by threadbear » Sun 03 Jun 2007, 19:19:26
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('roccman', '"')Secondly, one country's trade surplus has to be another country's deficit. So, if the US can no longer pay for its imports then oil producers and Asian exports can no longer sell to them. That reduces those exporters' current account surpluses. "
This is where I am not convinced.
Why would almost 3 billion Indians and Asians not become their own consumer machine?
We are at a point where America is becoming increasingly irrelevant on the global playing field.
It will be as rough a transition for the Chinese to expand the middle class so they can become a really strong engine of consumption, as it will be for the US to shrink the middle class, lower expectations in response to China's rising currency valuations.
China could see a deflationary collapse, like the Great Depression in response to this. The ultimate consequence could be an invigoration of union activity and the growth of the military industrial complex and an explosion of govt/corporate r&d and modernizing and expansion of the education system. They have the funds to do this IF the value of American dollars can be managed slowly downward. It's the American model of recovery.
The US will recede as a world power, in an inflationary collapse,much like Rome. They will degrade to a secondary power, their international status reduced to organized crime cartels, working hand in hand with the church.
In this case it will be the fundamentalist evangelicals working hand in hand with narco regimes in places like Latin America, subverting Roman Catholicism, it's predessesor. The dollar will eventually go the way of the peso.