Como si nada hubiera sucedido desde la postguerra de 1945, el Imperio sigue golpeando países y regiones enteras, cada vez con menos tino, cada día más sordido y brutal. Los signos están en el aire, chicos, nada más hay que sentir los vientos de cambio que llegan del este.
Vía Zero Hedge
llegamos a esta interesante nota de Henry Bonner para Sprott Global
(http://sprottglobal.com/thoughts/articles/monetary-system-world-order-we-have-had-since-1940s-is-collapsing-richard-maybury). Veamos:
Título: Monetary
System, World Order We’ve Had Since 1940’s Are Collapsing: Richard Maybury
Texto: Richard
Maybury has been predicting ‘black swan’ events in his newsletter Early Warning
Report for the last two decades.
In a recent
conversation, he put his finger on something happening around the world. He
sees a growing anxiety about global events – “everybody knows there’s something
seriously wrong but they don’t know what is really happening,” he said.
A reckoning with
policies that have been in place since the 1940’s is taking place, according to
Richard. The fallout, he says, has implications for currencies, the military
hegemony of the US, and political stability around the world.
US Hegemony Since
the 1940’s
“The United
Nations, NATO, the Bretton Woods monetary system, the World Bank, and the
International Monetary Fund were all created in the 1940s according to
blueprints that were approved in Washington,” Richard explains.
And this ‘world
order’ may be coming to an end, he believes: “It’s the collapse of that
structure that was built in the 1940s that is behind all of these problems that
are popping up in financial markets and economies around the world” (we
published a report recently on why many indicators undermine the ‘recovery’
thesis. Download here).
Geopolitical Fallout
Everyone knows
that tensions between the US and the Middle East are at all-time highs but
Richard also believes the US is facing an untenable situation in its attitude
to China. The US has the same approach of policing East Asia, in particular the
Sea of China, as it did during the 1940’s, but things have changed, and the US
is no longer the overwhelming power that
it used to be, when most of Asia was under-developed relative to the West.
The Sea of China
could be one area where the global order, with the US on top, begins to break
down, says Richard:
“The fact of the
matter is that China already owns the South China Sea and the East China Sea
and Washington doesn’t like that.
“Washington is
planning to do something about that? Come on, that’s ridiculous. And yet that’s
the direction we’re moving in.”
Much to Show for
Strong Dollar
Why hasn’t the US
Dollar, the lynchpin of the global monetary system, lost its appeal? Richard
says the US remains the most powerful country, and that’s why people have stuck
with the Dollar for now:
“People are
scared out of their minds and they’re looking for safety and the position that
Federal officials created for themselves in the 1940’s still largely exists.
“So when you’re
scared, you want to go with the guy who’s strongest and that’s what they’re
doing.”
Even with a
strong Dollar, Richard remarks that the goods and services you can buy in the
US aren’t getting much better or cheaper:
“I look around at
goods and services that I used to buy and they’re not available anymore. The
quality of the stuff I do buy is going downhill. You know the old saying, ‘They
don’t make it like they used to.’ Well, that has become literally true in a lot
of cases.”
Swiss Move to
Protect Franc Is a Warning
One of the most
important consequences of this fallout is the impact on the global currency
system. Richard points to Switzerland’s recent move to abandon its peg to the
Euro, saying the Swiss are disavowing the current monetary system.
“The Swiss
announced that they essentially weren’t going to go along with this floating
exchange rate mess anymore. They were going to break the Franc loose from the
Euro and be independent. That was the Swiss telling the whole world, ‘Look out.
These other governments are all going nuts devaluing their currencies and we
will not go along with it.’”
Switzerland’s
move is a slap to the group of powerful political elites from various countries
that gather to set international policy, known as the ‘G20.’ In their most
recent get-together, they issued a statement supporting the European Central
Bank’s new initiative to buy back 1.1 trillion Euro worth of bonds (US$1.2
trillion).
The policy is
inspired by the US Fed’s own measures to bolster the economy through Quantitative
Easing (a bond-buying program that was ended in 2014) and a policy of supplying
loans at low interest rates.
The Swiss
departure from the Euro peg should thus come as a warning, according to
Richard. “The Swiss are the centerpiece of this huge catastrophe that is
developing because these governments are accepting as legitimate economic
policy the devaluation of their currencies. The Swiss are saying ‘Look out. All
hell is going to break loose.’”
Nervous
Did the Swiss’
decision to de-peg their currency from the Euro shake the faith of the ECB?
Nope.
The most recent
announcement from the G20 meetings in Istanbul supports an activist monetary
policy in Europe, saying:
“Consistent with
central banks’ mandates, current economic conditions require accommodative
monetary policies in some economies.
“We welcome that
central banks take appropriate monetary policy action. The recent policy
decision by the ECB will further support the recovery in the Euro area.”
Richard concludes
that he’s wary of owning any currencies now:
“Who knows what’s
coming. I don’t. I just know that if you have a whole lot of cash of any kind,
in any currency, you ought to be really nervous about it and you ought to be
into raw materials and precious metals, at least to some extent.”
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