… the source of these demands lies in the fact that bankers got money without working for it. High unemployment and a mal-adjusted economic structure lead to everyone wanting a bailout.
Quelle: The Top 1 Per Cent
Samstag, 12. November 2011
… the source of these demands lies in the fact that bankers got money without working for it. High unemployment and a mal-adjusted economic structure lead to everyone wanting a bailout.
Quelle: The Top 1 Per Cent
Tags: Banken, Griechenland, Occupy, Weltgeschehen, Zeitgeist, Zeitgeschehen
Labels: Wirtschaft
Mittwoch, 11. August 2010
… the U.S. is losing its essential character: it is no longer the land of opportunity and upward mobility; no longer the place where the future will surely be better, and more prosperous, than the past.
Quelle: Europeans Can\’t Be Bothered to Hate America – Newsweek
Tags: Europa, Geschichte, Weltgeschehen
Labels: Medien, USA
Dienstag, 20. Juli 2010
Want another one? How about ‚Decline?‘ What do we mean by ‚decline?‘ We’re talking about the thing the anglo-saxon empire is in.
Wait a minute. We’re still Number One, right?
Yes…in the sense that we can, in theory, kick any butt in the world. That is, if the Chinese let us. They’ve got so much of our money and so many of our bonds, if they decided to dump them, we’d be in one helluva fix. Because we don’t pay enough in taxes to fund our social programs and the Pentagon at the same time. We can’t afford it. So the nice Chinese lend us money.
But don’t worry. They’ve promised not to dump our bonds. And we’re sure they’ll honor that promise for as long as they want to.
Tags: China, Macht, Weltgeschehen
Labels: Politik, USA, Wirtschaft
Donnerstag, 11. Februar 2010
It won’t take investors long to figure out that there isn’t a whole lot of difference between Greece’s finances and those of the US. Each has about the same amount of debt and the same size deficit, relative to GDP. The big difference is that the US ultimately controls the currency in which its debt is calibrated. Greece does not. Neither does California.
Quelle: USA Has Fives Times As Much Sovereign Debt As All the PIIGS Put Together
Tags: Finanzkrise, Griechenland, Irland, Italien, Portugal, Spanien, Weltgeschehen, Wirtschaftskrise
Labels: USA, Wirtschaft
Sonntag, 27. Dezember 2009
Coming right to the point, the fixers face not just one crisis, but many. They have a growth model that no longer works. They have aging populations and social welfare obligations that can’t be met. They have limits on available resources, including the most basic ones – land, water, and energy. They have a money system headed for a crack-up, and an economic theory that was only effective when it wasn’t necessary. Now that it is needed, the Keynesian fix is useless. If a recovery depends on borrowed money, what do you do when lenders won’t give you any?
Quelle: Economists With Their One-stop Solution: Stimulate Consumer Spending
Ich werde es garantiert noch erleben, wenn uns der Scheiss um die Ohren fliegt …
Bonner geht in einem früheren Artikel noch etwas genauer auf das „Problem“ ein:
With 6 billion people now competing for stuff, the whole idea of having a lot of stuff is being called into question. In the first place, there’s not enough stuff around to permit everyone to have as much as Americans – at least not without some huge technological breakthroughs. In the second place, Americans have run out of money to buy stuff. In the third place, it takes a lot of energy to make and transport so much stuff; the US no longer has access to cheap energy. And finally, the US economic model – in which growth is a result of stimulating consumers to buy more stuff – no longer works.
Quelle: Supposed to Believe Investors Can Avoid Calamities of Past by Studying Previous Market Cycles
Tags: Alltag, Finanzen, Finanzkrise, Weltgeschehen, Wirtschaftskrise, Zukunft
Labels: Gesellschaft, Politik
Freitag, 11. Dezember 2009
For example right now across the globe, there are nearly 488 uranium-hungry nuclear plants that are either proposed, planned or already in construction. Let me put that in perspective…
The number of nuclear plants is set to increase by 112% if all these projects go ahead.
Quelle: Ratings Agencies Put Spain on Negative Debt Watch
Ohne genaue Sachkenntnis (ich könnte eigentlich einen Kollegen fragen, der vor einiger Zeit von atel angestellt wurde, um deren neues KKW zu bauen) behaupte ich einfach mal, dass die Probleme bei der geplanten Verdoppelung der AKW-Zahl nicht erst beim Brennstoff, sondern schon viel früher zu Tage kommen werden.
In Stichworten:
Tags: AKW, Atomkraft, Kernkraft, KKW, Klima, Umwelt, Weltgeschehen
Labels: Schweiz
Montag, 24. August 2009
Far from causing us to become more violent, something in modernity and its cultural institutions has made us nobler. In fact, our ancestors were far more violent than we are today. Indeed, violence has been in decline over long stretches of history, and today we are probably living in the most peaceful moment of our species‘ time on earth.
[…] why do so many people imagine that we live in an age of violence and killing? The first reason, I believe, is that we have better reporting. As political scientist James Payne once quipped, the Associated Press is a better chronicler of wars across the globe than were 16th-century monks.
Tags: Frieden, Krieg, Weltgeschehen
Labels: Gesellschaft
Freitag, 29. Mai 2009
Aber eigentlich kann sich kaum jemand ein Worst-case-Szenario vorstellen. Aus dem einfachen Grund, weil den beiden derzeit aktiven Generationen jegliche Erfahrung für ein solches abgeht. Wir wissen schlicht und einfach nicht, wie man mit einer tiefgreifenden wirtschaftlichen- und damit auch gesellschaftlichen Krise umgehen muss.
Quelle: Arlesheim Reloaded. Mäuse schultern Elefanten. – Es kommt viel schlimmer als derzeit gefühlt
Zu einem ähnlichen Schluss komme ich in meiner Lizentiatsarbeit über die Missernte von 1916/17 im Ersten Weltkrieg: Niemand wusste mehr, wie sich eine Versorgungskrise anfühlte. 1918 wurde nicht wirklich kein friedliches Jahr … abgesehen vom Waffenstillstand von Compiègne.
Tags: Alltag, Geschichte, Weltgeschehen, Wirtschaftskrise
Labels: Arbeit, Wirtschaft
Sonntag, 3. Mai 2009
Die Saudis bauern im Sudan, Katar erntet in Kenya, Libyen bepflanzt die Ukraine. Reiche Länder versuchen sich Boden im Ausland zu sichern – zwecks Versorgung mit Lebensmitteln.
Quelle: Wettlauf ums Ackerland der Welt (International, NZZ Online)
Was 70 Erdenjahre ausmachen können … In den 1930er hatten die Nazionalsozialisten völlig andere Pläne, um ihre Bevölkerung auch in Zukunft ernähren zu können: „Lebensraum im Osten“, insbesondere die fruchtbaren Schwarzerde-Böden in der Ukraine. Marktwirtschaftliche Instrumente waren damals doch eher tabu und man setzte voll auf eine kriegerische Konfrontation. Das Herz eines jeden Liberalen sollte angesichts dieser friedlichen Sicherung von Ackerland jubeln. Oder?
Tags: Ernährung, Euro08, Landwirtschaft, Ukraine, Weltgeschehen
Labels: Allgemein
Montag, 6. April 2009
Ha! Da hat sich Bill Bonner also mittlerweile auch die Vorlesung des Marxisten Richard Wolff in Amhurst (FLV, 220MB) angeschaut:
What makes Germany and Japan so competitive today is the fact that their industries were destroyed in WWII. They were forced to rebuild…amid tough competition. The United States, on the other hand, never had the benefit of aerial bombardment. And its auto industry has had such huge advantages – it was practically doomed from the beginning. Detroit has ready supplies of steel…rubber…plastic…labor – everything you need to make a modern automobile. Japan and Germany had to import almost everything.
Quelle: Gordon Brown Pronounces New World Order
In der Tat war dies eine der bemerkenswertesten Passagen im Video …
Tags: Finanzkrise, Globalisierung, Studium, Weltgeschehen, Wirtschaftskrise
Labels: USA, Wissenschaft