by Euric » Tue 19 Dec 2006, 12:29:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Longsword', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ElijahJones', 'W')hy are we importing so much more than we export since 9/11.
(SNIP some good points)
...In my minds eye I see a big fat Uncle Sam in a pool of blood with several gaping oozing wounds. I am not trying to be sensationalist. But I leave open the chance I an dead wrong. Admittedly I am not a man of 30 years experience, but I know some good sound fundamentals. Why do I and so many others here see to see the precarious situation but those in power do not? Are we deceiving ourselves?
Oh, they see it, but they are banking on status quo, since doing anything about this would be far too painful, a political suicide. As long as the rest of the world is willing to pay for the US orgy of consumerism, arms buildup, military adventures and tax cuts, then there is no downside to US leadership.
US is playing the "too big to fall" card. Instead of fixing their fiscal house, the leadership is banking on China, Japan, Middle-East and the rest to pay all the bills. China needs a place to sell their cheap trinkets, after all, and Middle-East governments need a place to dump their oil for big profits.
The rest of the world isn't willing to go on like this. If you take a hint from the article, Germany is booming and confidence is increasing because Germany has learned to find other buyers for their products and not rely on the US. Thus when the US does fall they will take no one with them.
The timing for the US collapse is critical. If it happens too soon and other markets aren't ready then they could be caught in the shock wave. If the crash is delayed too long, then the shock and impact would be greater.
The fact that the EU economy is growing in real terms (not in the terms of US debt inflation) despite the growing euro is a sign that Germany and the EU are succeeding in diversifying their customer base.