What the Looming US-China Currency War Means for the Economy
If the world gets into a currency war — with the assault on wages and savings that devaluation entails — no one wins.
If the world gets into a currency war — with the assault on wages and savings that devaluation entails — no one wins.
While much of the media remains focused on Trump and trade, the greatest threat to the Chinese economy may be reckoning with a massive financial bubble from within.
The fact that the most conservative investors are being forced to purchase bonds of nearly bankrupt companies for virtually no yield is not a success of monetary policy nor a tool for growth.
The market probably interprets correctly that the European Central Bank will become even more dovish under Lagarde. This will encourage more risk in the financial system.
Since Libra is an extended arm of the current financial system, first-world economies could benefit at the cost of developing economies.
A major factor that can explain the apparent contradiction between weakening so-called fundamentals of today — and the stock market's continued march upward — is changes in monetary liquidity.
Increased velocity of circulation is not, in itself, a contributing cause of higher commodity prices. It is not even a link in the chain of causation.
Vikram Mansharamani’s second edition of Boombustology: Spotting Financial Bubbles Before They Burst has all the great insights from the first edition plus a foreword by James Grant.
Contrary to popular thinking, the velocity of money does not have a life of its own.
Skidelsky manifests an inordinate distaste for money and “greed.” Far better in his eyes is the pursuit of power by the State, even at the cost of wars and massive public debt. Some of us will not agree.