We have the left media, we have the right media but there are other points of views still ... what do you think?
The
crash of 2008 brought with it a host of strange economic paradigms
rarely if ever seen in history; paradigms which have turned normal
fiscal analysis on its head. While some core fundamentals remain the
same no matter what occurs, the reporting of this data have been
deliberately skewed to hide the truth. But what is the truth? Well, at
bottom, the truth is that most economies around the world are far weaker
than the picture governments and central banks have painted. This is
especially true for the United States.
One country has been pursuing an opposite strategy for many years
now — meaning, it has been hiding its economic preparedness more than
its weaknesses. I am of course speaking of China.
In the world of alternative analysis, when we mention China
several issues always arise: China's expanding debt burden, government
spending on useless infrastructure programs like “ghost cities,” China's
central bank and its corporate subset misreporting financial figures
regularly, etc. All of these things fuel the notion that when a global
fiscal disaster inevitable takes place, it will emanate first from
China. They also give the American public the false impression that a
trade war against China will be easily won and that China will
immediately falter under the weight of its own veiled instabilities.
However, if one actually studies China's behavior and activities
the past decade, they would see a method to the apparent madness. In
fact, some of China's actions seem to suggest that the nation has been
preparing for years for the exact geopolitical conditions we see today.
It's as if someone warned them ahead of time.
In terms of prepping for a trade war with the U.S., China has
implemented several important steps. For example, for at least the past
10 years, the country has been shifting away from a pure export economy
and reducing its reliance on sales of goods to the U.S. In 2018, Chinese
consumer purchases of goods is expected to surpass that of American
consumers. For the past five years, domestic consumption in China accounted for between 55 percent to 65 percent of economic growth, and private consumption was the primary driver of the Chinese economy — not exports.
The argument that China is somehow dependent on U.S. markets and consumers in order to keep its economy alive is simply a lie. China is now just as enticing
a retail market as the U.S., and its domestic market can pick up some
of the slack in the event that U.S. markets are suddenly closed to
Chinese exports. This problem of swiftly growing Chinese debt is presented often
as the key argument against the nation surviving a global economic shift
or trade war, with its “shadow banking” system threatening to unleash a
long hidden credit crisis and stock market plunge. But this is not the
complete story.
The exact amount of fiat printing that China's central bank undertook after the 2008 crash is not known. Some estimates suggest China's debt
to now sit at around 250 percent of its gross domestic product. By
normal standards this would suggest a credit crisis is imminent. But was
China's sudden interest in debt expansion a reactionary matter, or was
it part of a bigger plan?
Just after 2008, a common argument against China's resilience was
the notion that China was dependent on holding U.S. dollar reserve in
order to keep its own currency weak. Meaning, Chinese companies had to
sell goods to the U.S. in exchange for dollars, which they then
exchanged to the central bank for Yuan. China's central bank then held
those trillions of dollars in reserve as a means to keep the dollar
stronger on the global market, and the Yuan weaker, thus supporting and
perpetuating the old export model.
Obviously this argument is no longer applicable, or outright absurd.
China's debt expansion and Treasury bond issuance actually
started way back in 2005 under the “Panda Bond” program. At the time it
was treated like a novelty or a joke by the mainstream economic
community. Today, it is a powerhouse as Yuan denominated assets are spreading around the world. China no longer needs to hold dollars or dollar denominated
assets in order to keep its currency weaker for export markets. It can
simply inflate and monetize its own debt, just like the U.S. does. But
why would China bother to do this at all? Why jump into the same debt
game that has caused so much trouble for western nations?
Perhaps because they know something we don't. During the initial
phase of the derivatives crisis, the possibility of China joining the
International Monetary Fund's Special Drawing Rights basket leaped to
the forefront. With the Yuan as an SDR basket
member, its potential to become an financial center for global trade
rather than just and export and import hub would be assured. But the IMF
set certain requirements before China could join. One of these
requirements was far greater currency liquidity and a more “freely
usable” Yuan market. In other words, for China to join the SDR basket
they would first need to go into considerable debt. This is exactly what they did; not to prop up their banking
system (though this made for a valid excuse) or to necessarily prop up
their stock markets. Rather, China wanted a seat at the table of the
“new world order,” and they bought that seat through massive debt
expansion. China was officially included in the SDR basket in 2016.
China has been a very vocal proponent of the SDR basket system,
and it becomes clear why if you understand what the globalists intend
for the future of the world's monetary framework. This plan was first
outlined in the globalist controlled Economist magazine in 1988
in an article calling for the beginnings of a global currency in 2018.
The article states that the U.S. economy and the role of the dollar as
world reserve would have to be diminished, and that the IMF's Special
Drawing Rights basket could be used as a bridge to set up a single
currency for all the world's economies.
This currency would of course be administered and controlled by the banking elites at the IMF.
Since 2009, China's central bank has called for the SDR to become a “super-sovereign reserve currency,”
in other words, a global currency system. In 2017, the vice governor of
China's central bank stated that central banks should increase their
use of the SDR as a unit of account and that greater SDR liquidity
should be encouraged. In 2015, China's central bank
suggested that the SDR system should “go digital,” creating a digital
version of the reserve system so that it could spread quickly. It should come as no surprise that the IMF is in full agreement with this plan and has even suggested in recent articles on its website that cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology are the future evolution of the monetary system.
Notorious globalist George Soros revealed a few darker details
of what the IMF calls the “global economic reset” in an interview in
2009; these details included a diminished American economy, a diminished
dollar and for China to become a new economic engine for the world. Finally, China has clearly been prepping for a considerable
crisis in the dollar or in the world's economic stability as shown in
its sudden and aggressive stockpiling of gold reserves the past decade.
Only recently surpassed by Russia in purchases, China is one of the most aggressive national buyers of gold.
An expanding gold stockpile would be an effective hedge against a
collapsing dollar market. If the dollar loses its world reserve status,
nations like China and Russia and placed well to mitigate the damages.
Considering the fact that the IMF officially holds around 3,000 tons of
gold as well, the globalists are also well placed for a dollar crash.
It would appear that China has been included at many levels in
the plan for the global reset. All of the previously mentioned actions
suggest foreknowledge of a dramatic shift in the dollar model. The trade
war itself provides perfect cover for the economic reset, as I have
been warning in my latest articles. China would play an important role
in the reset, as they have the ability to dump U.S. Treasuries and the
dollar as world reserve, causing a chain reaction through global markets
as their trading partners follow suit.
They will likely do this quietly (as Russia recently did), in
order to pawn off their T-bond holdings before news of a Treasury dump
hits the mainstream. The primary beneficiaries of this act will be the
globalists, while China has placed itself to survive (not necessarily to
thrive) during the chaos. The same cannot necessarily be said for the
U.S., which suffers from the Achilles Heel of total dependency on the
dollar's primacy.
To truth and knowledge,
Brandon Smith
Welcome to Elkmont, Alabama. A blog dedicated to the sleepy little Southern town of Elkmont, Alabama and its people. We invite all those with good news, something worth braggin' about or announcements to submit their article to share with the Elkmont community. Pictures are welcome. Please visit often and see what is happening in Elkmont.
Thursday, July 12, 2018
SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT..... ITS ALWAYS GOOD TO READ DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES
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Something To Think About
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