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For the Record (Read 200058 times)
perceptions_now
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Re: For the Record
Reply #975 - Nov 9th, 2013 at 11:54am
 
Govt toughens travel expense claims rules


THE federal government is toughening rules for politicians' travel entitlements after it emerged some claimed taxpayers' money to attend weddings and football matches.

The government will strengthen the declaration parliamentarians make when making a travel claim.

From January 1, if their travel claim later needs adjustment, because it is outside the guidelines, they will be forced to pay a 25 per cent penalty on top of the adjustment.

Mandatory training will also be given to parliamentarians and their offices if more than one incorrect claim is lodged within a financial year.

Special Minister of State Michael Ronaldson told a press conference in Melbourne the move will improve transparency and public respect for the system.

"Those who do the wrong thing on the back of these changes will suffer a significant financial penalty," he said.

Under the changes, Senator Ronaldson may table in parliament the name of any parliamentarian who fails to "substantially comply" within a reasonable time with a request for further information about their claims.

Link -
http://www.perthnow.com.au/news/breaking-news/pollies-face-penalty-for-wrong-exp...
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Too little, Too Late!

Both Liberal & Labor left this swinging for much too long, as it suited both party's, until it finally got the adverse Public Publicity it deserves!

And, whilst some action is better than none, the remedial actions proposed have not gone anywhere near as far as is really required!

It should be clearly spelled out that the sort of "claims" recently highlighted are NOT CLAIMABLE & the circumstances that are claimable should also be very clearly spelled out (chapter & verse),

AND, the penalty/s for trying on a Rort should also be more substantial, perhaps the first attempted Rort should attract a 50% loading on the repayment, the second a 100% loading on the repayment and on the third try the offender gets the boot, out of Parliament! 

AND, penalty/s should also be introduced for other Rorts in addition to Travel. 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #976 - Nov 15th, 2013 at 2:22pm
 
France on brink of another recession: Troubled economy went into reverse over the summer


    Figures showed output fell by 0.1 per cent between July and September
    Dismal news came just a week after Standard & Poor’s cut France’s credit
    Contrast to the UK where economy grew by 0.8 per cent in third quarter


France was yesterday rocked by the news that its troubled economy slammed into reverse over the summer.

Official figures showed output fell by 0.1 per cent between July and September - leaving the country on the brink of another recession.

The dismal news came just a week after Standard & Poor’s cut France’s credit rating by a further notch to AA in a humiliating setback for President Francois Hollande.


The performance in the rest of the eurozone was little better with output in the single currency bloc growing by just 0.1pc in the third quarter down from 0.3pc in the previous three months.

The German economy slowed from 0.7 per cent to just 0.3 per cent.


Figures from Italy showed its economy shrank by 0.1pc following a 0.3pc contraction in the second quarter.

But Spain notched up growth of 0.1 per cent  - its first quarter of expansion since early 2011.

The disappointing figures from the across the region were a stark reminder that the eurozone crisis is far from over and fuelled fears of a long and painful recovery.


Unemployment in the eurozone is at a record high of over 12 per cent and more than half of Spanish and Greek youngsters who want a job cannot find work.


The European Central Bank last week cut interest rates from 0.5 per cent to a new record low of 0.25 per cent in a desperate bid to stave of deflation and inject life into the economy.

But with Germany, the eurozone’s biggest economy, slowing and France, the second biggest, in decline, experts fear the move was too little too late.

Link -
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2507613/France-brink-recession-Troubled-...
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A few observations -
1) I would suggest that none of the stats being put out by governments, are all that believable and they are mainly slanted towards painting a "more optimistic picture, than actually exists".
2) Given the directions of the basic Global Economic Drivers, there is zero chance of any sustained Economic Recovery, in the foreseeable future!
ii

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Re: For the Record
Reply #977 - Nov 15th, 2013 at 3:30pm
 

It's a bit volatile in the Eurozone. They never really did climb out of that big old global financial crisis of 2008, did they.

I don't know if Great Britain are faring any better.

And what about us? Joe needs a top up, but he won't tell us what for. Are things worse than we were told?

Then we have the USA where money printing has taken on a life of its own. We will hear more about that next February, but the new IMF boss says it's the way to go (she's not about to rock the boat).....stimulate the economy. It hasn't worked for the last six years, but who knows? It's a bit late to start on a different path after all.

Too little, too late!

Pay down your debt boys and girls, there's a ginormous tsunami heading this way (will be funny if it hits on Tony's watch - spiteful I know)  Smiley
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"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace." Hendrix
andrei said: Great isn't it? Seeing boatloads of what is nothing more than human garbage turn up.....
 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #978 - Nov 16th, 2013 at 11:11am
 
The Federal Reserve Is Monetizing A Staggering Amount Of U.S. Government Debt


...

The Federal Reserve is creating hundreds of billions of dollars out of thin air and using that money to buy U.S. government debt and mortgage-backed securities and take them out of circulation. Since the middle of 2008, these purchases have caused the Fed's balance sheet to balloon from under a trillion dollars to nearly four trillion dollars. This represents the greatest central bank intervention in the history of the planet, and Janet Yellen says that she does not anticipate that it will end any time soon because "the recovery is still fragile". Of course, as I showed the other day, the truth is that quantitative easing has done essentially nothing for the average person on the street. But what QE has done is that it has sent stocks soaring to record highs. Unfortunately, this stock market bubble is completely and totally divorced from economic reality, and when the easy money is taken away the bubble will collapse.
Just look at what happened a few months ago when Ben Bernanke suggested that the Fed may begin to "taper" the amount of quantitative easing that it was doing.
The mere suggestion that the flow of easy money would start to slow down a little bit was enough to send the market into deep convulsions. This is why the Federal Reserve cannot stop monetizing debt. The moment the Fed stops, it could throw our financial markets into a crisis even worse than what we saw back in 2008.


The problems that plagued our financial system back in 2008 have never been fixed. They have just been papered over temporarily by trillions of easy dollars from the Federal Reserve. All of this easy money is keeping stocks artificially high and interest rates artificially low.

Right now, the Federal Reserve is buying approximately 85 billion dollars worth of U.S. government debt and mortgage-backed securities each month. We are told that the portion going to buy U.S. government debt each month is approximately 45 billion dollars, but who knows what the Fed is actually doing behind the scenes. In any event, by creating money out of thin air and using it to remove U.S. Treasury securities out of circulation,
the Federal Reserve is essentially monetizing U.S. government debt at a staggering rate.


If the Fed does decide to permanently stop quantitative easing at some point, stocks will drop dramatically and interest rates will skyrocket because there will be a lot less demand for U.S. Treasuries. In fact, interest rates have already risen substantially over the past few months even though quantitative easing is still running.

But if the Federal Reserve keeps doing this, it is going to become increasingly obvious to the rest of the world that the Fed is simply monetizing debt and is starting to behave like the Weimar Republic. The remainder of the planet is watching what the Federal Reserve is doing very carefully, and they are starting to ask themselves some very hard questions.

Why should they continue to use our dollars to trade with one another when the Fed is wildly creating money out of thin air and rapidly devaluing the existing dollars that they are holding? And why should they continue to lend us trillions of dollars at ultra-low interest rates that are way below the real rate of inflation when the U.S. government is already drowning in debt and the money that will be used to pay those debts back will be steadily losing value with each passing day?

Right now, the Fed is stuck in the middle of a "no man's land" where it is monetizing a significant amount of U.S. government debt but it is trying to sell everyone else on the idea that it is not really monetizing debt. This is a state of affairs that cannot go on indefinitely.


Ultimately, the Federal Reserve is faced with only bad choices. The status quo is not sustainable, ending quantitative easing will cause the financial markets to crash, and going "all the way" with quantitative easing will just turn us into the Weimar Republic.

The consequences of decades of very foolish decisions are catching up with us, and this is all going to end very, very badly. I hope that you are getting ready.

Link -
http://seekingalpha.com/article/1842622-the-federal-reserve-is-monetizing-a-stag...
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Most of that, should be pretty much "self evident", But no doubt it will come as a surprise to many & many will also disagree!

Nevertheless, this is a state of affairs that cannot go on indefinitely, although the FedRes & the USA do now find themselves in a catch 22 situation, they can not continue & they can not go back.

So, it is likely they will continue, until something uncontrollable out of left field intervenes & that's when TSHTF!

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Re: For the Record
Reply #979 - Nov 17th, 2013 at 6:33pm
 
Ross Garnaut: Suffering some pain now will stave off the economic dog days


The resources boom hangover has left Australians and their leaders a stark choice, writes Ross Garnaut.

It was December 2005, and Australians were enjoying the longest economic expansion - and the largest rise in incomes over a short period - that a developed country had ever known.

''There are 'salad days' of economic policy,'' I said to the annual dinner of the Economic Society in Canberra, ''days when the economy outpaces even people's expectations. These are the times when poor policy looks good enough, and ordinary policy looks celestial.''

It was the third year in which the China resources boom was massively boosting payments for Australian exports. Yet the salad days would be followed by the ''dog days'', I went on to say, ''days when celestial economic policy looks ordinary, and ordinary policy diabolical. It will be wise to save much of the economic fruits of the China boom, in case the extraordinary conditions we are enjoying turn out to be temporary - as they always have in the past.'' The rest is history. Australians now have to make the best of the dog days.


The Coalition's decisive 2013 election victory in the House of Representatives gives it the opportunity to take decisions in the public interest. If it uses this opportunity to occupy the centre ground in political life and govern with the welfare of the great majority of Australians in mind, it will at once conserve most of the gains in our standard of living of the past 22 years and entrench itself in power for a long period.


Alternatively, if it seeks to govern in the interests of its most powerful supporters, it will not be able to lead Australia away from rising unemployment, large falls in living standards, social tension and growing dissatisfaction with our institutions. Its lifespan is likely to be short. A new government will have to deal with the problems, and we cannot be sure at this distance that it would do better.

Neither major party took policies into the election that came to grips with the great challenges facing Australia. Both parties proposed policies that would, indeed, impede solutions.


The choice for the new Abbott government is between two radically different approaches. We can continue to conduct our public life as if the approaches that seemed good enough in the salad days will still work in harder times. If this is our choice, we will continue to live behind the veil of ignorance that has descended over our public life during the past dozen years. We will make choices within a political culture that is distorted by the intrusion of market values into areas of public policy where they have a corrupting effect and produce poor results.

Or we can restore discipline of the kind that framed public choice in the reform era from 1983 to 2000, be prepared to think hard about policy rather than shout political slogans, and be guided by clear analysis even when it requires difficult decisions.


I call these the ''business as usual'' and ''public interest'' approaches to policy. They lead to radically different outcomes. If we continue with the former, we will live in greater comfort for a short while. But sooner rather than later we will experience deep economic recession with high unemployment.


If we choose ''business as usual'', we can expect disappointment
as public services are diminished bit by bit in response to successive fiscal crises. We can expect bitter political conflict within our society, and unhappiness about our institutions.


Such tensions would be all the more dangerous because they would emerge at a time of international financial uncertainty, in a world dragged down by the overhang from the global financial crisis, and with its causes mostly still at large. They would come at a time of ideological uncertainty, with doubts growing about whether the political and economic systems of the developed world still have the capacity to deliver prosperity to most of its citizens. They would be all the more dangerous because they would be emerging at a time of strategic uncertainty, when Australians' confident presumption that might is right and on our side is challenged by the rise of the Asian superpowers.

And they would come at a time of the growing impact of climate change.


To Be Cont!ii



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Re: For the Record
Reply #980 - Nov 17th, 2013 at 8:08pm
 
Ross Garnaut: Suffering some pain now will stave off the economic dog days (Cont)


The public interest is the much harder choice, but it has better consequences. For Australia to choose this approach, many of us - enough to influence policy decisions at a high political level - will have to put aside the slogans that have replaced thought about public policy so far in the 21st century. We will have to reconsider propositions to which we have given unthinking assent. That is hard. Harder still, we will have to change our minds when the evidence supports change. The public interest approach will not be chosen unless many Australians are prepared to support policies that sometimes go against their immediate personal interests. Political leaders will have to introduce changes that disappoint their strongest supporters.


The odds favour Australians choosing ''business as usual'' - what I have been calling, since 2004 the ''great Australian complacency'' of the early 21st century.
But let us at least consider alternatives to sleepwalking into a deeply troubled future as if we had no choice at all.


The election has been followed by a shift from talking down to talking up the economy in the New Newscorp majority press. Consumer and business confidence has continued to rise since the August cut in interest rates. There has been a lift in some of the financial markets. There is talk that increased confidence from the change of government will lift spending and economic activity, and even that the resources boom will burst back into life. That the employment and growth and budget and external payments challenges will go away.

Sorry. That is not the way the economy works.


Increased investment in any industry is shaped by calculations of expected profit. None of the purported increase in confidence and none of the high-profile election promises of the government will change profit calculations in ways that increase investment. None will help us to meet the fundamental challenge: to improve Australian competitiveness and to increase investment and activity in trade-exposed industries while keeping the budget on a path to long-term stability.

The fall in the Australian dollar so far in 2013 helps, but it is not nearly enough.

The new Australian political culture makes a prime minister seeking to govern in the public interest vulnerable to attack from an opposition focused on unpopular developments and measures. The dog days provide exceptional opportunities for negativity. The approach of the opposition matters. Whatever it might do to its own hopes for early return to government, an opposition that offers broadly constructive support for a new reform era would improve the prospects of a successful Australian transition.

If I am right and Australia gets it right, we will endure a period of moderate falls in living standards, without any part of our society suffering badly from the adjustment. After a while, living standards will start to rise again - moderately, in line with the higher productivity growth that a new reform era has made possible. We will be in a sound position to manage any major disruption to the international economy. We will feel comfortable with our democracy, and others will see our democratic capitalism in a positive light.

If we fail to take an early opportunity to adjust down the cost levels that have hung over from the China resources boom, we can look forward to economic instability, inflation, stagnation and high unemployment. Governments will do their best to deal with parts of the problem where solutions seem to be constrained less tightly by political reality, and stir up new nests of opposition for their troubles. We will become an unlucky country, run by second-rate people who share the country's bad luck.

If our country fails the challenge, Australians would be foolish to ignore the weakness in our democracy that contributed to failure - the rise in power of private interests; the fragmentation of the national conversation about policy; increasing comfort with conflict of interest. We would be wise to heed the lessons from the political history of other resource-rich countries in which democratic institutions have been broken by the power of resource-based wealth.

It matters to Australians that the public interest wins in the great struggle to shape the aftermath of the China resources boom. At a pivotal time in the spread of modern economic development throughout the world, the fate of democratic capitalism in our ancient continent matters for others as well.

Link -
http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/ross-garnaut-suffering-som...
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Garnaut certainly gets a number of issues correct, although I think there are a few issues where I would disagree & a deliberate Decline in the OZ$ is oe where I would not agree!

That said, IF we take the correct path, then we will be better placed, But the will still be a great struggle.

However, If we do not select the correct actions, then the path ahead will prove very rocky. indeed! 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #981 - Nov 18th, 2013 at 10:33pm
 
Recycling company Carbon Polymers Ltd under investigation by Environment Protection Authority over tyre dumping


Australia's largest tyre-recycling company has abandoned thousands of tyres at its depots around the country and is now under investigation by the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA).

Carbon Polymers Ltd, which is about to change names and depart the tyre-recycling business altogether, is run by Andrew Howard, a former derivatives trader and associate of Ron Medich, who is facing charges in relation to the murder of his business partner, Michael McGurk.

Mr Howard had also previously worked for Mr McGurk.

Carbon Polymers is listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), which means its shares can be traded and it must continuously update shareholders as to changes which materially affect the value of the company.

But company insiders have told the ABC that the regular breakdown of machinery, the failure to pay bills and even the closure of the company's facilities in Perth, Adelaide and Sydney were never disclosed to the market.

Neil Sayer, the company's former operations manager in Adelaide, said the company did not process a single tyre in the nine months he was there, but this fact was never disclosed to investors.

"Just looking on the ASX reports over the last two years it's pretty obvious that this company is not doing what it said it would do," he said.

The EPA undertook a site inspection several weeks ago at the company's headquarters at the Sydney suburb of Smithfield, which has since been abandoned.

Steve Beaman, the EPA's director of waste and resource recovery, confirmed that Carbon Polymers was in the State Government's sights.

"The EPA is currently investigating Carbon Polymers Pty Ltd," he said.

"We take the allegations concerning Carbon Polymers Pty Ltd very seriously and do not want to jeopardise our investigations by commenting any further at this stage."

In the past three years, the company has raised $9 million – much of it from ordinary investors who were won over by its promise of rapid growth and the prospect of $20 million profit by 2016.

In October 2011 Carbon Polymers announced it had won a major contract to supply thousands of tonnes of processed rubber to VicRoads for use in bitumen.

But this deal – like others – fell apart after the company could not supply a sufficiently high-quality product. This too was never disclosed to the ASX.

The company has failed to announce to the market a series of court actions taken against it, including by former directors, landlords and consultants.

In June this year, it lost an appeal in the NSW Supreme Court, which ordered it to pay more than $560,000.


In April this year, a board-level dispute spilled into the public arena. At the time, the ASX published a letter by former Carbon Polymers director Phillip Merhi which alleged the company had been insufficiently transparent about its affairs.

"I have raised with the managing director my concerns over the financial affairs of the company and various other concerns," he wrote.

The ABC has seen multiple complaints to the corporate watchdog, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), and to the ASX, which allege a pattern of governance failures at the company.

At least two such complaints were filed by former employees and directors of the company who had seen the operation from the inside.

Despite this, ASIC's investigators have declined to take up the matter.

Link -
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-11-18/recycling-company-carbon-polymers-epa-tyre...
=========================================
There are many serious issues raised in this story, which need to be addressed, by various State governments & the Federal Government!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #982 - Nov 19th, 2013 at 10:42am
 
As I have said previously, the Floating of the OZ$ was/is one of a select few of the momentous Economic moves made by Australian Pollies, for many decades.

And following is a new chart released by Commsec, which tracks the floating OZ$ since it was first floated in 1983, together with some "relevant" comments.

...

For those like me, who find the above print to be a little small, you may prefer to go to the following link, then click onto the chart, which then brings up a larger version.
http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2013/11/thirty-years-of-floating-for-the-austral...
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Re: For the Record
Reply #983 - Nov 19th, 2013 at 11:37am
 
Russian lawmaker wants to outlaw U.S. dollar, calls it a Ponzi scheme


MOSCOW — Predicting the imminent collapse of the U.S. dollar, a Russian lawmaker submitted a bill to his country’s parliament Wednesday that would ban the use or possession of the American currency.

Mikhail Degtyarev, the lawmaker who proposed the bill, compared the dollar to a Ponzi scheme. He warned that the government would have to bail out Russians holding the U.S. currency if it collapses.

“If the U.S. national debt continues to grow, the collapse of the dollar system will take place in 2017,” said Mr. Degtyarev, a member of the nationalist Liberal Democrat Party who lost in Moscow’s recent mayoral election.

“The countries that will suffer the most will be those that have failed to wean themselves off their dependence on the dollar in time. In light of this, the fact that confidence in the dollar is growing among Russian citizens is extremely dangerous.”

The bill would partially revive a Soviet-era ban on the dollar. It would prohibit Russians from holding dollars in the country’s banks, and banks would be unable to carry out transactions in the dollar.

However, Russians still would be able to buy or sell dollars while abroad and hold dollar accounts in foreign banks.

Russia’s Central Bank and the government would be exempt from the law.

Russian financial analysts were largely critical of the bill, which they suggested was more about making political capital on the back of rising anti-U.S. sentiment in Russia than protecting the country’s economy.

“The American financial system, despite all its existing problems, remains the most stable and low-risk in the world,” said financial analyst Andrei Shenk.

He also warned that the bill would harm Russia’s investment climate.

Another analyst warned that the bill would strip Russians of the ability to flee the country to seek greater political and social freedoms.

“The right to the free exchange of currencies is a fundamental element of capitalism,” said Moscow-based economics analyst Igor Suzdaltsev. “It allows citizens to leave the country when a dictatorship is imposed by selling their property and exchanging their assets for the necessary currency.”

Link -
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/nov/13/bill-would-outlaw-us-dollar-russ...
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This is a state of affairs that cannot go on indefinitely, although the FedRes & the USA do now find themselves in a catch 22 situation, they can not continue & they can not go back, without incurring adverse Consequences.

So, it is likely they will continue, until something uncontrollable out of left field intervenes such as the Russians, the Chinese, Oil Nations such as OPEC & a few other nations abandoning the US$ safe haven notion & that's when TSHTF.

As I have said previously, " for all Actions & In-actions, there are Consequences"!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #984 - Nov 23rd, 2013 at 11:15pm
 
'Bad and lazy habits' costing nation


RIO Tinto chairman Jan du Plessis has offered an upbeat outlook on growth in the Chinese economy but has warned that Australia needs to shake off "bad and lazy" habits that have prevented it from becoming a more productive nation.

Mr du Plessis, speaking at an industry function yesterday, also defended the miner's focus on iron ore, which generates 80 per cent of the company's earnings, saying Rio's management was content with its current portfolio.

"We are not going to be tempted to do things or to make acquisitions or to diversify outside of iron ore just to appear more diversified," Mr du Plessis said.

"We invest appropriately in the iron ore business and we have got a whole portfolio of other businesses that in their own way are good businesses and at the right time they will come through and they will shine." Speaking at the Australian British Chamber of Commerce business lunch in Sydney, he said Australia was in a comfortable position but costs had rapidly escalated.

"From a mining perspective, it has become tough to operate here. Costs are very high," he said.

"The competitive position in Australia is not what it once was. Seven years ago, Australia was one of the cheapest places in the world to operate; today it is just about one of the most expensive,"
Mr du Plessis added.

In Australia, the resources boom underwrote what was a golden era of wealth creation between 1991 and 2009, making Australia's economy "the envy of many in the world".

In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, however, the situation had changed and the government and business needed to take stock,
he said.

"For too long, government and business have taken prosperity for granted. We have developed bad and lazy habits," he said.

"The strength of the resources boom has masked the weakness of a slowdown in productivity improvements."

Co-operation and collaboration of business and government, at an industry and company, federal and state level was needed for effective reform in Australia.

Globally, structural problems remained in Europe while a recovery in Britain and the US was under way.

But the global economy's wellbeing depended on Asia, particularly China, he said, where gross domestic product grew 7.8 per cent between July and September.

"My long-term view of the Chinese economy remains positive and we expect to see continued, robust growth in demand for commodities," he said.

"This is good for those of us in the mining business and therefore good for Australia."

Early signs from the new federal government that the country was "open for business" were encouraging, with the government showing "all the signs" it was serious about making that happen. "This government, like the Howard, Hawke and Keating governments, seems to understand that you can't have sustainable growth without investment and fundamental reform," he said.

He urged business leaders to "stand up and argue the case about why change is needed".

"Business has to be prepared to do some of the heavy lifting on the policy reform front. It can't all be left to government," he said.


Link -
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/mining-energy/bad-and-lazy-habits-costi...
==========================================

A few observations -
1) It is correct that, we need to become a more Productive, as a nation.
2) It is correct that, for far too long, government and business & the general Public have taken prosperity for granted.
3) It is INCORRECT that, a recovery is underway in the UK & the USA.
4) It is INCORRECT that, the Chinese economy remains positive and that continued, robust growth in demand for commodities, can be expected.
5) It is INCORRECT that, the competitive position in Australia has gone from being one of the cheapest places in the world to operate seven years ago, to today being about one of the most expensive.

A phrase comes to mind here, "tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth".


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Re: For the Record
Reply #985 - Nov 24th, 2013 at 11:53am
 
China Announces That It Is Going To Stop Stockpiling U.S. Dollars


China just dropped an absolute bombshell, but it was almost entirely ignored by the mainstream media in the United States. The central bank of China has decided that it is "no longer in China’s favor to accumulate foreign-exchange reserves".

During the third quarter of 2013, China's foreign-exchange reserves were valued at approximately $3.66 trillion. And of course the biggest chunk of that was made up of U.S. dollars.

But now China has announced that the time has come for it to stop stockpiling U.S. dollars. And if that does indeed turn out to be the case, than many U.S. analysts are suggesting that China could also soon stop buying any more U.S. debt. Needless to say, all of this would be very bad for the United States.

For years, China has been systematically propping up the value of the U.S. dollar and keeping the value of the yuan artificially low.

This has resulted in a massive flood of super cheap products from across the Pacific that U.S. consumers have been eagerly gobbling up.

Thanks to the massively unbalanced trade that we have had with China, tens of thousands of our businesses, millions of our jobs and trillions of our dollars have left this country and gone over to China.

Neither Yi nor Zhou gave a time frame for any changes.

It isn't going to happen overnight, but the value of the U.S. dollar is going to start to go down, and all of that cheap stuff that you are used to buying at Wal-Mart and the dollar store is going to become a lot more expensive.

But of even more importance is what this latest move by China could mean for U.S. government debt. As most Americans have heard, we are heavily dependent on foreign nations such as China lending us money. Right now, China owns nearly 1.3 trillion dollars of our debt.

"Together, with the Federal Reserve tapering its bond purchases, it has the potential to add to the bearish long-term outlook on U.S. Treasurys."

So who is going to buy all of our debt? That is a very good question. If the Federal Reserve starts tapering bond purchases and China quits buying our debt, who is going to fill the void?

If there is significantly less demand for government bonds, that will cause interest rates to rise dramatically. And if interest rates rise dramatically from where they are now, that will set off the kind of nightmare scenario that I keep talking about.


China accounts for more global trade that anyone else does, and they also own more of our debt than any other nation does. If China starts dumping our dollars and our debt, much of the rest of the planet would likely follow suit and we would be in for a world of hurt.

And just this week there was another major announcement which indicates that China is getting ready to make a major move against the U.S. dollar. According to Reuters, crude oil futures may soon be priced in yuan on the Shanghai Futures Exchange.

China, which overtook the United States as the world's top oil importer in September, hopes the contract will become a benchmark in Asia and has said it would allow foreign investors to trade in the contract without setting up a local subsidiary.

If that actually happens, that will be absolutely huge.

The world is changing, and most Americans have absolutely no idea what this is going to mean for them.As demand for the U.S. dollar and U.S. debt goes down, the things that we buy at the store will cost a lot more, our standard of living will go down and it will become a lot more expensive for everyone (including the U.S. government) to borrow money.


The years ahead are going to be very challenging, and so I hope that you are getting ready for them.

Link -
http://seekingalpha.com/article/1857411-china-announces-that-it-is-going-to-stop...
=========================================
In fact, the Chinese have already effectively assumed this position several years, as indicated in the following chart  -
...

What is now changing is that they are becoming a little more Public, a little more overt and that is perhaps because there is now more backing for that stance, coming from the likes of Russia, some of the Oil Producing nations & a few others, But also because of the "ongoing" nature of the US "Monetizing" their own Debt, via the US FedRes buying US Treasury Debt, which it has done by "magically" printing money out of "thin air".

As I have said previously, "for all actions & in-actions, there are Consequences" and although the US Politicians may not have thought so, I can assure them, the will be Consequences!


As suggested in the article, the world is changing, But most US citizens & indeed people in OZ & throughout the world, have no idea what's going on, nor how it will affect them.
That said, the years ahead will indeed be very challenging!


As to timing, that is still an unknown, But the next few years will most likely see a lot of turmoil!



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Re: For the Record
Reply #986 - Nov 25th, 2013 at 12:38pm
 
Krugman, ZIRP And The Permanent Economic Slump


This past week Nobel Laureate Paul Krugman mused:

    ….. if our economy has a persistent tendency toward depression, we're going to be living under the looking-glass rules of depression economics - in which virtue is vice and prudence is folly, in which attempts to save more (including attempts to reduce budget deficits) make everyone worse off - for a long time.

Professor Krugman's post was monumental in so many ways as it appeared to be a departure (or movement) from some of his positions. Consider his "new" thoughts which I find fully consistent with the New Normal:

    …. evidence suggests that we have become an economy whose normal state is one of mild depression, whose brief episodes of prosperity occur only thanks to bubbles and unsustainable borrowing ….

    ….
Why might this be happening? One answer could be slowing population growth
….

    …. Another important factor [for the mild depression] may be persistent trade deficits ….

The main crux of the Krugman argument is that the Fed should maintain its easy money policy (aka zero interest rate policy [ZIRP] and quantitative easing [QE]) as the American economy is mired in a mild depression.

Where is the evidence that monetary policy can do any more than guide an economy for short periods of time. I cannot produce a single chart to evidence QE is working, nor can I produce a single chart predicting with any degree of confidence what the economy would look like today had there been no QE.

USA monetary policy effects every dollar in existence - whether it exists in the USA or outside the USA. Low interest rates for dollars mean dollars can be used for low cost loans anywhere in the world to fund expansion. Dollars will flow in search of the highest return - which again can be anywhere in the world.

I muse whether the Fed can do any more than guess at the proper monetary policy. I ponder the endgame of QE: If the argument is that QE helps an economy, then shouldn't the disposal of QE assets hurt an economy?

How can one ever dispose of QE assets unless inflation takes hold making the QE assets worth a lot less? And inflation is not cooperating.

Why can't the Fed balance sheet continue to grow as long as the (permanent?) slump continues?

But, I hear someone cry out, the Fed will lose a lot of money if they sell Treasuries in a higher interest rate environment at a reduced price. I don't understand that concern - How can the Fed, which has been subcontracted by the U.S. Treasury to create the currency of the land, lose money?

They create money.

No matter how you cut it, ZIRP is a tax on the middle class. It effectively lets the government and big business use money at little cost - while retirees and individual savers get no return on their life savings. Or maybe that is the plan - try to force spending on the middle class (at the expense of reduced saving).


Whatever the case, there is no proof that easy money is helping the majority of Americans and there is no proof that removing easy money won't hurt them.


Link -
http://seekingalpha.com/article/1859361-krugman-zirp-and-the-permanent-economic-...
===========================================
No matter, which way it is sliced & diced, IF INCOME IS LESSENED, in this case by lower interest rates AND an expectation is thrown in (Rightly so) that the Share Price BUBBLE will burst in the not too distant future, THEN THE LOGICAL OUTCOME IS A LOWERING OF DEMAND!

But, WHEN YOU ALSO THROW IN the very real Expectation of A GLOBAL POPULATION GROWTH RATE THAT CONTINUES TO SLOW over the next 10-20 years, PRIOR TO GOING INTO ACTUAL DECLINE for the rest of this century, THEN A LOWER DEMAND IS NOT ONLY LOGICAL, BUT IT IS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED!

I should also add that, THERE ARE ALSO 2 OTHER MAJOR FACTORS that must be thrown into this mix & they are -
1) ENERGY - A SLOWING GLOBAL SUPPLY, WITH DEMAND STILL INCREASING FOR SOME 20 YEARS, RESULTING IN MUCH HIGHER PRICES!
2) CLIMATE CHANGE - AS THE GOLDILOCKS CLIMATE GOES, SO TO DOES THE SUPPLY OF FOOD & FRESH WATER, BUT UP GOES PRICES!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #987 - Nov 26th, 2013 at 5:47pm
 
Bubble Inflating All Around Us-David Stockman


Former White House Budget Director David Stockman says, “Much of the mainstream media is caught up inside the bubble . . . They have an extreme case of ‘recency bias.’  They can’t remember the events of a few years ago.”  Stockman, whose latest book is called “The Great Deformation,” goes on to say, “Look at this bubble inflating all around us. . . . The Russell 2000 is trading at 75 times reported earnings.  People seem to forget that’s exactly where we were in 2007 and 2008.”  Stockman has a grim assessment of the current economy.  Stockman contends, “You are in a crony capitalism bankrupting mess.  That is very disconcerting news to people inside the bubble.”  On China, Stockman says, “They are sitting on this massive hoard of paper that they’re never going to be able to do anything with.  They have huge distortions inside of their economy . . . as bad as anything we have.”  Stockman goes on to say, “This is a symptom that this huge central bank game is nearing its end stage.”  Stockman warns, “When the Fed finally stops printing $85 billion a month . . . we’ll have falling bond prices and rising yields, a crisis at the heart of the financial system, the $12 trillion Treasury note and bond market.  That’s when the day of reckoning will finally begin to unfold, and everybody will be caught up in it.”  Stockman warns, “This is not a viable system.  It’s a house of cards . . . I think it will be a deflationary event . . . financial asset prices will collapse. ”   How does gold do in this calamity?  Stockman says, “As they see those assets go up in smoke, I think there will be a flight to a monetary asset that people will have some confidence in, and gold will be that asset.” 

Link -
http://usawatchdog.com/bubble-inflating-all-around-us-david-stockman/
=========================================
You would think, If there was some $2.5 Trillion more going into an Economy (EACH YEAR), from the Federal Government & the FedRes, than is being received in Federal Revenue, then that sort of stimulus would be forging a gang Buster Economic reaction?

But it ain't!

And, at some point, when those Stimulus measures end, which they must, then The poo Really Will Hit The Fan, which it will!
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Re: For the Record
Reply #988 - Nov 27th, 2013 at 6:02pm
 

Honestly Perce.....I have heard 'experts' say that

"when the US economy starts to come around next year blah blah blah".....

UNBELIEVABLE!!!!


“When the Fed finally stops printing $85 billion a month . . . we’ll have falling bond prices and rising yields, a crisis at the heart of the financial system, the $12 trillion Treasury note and bond market.  That’s when the day of reckoning will finally begin to unfold, and everybody will be caught up in it.”  Stockman warns, “This is not a viable system.  It’s a house of cards . . . I think it will be a deflationary event . . . financial asset prices will collapse. ”


What if they never stop printing?

Why can't they have a $200trillion debt?

They don't seem to be all that concerned about $12 trillion.

Will it be a case of the more they print, the more other nations will turn away from the US dollar?
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"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace." Hendrix
andrei said: Great isn't it? Seeing boatloads of what is nothing more than human garbage turn up.....
 
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Re: For the Record
Reply #989 - Nov 28th, 2013 at 11:12pm
 
Ex Dame Pansi wrote on Nov 27th, 2013 at 6:02pm:
Honestly Perce.....I have heard 'experts' say that

"when the US economy starts to come around next year blah blah blah".....

UNBELIEVABLE!!!!


“When the Fed finally stops printing $85 billion a month . . . we’ll have falling bond prices and rising yields, a crisis at the heart of the financial system, the $12 trillion Treasury note and bond market.  That’s when the day of reckoning will finally begin to unfold, and everybody will be caught up in it.”  Stockman warns, “This is not a viable system.  It’s a house of cards . . . I think it will be a deflationary event . . . financial asset prices will collapse. ”


What if they never stop printing?

Why can't they have a $200trillion debt?

They don't seem to be all that concerned about $12 trillion.

Will it be a case of the more they print, the more other nations will turn away from the US dollar?


Pansi,
The next post, may be of interest to you!
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