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Take physic, pomp

Jesse on form (and on Chinese currency)

I really liked the post on Jesse’s CafĂ© AmĂ©ricain this evening that took the China deval news and condensed it to the core message (which once stripped of the chattersphere’s gobbledegook really is quite straightforward):

A devaluation of this sort is designed to improve the domestic economy by stimulating exports, lowering domestic costs of production relative to other sources, and to inhibit imports by raising their relative prices. 

In other words, China clearly signaled that the US dollar, to which they were matching their own currency, is overvalued relative to the state of the global economy, and especially their own. 

China is ‘the canary in the coal mine’ for the global economy, a major source of labor and supply. Their own economy is sick because demand from overseas is down. 

And why is demand lower? Because multinational corporations and the banking system have been financializing nearly everything to increase corporate profits and the wealth of a very few, pretty much at the expense of everyone else. 

So if the people do not have the money to buy, and cannot keep increasing their private debt to service consumption because of the predatory lending and fees in the system, guess what happens to aggregate demand?


Jesse L then goes on to compare circumstances with a couple of historical times, via US President speeches. Another snippet here (the past tenses in this quote can be changed to present tenses contextually):

The problem was not paper money per se, but the concentration of power and wealth which the abusive use of the monetary power had granted to a few powerful individuals and institutions.

That’s exactly right. And there’s plenty more quality food for thought in the post, so go read yourself.

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