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Baluarte
11-08-2013, 04:33 PM
How China Can Cause The Death Of The Dollar And The Entire U.S. Financial System

By Michael Snyder

http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/how-china-can-cause-the-death-of-the-dollar-and-the-entire-u-s-financial-system

http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/China-vs.-America-Photo-by-Wangdora92-300x210.jpg

The death of the dollar is coming, and it will probably be China that pulls the trigger. What you are about to read is understood by only a very small fraction of all Americans. Right now, the U.S. dollar is the de facto reserve currency of the planet. Most global trade is conducted in U.S. dollars, and almost all oil is sold for U.S. dollars (http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/the-growing-rift-with-saudi-arabia-threatens-to-severely-damage-the-petrodollar).
More than 60 percent (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/jeremy-warner/10378666/The-sun-is-setting-on-dollar-supremacy-and-with-it-American-power.html)of all global foreign exchange reserves are held in U.S. dollars, and far more U.S. dollars are actually used outside of the United States than inside of it. As will be described below, this has given the United States some tremendous economic advantages, and most Americans have no idea how much their current standard of living depends on the dollar remaining the reserve currency of the world. Unfortunately, thanks to reckless money printing by the Federal Reserve and the reckless accumulation of debt by the federal government, the status of the dollar as the reserve currency of the world is now in great jeopardy.

As I mentioned above, nations all over the globe use U.S. dollars to trade with one another. This has created tremendous demand for U.S. dollars and has kept the value of the dollar up. It also means that Americans can import things that they need much more inexpensively than they otherwise would be able to.

The largest exporting nations such as Saudi Arabia (oil) and China (cheap plastic trinkets at Wal-Mart) end up with massive piles of U.S. dollars...

http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Are-You-Ready-For-A-Tsunami-Of-Inflation-Photo-By-Revisorweb-425x283.jpg

Instead of just sitting on all of that cash, these exporting nations often reinvest much of that cash into low risk securities that can be rapidly turned back into dollars if necessary. For a very long time, U.S. Treasury bonds have been considered to be the perfect way to do this. This has created tremendous demand for U.S. government debt and has helped keep interest rates super low. So every year, massive amounts of money that gets sent out of the country ends up being loaned back to the U.S. Treasury at super low interest rates...

http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/United-States-Treasury-Building-Photo-by-Rchuon24-425x174.jpg

And it has been a very good thing for the U.S. economy that the federal government has been able to borrow money so cheaply, because the interest rate on 10 year U.S. Treasuries affects thousands upon thousands of other interest rates throughout our financial system. For example, as the rate on 10 year U.S. Treasuries has risen in recent months, so have the rates on U.S. home mortgages.

Our entire way of life in the United States depends upon this game continuing. We must have the rest of the world use our currency and loan it back to us at ultra low interest rates. At this point we have painted ourselves into a corner by accumulating so much debt. We simply cannot afford to have rates rise significantly.

For example, if the average rate of interest on U.S. government debt rose to just 6 percent (and it has been much higher than that at various times in the past), we would be paying more than a trillion dollars a year just in interest on the national debt.

But it wouldn't be just the federal government that would suffer. Just consider what higher rates would do to the real estate market.

About a year ago, the rate on 30 year mortgages was sitting at 3.31 percent. The monthly payment on a 30 year, $300,000 mortgage at that rate is $1315.52.

If the 30 year rate rises to 8 percent, the monthly payment on a 30 year, $300,000 mortgage would be $2201.29.

Does 8 percent sound crazy to you?

It shouldn't. 8 percent was considered to be normal back in the year 2000.

Are you starting to get the picture?

We need other countries to use our dollars and buy our debt so that we can have super low interest rates and so that we can afford to buy lots of cheap stuff from them.

Unfortunately, the truly bizarre behavior of the Federal Reserve and the U.S. government over the past several years is causing the rest of the world to lose faith in our currency. In particular, China is leading the call for a "de-Americanized" world. The following is from a recent article posted on the website of France 24... (http://www.france24.com/en/20131106-china-seeks-world-role-peoples-money)


For decades the US has benefited to the tune of trillions of dollars-worth of free credit from the greenback's role as the default global reserve unit.

But as the global economy trembled before the prospect of a US default last month, only averted when Washington reached a deal to raise its debt ceiling, China's official Xinhua news agency called for a "de-Americanised" world.

It also urged the creation of a "new international reserve currency... to replace the dominant US dollar".

So why should the rest of the planet listen to China?

Well, China now accounts for more global trade than anyone else does (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-02-09/china-passes-u-s-to-become-the-world-s-biggest-trading-nation.html), including the United States.

China is also now the number one importer of oil in the world. (http://www.cnbc.com/id/101102770)

At this point, China is even importing more oil from Saudi Arabia than the United States (http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/saudi-arabia-and-china-team-up-to-build-a-gigantic-new-oil-refinery-is-this-the-beginning-of-the-end-for-the-petrodollar) is.

China now has an enormous amount of economic power globally, and the Chinese want the rest of the planet to start using less U.S. dollars and to start using more of their own currency. The following is from a recent article in the Vancouver Sun. (http://www.vancouversun.com/Business/asia-pacific/China+yuan+makes+waves+international+currency/9123015/story.html)..


Three years after China allowed the yuan to start trading in Hong Kong’s offshore market, banks and investors around the world are positioning themselves to get involved in what Nomura Holdings Inc. calls the biggest revolution in the $5.3 trillion currency market since the creation of the euro in 1999.

And over the past few years we have seen the global use of the yuan rise dramatically (http://www.vancouversun.com/Business/asia-pacific/China+yuan+makes+waves+international+currency/9123015/story.html)...


International use of the yuan is increasing as the world’s second-largest economy opens up its capital markets. In the first nine months of this year, about 17 percent of China’s global trade was settled in the currency, compared with less than one percent in 2009, according to Deutsche Bank AG.

Of course the U.S. dollar is still king for now, but thanks to a whole host of recent international currency agreements this status is slipping. For example, China just recently signed a major currency agreement with the European Central Bank (http://money.cnn.com/2013/10/10/news/economy/ecb-china-currency/)...


The swap deal will allow more trade and investment between the regions to be conducted in euros and yuan, without having to convert into another currency such as the U.S. dollar first, said Kathleen Brooks, a research director at FOREX.com.

"It's a way of promoting European and Chinese trade, but not doing it with the U.S. dollar," said Brooks. "It's a bit like cutting out the middleman, all of a sudden there's potentially no U.S. dollar risk."

And as I have written about previously (http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/the-giant-currency-superstorm-that-is-coming-to-the-shores-of-america-when-the-dollar-dies), we have seen a bunch of other similar agreements being signed all over the planet in recent years...

1. China and Germany (See Here (http://finance.townhall.com/columnists/mikeshedlock/2012/09/02/china_germany_to_settle_more_trade_in_yuan_euros_w hats_that_mean_for_gold_the_dollar/page/full/))

2. China and Russia (See Here (http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010-11/24/content_11599087.htm))

3. China and Brazil (See Here (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-18545978))

4. China and Australia (See Here (http://www.financialexpress.com/news/australia-china-sign-31bn-currency-swap-agreement/927280))

5. China and Japan (See Here (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-25/china-japan-to-promote-direct-trading-of-currencies-to-cut-company-costs.html))

6. India and Japan (See Here (http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/12/28/us-india-japan-trade-idUSTRE7BR0N020111228))

7. Iran and Russia (See Here (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-01-07/iran-russia-replace-dollar-with-rial-ruble-in-trade-fars-says.html))

8. China and Chile (See Here (http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/china/2012-06/27/c_123334167.htm))

9. China and the United Arab Emirates (See Here (http://money.cnn.com/2012/03/07/markets/bondcenter/dim-sum-bond-dubai/index.htm))

10. China, Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa (See Here (http://zeenews.india.com/business/news/economy/brics-to-sign-pacts-for-trade-in-local-currencies_44626.html))

But do you hear about any of this on the mainstream news?

Of course not.

They would rather focus on the latest celebrity scandal.

Right now, the global move away from the U.S. dollar is slow but steady.

At some point, some trigger event will likely cause it to become a stampede.

When that happens, demand for U.S. dollars and U.S. debt will disintegrate and interest rates will absolutely skyrocket.

And if interest rates skyrocket that will throw the entire U.S. financial system into chaos. At the moment, there are about 441 trillion dollars worth of interest rate derivatives sitting out there (http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/the-441-trillion-dollar-interest-rate-derivative-timb-bomb). It is a financial time bomb unlike anything the world has ever seen before.

There are four "too big to fail" banks in the United States (http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/too-big-to-fail-is-now-bigger-than-ever-before) that each have more than 40 trillion dollars worth of total exposure to derivatives. The largest chunk of those derivatives is made up of interest rate derivatives. In case you were wondering , those four banks are JPMorgan Chase, Citibank, Bank of America and Goldman Sachs.

A huge upward surge in interest rates would absolutely devastate those banks and cause a financial crisis that would make 2008 look like a Sunday picnic.

Right now, the leader in global trade seems content to use U.S. dollars for most of their international transactions. China also seems content to hold more than a trillion dollars of U.S. government debt.

If that suddenly changes someday, the consequences for the U.S. economy will be absolutely catastrophic and every single American will feel the pain.

The standard of living that all of us are enjoying today depends largely upon China. They can bring down the hammer at any moment and they know it.

olivier
11-09-2013, 05:03 AM
Quite the opposite is actually happening. The current mainstream media representation of China of a rising economic powerhouse, sustained by a flood of statistics resembling in their real meaning to the one time Mao inspired fetishism of production, leading among other things to the grotesque melting of steel in home made furnaces etc. is simply misleading.

The more USD cross the Chinese wall, the more dependant China is on the value of those USD, which is determined by the issuer of last resort: the FED. Once melted like ice on snow on request,the already more than a trillion of USD within China may simply destroy the whole of the Chinese economy in no more than a few days. As for the role of oil, this is beyond economics, it is real politik. Nobody is even attempting to refuse the USD for oil, including Venezuela. Furthermore, due to the massive introduction of toxic Mc Donalds type fast food, beef etc. China is more dependant on food imports, including from the US than at any time in its history, starting with the Yellow Emperor, they say 5000-6000 years ago, when according to legend a Dragon initiated the Chinese to agriculture and the cultivation of rice.

For additionnal information on the subject, a new atypical book on the world economy has been published recently in Australia:Twenty Tales on the Political Economy of Quality Amazon.com: Krum Stefanov: Books, Biography, Blog, Audiobooks ...
www.amazon.com/Krum-Stefanov/e/B009SEY7E4‎

Baluarte
11-09-2013, 05:11 AM
Probably. China has drastically stagnated in the last 2 years. I've noted that in their charts regarding electric consumption or demand for fuel, steady numbers in spite of manufactured growh statistics.

But I meant to address the crisis of the USD rather than the Chinese themselves.

ALSh
11-09-2013, 09:30 PM
Quite the opposite is actually happening. The current mainstream media representation of China of a rising economic powerhouse, sustained by a flood of statistics resembling in their real meaning to the one time Mao inspired fetishism of production, leading among other things to the grotesque melting of steel in home made furnaces etc. is simply misleading.

The more USD cross the Chinese wall, the more dependant China is on the value of those USD, which is determined by the issuer of last resort: the FED. Once melted like ice on snow on request,the already more than a trillion of USD within China may simply destroy the whole of the Chinese economy in no more than a few days. As for the role of oil, this is beyond economics, it is real politik. Nobody is even attempting to refuse the USD for oil, including Venezuela. Furthermore, due to the massive introduction of toxic Mc Donalds type fast food, beef etc. China is more dependant on food imports, including from the US than at any time in its history, starting with the Yellow Emperor, they say 5000-6000 years ago, when according to legend a Dragon initiated the Chinese to agriculture and the cultivation of rice.

For additionnal information on the subject, a new atypical book on the world economy has been published recently in Australia:Twenty Tales on the Political Economy of Quality Amazon.com: Krum Stefanov: Books, Biography, Blog, Audiobooks ...
www.amazon.com/Krum-Stefanov/e/B009SEY7E4‎

China has some years that is continuing buying massive gold to replace dollar as its currency reserve. So they are replacing the dollar. They also have made some agrement with some countries to bypass the dollar as an intermedient currency for trade.

Sblast
11-09-2013, 10:55 PM
"How Baluarte Can't Stop Posting From Garbage Websites in Order to Cum" should be the title.

Han Cholo
11-09-2013, 10:57 PM
"How Baluarte Can't Stop Posting From Garbage Websites in Order to Cum" should be the title.

It's just an article. Have some manners you perverted zid.

olivier
12-18-2013, 12:46 AM
China has some years that is continuing buying massive gold to replace dollar as its currency reserve. So they are replacing the dollar. They also have made some agrement with some countries to bypass the dollar as an intermedient currency for trade.

When at the beginning of the 19th century, a British envoy I guess from the East India Company met the Chinese Emperor about trade issues, the Emperor told him at some point something like : 'We do not need to import anything. China has everything'. The British were seriously concerned about the growing trade deficit with China, imports of silk,porcelaine etc. and virtually non existing British exports. So as a result of all this, 2 crucial events with far reaching consequences took place: the British due to the outflow of silver introduced at the expense of bimettalism, the gold standard, ultimately as shown in the default of 1931, the most impressive ponzi scheme in financial history so far, leading as everyone knows to the Great Depression and WWII. Now lets get back to China : So as the story goes, the British resolved the issue of the deficit by exporting Opium to China and by importing tea, the little backstage history of the 4 o clock tea. As a result, they say up to 1 in 4 or 5 men in China became a drug addict, including Dun Xiaio Ping in his youth.

Today, China is more dependant than ever on oil and food due to the quantitative expansion of the economy which far from making China stronger is making it weaker. The USD is the key weapon in the arsenal of globalism. Now, there is no way of bypassing the USD, since the petrodollar economy is real politik inherited from the end WWII. The gulf states have no geopolitical choice so to speak and the equation USD=OIL is not a free choice. Given that most of the proven Oil reserves are in the Middle East,(including Irak and Libya) there is simply no way of dumping the USD, the more the Chinese GNP is expanding the less possible it is to bypass the Oil of the Middle East and also the imports of food, including US food.

And what is more: each summer thousands of tourists visit the New York vault where is kept some of the Gold of the US gov ( in addition to Fort Knox) plus the Gold of the IMF, the World Bank and the gold resreves of no less then 36 countries including Japan, Germany and Switzerland.( this is well documented and commented in the book Twenty Tales posted above) All this gold amounts to at lest 85-90% of world gold reserves, despite the pathetic efforts of the Chinese gov to increase domestic gold production. ( we forgot the gold of South Africa a key player in the global agenda since the time of Cecil Rhodes etc.) Furthermore, it is the US and the US only which since the Bretton Woods in 1944, has the privilege of paying for imports etc, only in USD. This is not just economics, this is real politik. Now, when Lenin in his time said at one point that the capitalists will sell you the rope with which you will hang them, he was is simply wrong, the father of the revoltion appears to be an amateur in thde The long term effect of the printing of USD ( debts, inflation, ponzi schemes etc.)was definitely well known right from thje beginning

olivier
12-18-2013, 01:14 AM
So if China is to oppose the global agenda where the USD plays a key role, it has simply to undo what already Dun Xiao Pin did in the first place, when he opened the the economy to the outside world. The export oriented Chinese economy cannot dump the USD gradually, since the USD is behind oil and almost all USD denominated commodities anms also the export of food of the Monsanto GMO variety. The role of the USD is not based on consensus at last resort, it has been imposed following WWII by Wall Street and the London

Baluarte
12-18-2013, 03:17 AM
So if China is to oppose the global agenda where the USD plays a key role, it has simply to undo what already Dun Xiao Pin did in the first place, when he opened the the economy to the outside world. The export oriented Chinese economy cannot dump the USD gradually, since the USD is behind oil and almost all USD denominated commodities anms also the export of food of the Monsanto GMO variety. The role of the USD is not based on consensus at last resort, it has been imposed following WWII by Wall Street and the London

You vastly overestimate the petrodollar. It isn't sustainable given the current American economic policies and performance, let alone indestructible or irreplaceable as you make it sound.

There's a reason why the BRICS have started building alternative financial units outside of the USD dominance. Even Saudi Arabia is slowly doing the same thing. The only thing the last 4/5 years have witnessed, is the drastic increase in the use of the yuan (replacing the euro as second most used currency for import credit payments). I'll open a topic about it shortly.

olivier
12-18-2013, 05:59 AM
A few days ago passed away the actor Peter O Tool. So, he played Laurence of Arabia in of his films who had a contribution to the creation of Saudi Arabia. Ever since that time, Saudi Arabia has a limited independence and no freedom of choice in the petrodollar deal. As one of the animals in Orwell s Animal Farm, observed some are more equal than others. So, these BRICS, in order to dump the USD have to find a place under the Sun for the several trillions of USD in circulation outside of the US and most of them inside their own countries, and find a cure for the present Stockholm syndrome in these matters. By the way, the power of the FED (which is not exactly the same as the US) is infinitely greater than before 1971, let alone 1944 or 1913. There is a thing in the world economy without any precedent in recorded financial history: the whole world has been taken a hostage to the last resort issuers of the USD. A sudden massive devaluation of the USD by the FED may simply destroy the world economy as we know it in less than 24 hours. Nobody else can dream of something even remotely resembling to this. The more global the world economy becomes, the tighter is the knot of the USD on the global economy (but once again not necessarily the US economy, these are not identical as it may seem at first glance). So once again the BRICS have to find a solution to their own assets in USD and more than anything a solution to the daily influx of USD on a permanent basis. Furthermore, the USD cannot be dumped without a respective dissolution of NATO and respectively a suppression of the geopolitical role of the US. At this stage, this is at best political fiction. Secundo, suppose that in the unlikely event of a veto to the USD by the only 2 countries who are so to speak technically capable of dumping the USD, Russia and China, whatever the cost might be, these would have no other option than resorting to Gold and Silver. However as we said it already most of the Gold is in the sphere of the US and the UK.
How will world commerce function even if Russia and China have sufficient reserves? What about the others, who either have no gold or have left it in the US? It goes without saying that the repatriation of gold will become a geopolitical issue. By the way, Germany and Switzerland made attempts to repatriate their gold in 2008, which led to nothing, the level of transparency in these matters being lower than that of any secret service. In any case, the world will go back to autarchy and mercantilism. So, in these setting, gone will be the export oriented present Chinese expansion. But what will not be gone, is the present dependency of China on oil, food, natural resources and still technology.
Tertio, the present hysterical campaign about the rise of China is a US/UK inspired move, designed to mislead the public and flatter the still crude post Maoist Chinese ego. Exactly the same thing happened with Japan in the 1980s, weeks before the crash of the Tokyo real estate market, related as China now, to the piles of USD creating ponzi schemes etc. The media were presenting Japan as a rising titan etc. Again, the same happened in the late 1960s, when the UK was presents as the sick man of Europe, precisely at the time when the City of London was reorienting itself to recycling of USD ( then Eurodollar market) and the lucrative coupons from the global Foreign Exchange market, based on the post 1971 sand like fiat money, the USD.