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Currency Wars, Trade and the Consuming Crisis of Capitalism

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Yavin4 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-07-11 09:58 AM
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Currency Wars, Trade and the Consuming Crisis of Capitalism
Pretty intresting read:

To really make sense of the past 40 years, and the current crisis of advanced global Capitalism, we must turn to everyone's favorite misunderstood economic framework, Marxism. I recently addressed several aspects of Marx's view of the inevitability of advanced Capitalism's crises in Marx, Labor's Dwindling Share of the Economy and the Crisis of Advanced Capitalism (August 31, 2011).

Here's the thing about conventional economics: it cannot make sense of our current interlocking crises because it lacks the tools and perspective to do so. Conventional economics has failed on a grand scale. Not only has its policies failed, its account of what's really going on fails to explain the underlying dynamics because it is fundamentally self-referential, parochial, mechanistic, blind to broader forces of history and soaked in the quasi-religious hubris that reductionist equations and quant models can not only explicate reality, they can predict human behavior.

The catastrophic failure of its policies result not from poor policy choices but from a tragically inadequate intellectual foundation. Hubris, indeed.



http://www.oftwominds.com/blogsept11/global-capitalist-crisis9-11.html
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dkf Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-07-11 10:15 AM
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1. This is the scary part...
"If we put all these pieces together, we have a clearer understanding of the long-term historical forces at work: the global consumer society funded by credit is in its end-game, and is the "Central State as guarantor of private consumption" model in which governments borrow/print vast sums of fiat currency to distribute to their citizenry to prop up consumption.

Once exports go away, then domestic economies the world over implode. Ironically, perhaps, the one nation which doesn't depend on exporting its surplus production for its stability is the U.S.

This is one reason why the Swiss pegging their fiat franc to the Euro will fail to hold back the ceaseless tide eroding the Euro. You can play games with currency pegs for awhile, but ultimately the value and utility of a fiat currency is established by trade, energy and the geopolitical issues outlined above.

If we don't understand trade flows, surplus production, the surplus in labor and the resultant decline in its share of national income, credit and currencies in this Marxist-inspired historical perspective, we cannot make sense of the financial/political crises which are sweeping over the global economy. The end-game is at hand, and we need models that are up to the task of explaining the vast forces now in play. "
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bemildred Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-07-11 10:21 AM
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2. Conventional economics fails to explain what actually occurs.
No need to talk about "underlying dynamics". Most of it is based on fatuous mathematical models. GIGO.
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