding T-Bills to buying key US assets instead. Bearn Stears, Nasdaq, etc.
This is the beginning of a shopping spree that will have a major impact on the US economy and foreign policy for a long, long time. |
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Gon fix it with me hammer
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i think that anybody not in that room, better not plan on any of those spoils very few people are in that group of "havemores" or "his base"
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Stijn Vandamme EX911STARGA73EX92477EX94484EX944S8890MPHPINBALLMACHINEAKAEX987C2007 BIMDIESELBMW116D2019 |
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Gon fix it with me hammer
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the Chinese government set it's value, and they under value it , there is some political pressure on them to fix that... it ain't working they just go "blah" whenever it's mentioned it's a major export advantage to them and if the US forces the yuan to be revalued 40% plus, or slaps a 40% import tax on em that would suck for wallmart and for the American consumer guess what will happen?
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Stijn Vandamme EX911STARGA73EX92477EX94484EX944S8890MPHPINBALLMACHINEAKAEX987C2007 BIMDIESELBMW116D2019 Last edited by svandamme; 11-05-2007 at 11:51 AM.. |
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Gon fix it with me hammer
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it's relative to all currencies, including the EURO, the Brittish pound, and others so i'de say it's not just that alone that's dragging down the USD i'm no economist, but my take is that free market economy , is doomed to fail it's a greedy cesspool of low accountability respective to nations and the people in those nations... rich getting richer, sure, that's not new but the current business methods are not sustainable look at wallmart, dumping prices on everything, shaving every bit of cost in it's stores, not the least of it the employees... driving real "american" business , out of business with unbeatable tactics and they can do it , because the consumer likes to buy lot's of cheap stuff rather then just the good quality stuff they really need so what's happening with the US, if all businesses are finished off by wallmart like competition? eg, bottom dollar wages, chinese import products all you get, is more unemployment more debt bigger gap between rich and poor and fewer inbetweens all this , because companies these days, only manage and run based on delivering results to shareholders, nobody cares anymore about sustaining the local business, and the local employees that's no part of free economy, and that's why it will not last something has got to give in history there has always been trade and until the last hundred or so years, trade has always been enforced by military power not anymore, sure the military still influences economies these days but it is no longer a parallel partnership all you get now, is inflation, growth, more, more more but nothing more is added to the mix, there are no new conquests of territory, there are very few places left to start mining just increased efficiency, every year tell me how much better can efficiency get, till it hits a ceiling? can we get to 120% and keep going? how many western countries, could ( if they wanted to ) shut down their borders and feed it's civilians with own produce? no more imports of essential supplies....? now everybody rates economies on GDP surplus and deficit if you sell more then you buy, you're doing good but that doesn't mean you can take care of your peoples in the future, i'm sure the true rating will be "who can take care of his own" and GDP surplus, will be like in the old days, who can actually sell things he has in surplus, after all things locally are taken care off those who fail, will have instability, internal struggles, violence, famine, disease, look at Africa rough times ahead, sooner or later, doodoo will hit the fan, one way or another the 2000 internet bubble was just a small scale example of what really is going to happen with the free market as a whole...
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Stijn Vandamme EX911STARGA73EX92477EX94484EX944S8890MPHPINBALLMACHINEAKAEX987C2007 BIMDIESELBMW116D2019 |
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Unconstitutional Patriot
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Cars & Coffee Killer
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: State of Failure
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Because the Yuan is pegged to the dollar, which is declining, it is making raw materials VERY expensive for China to buy. Eventually, they will have to let their currency float (making them a less attractive exporter) or their economy will implode.
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Some Porsches long ago...then a wankle... 5 liters of VVT fury now -Chris "There is freedom in risk, just as there is oppression in security." |
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could you please expand on this Chris.
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Tru6 Restoration & Design |
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For some reason people always seem to see currency flows in terms of their local cash economy. Thats kind of like discussing the intricacies of the Space shuttle based on a model that you built as a kid. Some things to consider...
1) Everyone b1tches about how devalued the dollar is, and how the Chinese are buying everything in sight. This is nothing new. In the past it was the Taiwanese and the Koreans, and before that (and in a much bigger way) the Japanese. Sure they came, bought a lot of stuff (land-mark buildings, companies, etc) and inevitably ended up sucking wind because they inevitably overpaid with their overvalued currencies. Meanwhile the previous (American) owners laughed all the way to the bank. 2) Isn't it curious that even with the exploding Chinese stock market, so many investors are still buying American stocks and bonds? Aren't these the same American companies that can't compete? Or is it that these companies really are worth something when compared to overseas companies? 3) Everyone laments the loss of jobs overseas. Welcome to the 21st century! It's not the jobs that are the value added, but the ability to create new jobs by developing new products and services which is where the value added exists. Most of the jobs which are being moved overseas are mature, routinized, comparatively easily repeated and copied jobs. To put it differently, they are boring, demanding and don't pay that well. I'd be surprised if anyone on this board would be happy doing them for the wage that's being paid, even in the local economy. While workers overseas may do better then their counterparts in the local economy overseas, the jobs only exist because they can be done there cheaper they can here. If they weren't being done in country C, they'd be done in country I, M or countless other places in the world. The reality is that it's comparatively easy to copy the job, and this is reflected in the very competitive and cheap wages associated with an exported job. The key to American economy is that we export ideas and jobs. That is the biggest difference between the American economy and the "Asian tiger" economies. Aside from maybe Singapore, the rest of the Asian Tigers only wish that they could create as many new ideas in their economies as the US does. Why can't they? They often have the rigorous schooling, entrepreneurs and the "high tech" economy -- but somehow it just doesn't happen. In my opinion it's because we have a culture and economy based on creativity. China and the other Asian Tigers don't have this because it would threaten the status quo, both culturally as well as politically. At the end of the day, the cost of living in China is increasing as everyone makes some money and wants to buy big-screen TV's, expensive cars and other stuff. It's already happening along China's coast. When that happens, suddenly they don't have the wage advantage that they once had. Manufacturers then take the jobs and go to the next cheap economy. The smart companies aren't bothering to put more factories in Shanghai because it's not much cheaper the Malaysia, Taiwan or Korea. Instead they're looking further inland to provinces where there is more competition for each job. While the Chinese certainly have a vast labor pool, so this isn't going to happen as fast as it did in Taiwan, Korea and Singapore -- it will happen. Watch out for when that happens because there will be a huge "correction" to the Chinese economy that will make the Japanese "Bubble" bursting look mild. The drain on the world's economy will be huge when that happens.
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John '69 911E "It's a poor craftsman who blames their tools" -- Unknown "Any suspension -- no matter how poorly designed -- can be made to work reasonably well if you just stop it from moving." -- Colin Chapman Last edited by jluetjen; 11-05-2007 at 05:27 PM.. |
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I see a few flaws in your argument John, though well presented.
RE: Taiwan, Korea, etc. First, you can't compare them with China. it's like comparing a flashlight to the sun. Scale. RE: American economy is based on ideas. I agree. Too bad it's so easy for China to copy our ideas with little to no repercussions. And at the end of the day, if all we come up with are ideas for products that are made overseas, at best you add to the upper 5% class. Ideas that create American jobs are great, but that's not really the trend. RE: labor pool correction. This is like trying to imagine God, or comprehend the number of stars in the sky. Combine its population with access to raw materials on its own terms with modernization while China opens up the very top industries like aerospace, and the correction won't be in our lifetime.
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Tru6 Restoration & Design Last edited by Shaun 84 Targa; 11-06-2007 at 06:05 AM.. |
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nice doggie
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Denver, CO
Posts: 1,478
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I've heard so much about the US loss of manufacturing capability. Hogwash. We're outsourcing to people willing to do it for less. As their economies change and it gets cheaper to do it here again it will come rushing back.
Some of the boomers will end up paying the price for their lavish lifestyles and there will be many who don't see an inheretance. So what, life goes on, they will have to make their own money and learn from their parent's mistakes. The US is not going belly up. If current fiscal policy is unsustainable, it will need to change at some point.
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Jerry 78 SC hotrod 02 Mini Cooper S Last edited by Hetmann; 11-06-2007 at 01:28 PM.. Reason: grammar |
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[QUOTE=Hetmann;3572585]
Some of the boomers will end up paying the price for their lavish lifestyles and there will be many who don't see an inheretance. So what, life goes on, they will have to make their own money and learn from their parent's mistakes. QUOTE] The most sensible thing I have read all day. |
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Unconstitutional Patriot
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Location: volunteer state
Posts: 5,620
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DXY dollar index is at 75.45 after hitting a new record low of 75.07, approximately 4% below the previous multi-decade low of 78.13.
Looks like this is becoming a game of which country blinks first. |
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