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Politics : Welcome to Slider's Dugout -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (17138)5/2/2009 8:18:38 PM
From: patron_anejo_por_favor7 Recommendations  Respond to of 49977
 
He who has the gold, makes the rules.....time for Beijing to get on with moving China into the reserve currency seat since no one with any sense of responsibility seems to want it.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (17138)5/3/2009 1:11:22 AM
From: hilligas1 Recommendation  Respond to of 49977
 
Tobago: GREAT POST !! THANKS



To: TobagoJack who wrote (17138)5/3/2009 2:38:52 AM
From: Cactus Jack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49977
 
Jay,

How widespread/common is private gold ownership in China? Just curious.

jpg



To: TobagoJack who wrote (17138)5/3/2009 9:41:59 AM
From: dvdw©1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49977
 
The inevitable truth is; the underlying commodity gold is scarce. Only nano particalization can change that. The idea can not be denied or refuted.

The simple question to be answered is, which time frame will bring it about?

china's move on copper recognizes that scarcity impoverishes.

Abundance is necessary within the context of exchange velocity.

Contrivance is sleight of hand recognition of these facts.

Who so ever shall undertake contrivance without reform, shall be codified in tails to come.

Values and valuation have been co opted by securitization, reducing to petty self interest.

there are edifices to construct! The world has a set of better eyes.stalking recognition that...degrees of freedom in design, must be truly randomized to permit / admit, potentials potential.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (17138)5/14/2009 10:34:07 AM
From: SliderOnTheBlack3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 49977
 
Unhappy China & Angry Youth...

China’s ‘angry youths’ are novel heroes.

ft.com ... html?nclick_check=1

By Kathrin Hille in Beijing

Published: March 27 2009

China is unhappy. So much is clear as a book stating just this and recommending a confrontation with the west as a remedy has conquered the country’s bestseller lists and triggered a fierce online debate over China’s place in the world and its identity.

Unhappy China argues that the country should stand up to the west to claim its rightful place as a global power, and it looks to a patriotic young generation as a source of national strength and unity.

This comes just as China’s harassment of a US surveillance ship, which was branded by Washington as “aggressive, troublesome” behaviour, and Beijing’s proposal that the US dollar could be replaced as the main international reserve currency, gave powerful reminders of the country’s potential to become a global power both militarily and economically.

Song Qiang, one of the book’s five authors, says that for a rising power like China, there are only two choices open to it: to become a hegemon or to get cast aside.

“I’d rather choose the first,” he said in an interview.

Wang Xiaodong, another of the authors, argues that the financial crisis has proved that the US has failed in world leadership and that “we can do it better”. Even without the crisis, he believes China must become a superpower.

“For a country as big as China, the need will arise to secure sufficient resources,” he said.

The nationalism of China’s “angry youths” shocked many in the west when they protested against the rejection of their Olympic torch run in Paris, attacked the western media for alleged bias and lies in its coverage of unrest in Tibet and called for a boycott of the French retailer Carrefour’s outlets in their country.

For the book’s authors, they are China’s only heroes and these views sell. Unhappy China jumped to the top of the bestseller list of online bookstore dangdang.com soon after publication on March 12.

As the initial 100,000 copies were selling out quickly, the publisher rushed to print another 50,000 early this week.

In the country’s lively internet blogosphere, the book has created something of a stir.

On Qihoo, a search site, a search for the book title returned more than a million listings.

All major web portals and social networking sites have their own Unhappy China forums where supporters and critics face off.

“The book appeals to the section of this increasingly diverse society which is frustrated that the leadership is not taking a firmer hand in foreign policy,” said Russell Leigh Moses, a Beijing-based political analyst. He added that the treatise represents a challenge for the Chinese government.

“The fact that this book is out means that such ideas have some traction,” said Mr Moses.

“However, it’s a sign of just how divided this society is and how uncertain the future is that it doesn’t sweep the system in a storm but causes so much friction.”

Some bloggers reject the book as the bitter rant of ultra left-wing intellectuals who feel sidelined under Beijing’s policies of reform and opening.

Others agree with the goal but differ on the authors’ view that Beijing should go for it and assert itself right now.

“China is still too weak to seek confrontation with the west,” said an anonymous blogger.

But another blogger said: “These five authors can directly replace the current politbureau members.

“Then they can [make] China a first-rate major power in just a few years!”

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telegraph.co.uk

Premier Wen Jiabao left no doubt at the Communist Party summit in March that China is irked by Washington's response to the credit crunch, suspecting that the US is engaging in a stealth default on its debt by driving down the dollar. "We have lent a massive amount of capital to the United States, and of course we are concerned about the security of our assets. To speak truthfully, I do indeed have some worries," he said.

Days later, the central bank chief wrote a paper suggesting a world currency based on Special Drawing Rights issued by the International Monetary Fund.

Some economists say China is suffering from "cognitive dissonance" by anguishing so much over its reserves, accumulated as a result of its own policy of holding down the yuan to promote exports. Quantitative easing by the US Federal Reserve and fellow central banks may have saved China as well, since the country's growth strategy is built on selling goods to the West.

China's fears of imported inflation may reflect its concerns about over-heating. The M2 money supply rose 25pc in March on a year earlier, and there has been explosive credit growth since the government relaxed loan restraints.

There are concerns that the stimulus is leaking into a new asset bubble rather than promoting job growth.

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No job growth + unhappy youth = no happy family.

What really got us out of the Great Depression?

Comments?

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