The Theory Of MMT Falls Flat When Faced With Reality (Part II)

The Theory Of MMT Falls Flat When Faced With Reality (Part II)

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 11:10

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

If you missed Part-1 of our series on the “Theory Of MMT Falls Flat When Faced With Reality,” start there. In Part-2, we complete our analysis of the theory and the potential ramifications. The premise of our discussion was this recent explanation of “Modern Monetary Theory” by Stephanie Kelton.

As discussed previously, economic theory always sounds much better than how it works out in reality. The reason is that in “theory,” supply and demand imbalances always revert to previous norms. However, in “reality,” humans rarely act or react, according to theory.

We left off in Part-1, discussing the similarities between the U.S. and Japan. Most importantly, while MMT suggests that debt and deficits don’t matter in theory, economic realities have been vastly different.

The Productive Debt Of WWII

Let’s pick up with Ms. Kelton’s views on this issue.

“Think about what happened after World War Two when the U.S. national debt went in excess of 100% –close to 125% of GDP. The way we talk about it today as burdening future generations, as posing a grave national security risk, we would have to scratch our heads. Did our grandparents worry about the next generation with all those bonds sold during World War Two to win the war, build the strongest middle class, and produce the longest period of peacetime prosperity? 

The Golden age of capital, all of that followed in the wake of fighting World War Two, increasing deficits massively, increasing the size of the national debt. And, of course, the next generation inherits those bonds. They don’t become burdens to the next generation; they become their assets.”

We must address several issues in Ms. Kelton’s recollection of WWII.

The first issue is the amount of deficit. If you take a look at a long-term history of our debts, deficits, and economic growth, we can immediately gain some perspective.

The Golden Age

As the U.S. headed into WWII, the Government ran a deficit, which in hindsight is barely visible. Most importantly, the Government did expand its debt burden by selling “War Bonds” to the public. These “War Bonds” were bought by citizens an “investment” to fund the “war effort.” These bonds were a “productive use” of debt. They funded manufacturing and construction projects with every manufacturing facility converted to “war-time” production.

Ms. Kelton conveniently forgot to mention that during this period, the 10-year average economic growth ran nearly 15% annualized. Such was not surprising with an entire population with a singular focus of the war effort. While the men signed up to fight overseas, the women left their homes to build planes, trucks, tanks, and jeeps. There was no “excess” consumption as everything from gasoline, to tires, to cheese, was rationed to the general public with everything consumed to feed, clothe, and arm the troops abroad.

Ms. Kelton is correct that our grandparents didn’t “squabble” over the debt. There was no need, as the focus of every single worker in the U.S. was “winning the war.” They also knew that when the war was over, the Government would reduce the debts and deficits as it returned to more fiscally responsible measures.

Then came the “Golden Age” as the “boys of war” returned home. Following World War II, America became the “last man standing.” After the war, the devastation of France, England, Russia, Germany, Poland, Japan, and others, left them crippled. It was here America found its strongest run of economic growth in history as the “boys of war” returned home to start rebuilding a war-ravaged Europe.

But that was just the start of it.

The Leap Into Space

In the late ’50s, America embarked upon its greatest quest in human history as humankind took its first steps into space. The space race, which lasted nearly two decades, led to leaps in innovation and technology that paved the wave for the future of America.

These advances, combined with the industrial and manufacturing backdrop, and low debt ratios, fostered high levels of economic growth, increased savings rates, and capital investment. 

Currently, the U.S. is no longer the manufacturing powerhouse it once was, globalization has sent jobs to the cheapest sources of labor. Technological advances continue to reduce the need for human labor and suppress wages by increasing productivity. Most importantly, households are highly indebted, and use that debt primarily for non-productive uses.

While Stephanie certainly makes a case of running deficits, the evidence is abundantly clear the approach is misguided. Still, the abuse of debt is economically destructive.

Where The Theory Falls Apart

The types of inflation that have been important in the U.S. have almost always come on the cost side: what we call cost-push inflation. They come about because of things like oil price shocks. You might see increases in headline inflation rates because of the housing component or healthcare. So when you think about how to fight inflation, if inflation is resulting from energy price increases, you will probably not have the Fed raise interest rates or Congress raise taxes. You got to do something else that’s going to work, so I reject the idea that MMT is about using taxes to fight inflation. That’s a mischaracterization of everything we’ve written, but people say it all the time.” – Kelton

Such is the entire problem with MMT in a nutshell. On the one hand, as noted in Part-1, under the MMT theory, you can run debts and deficits as long as “inflation” is not a problem. However, for the theory to work, you must have a measure of inflation, which is both accurate and not subject to manipulation.

Currently, we have neither.

Mind The Gap

However, where Ms. Kelton, and almost all economic theories are misguided, is there is a vast difference between “economic theories of inflation” and “actual inflation.” With economic theories continuing to weigh on the economic prosperity of the masses, their ability to absorb higher “costs” has continued to erode over the last 30-years. 

“The ‘gap’ between the ‘standard of living’ and real disposable incomes is shown below. Beginning in 1990, incomes alone were no longer able to meet the standard of living so consumers turned to debt to fill the ‘gap.’ However, following the ‘financial crisis,’ even the combined levels of income and debt no longer fill the gap. Currently, consumers cannot fill the record $2654 annual deficit to maintain their lifestyle without more debt.”

MMT Is Already Here

Then, as with all economic theories, you need an “out clause” to continue to justify “socialistic spending.” In this case, Kelton completely contradicts her theory by stating that in the pursuit of your spending goal, “inflation” doesn’t matter.

The reality is that MMT is already here.

Breadlines In The Mail

During the “Great Depression,” the economically devastated masses would form “breadlines.” Today, the economic devastation is just as real, it is just that the “breadlines” are at the mailbox as the rise of “Social Assistance” skyrockets.

“The declines in real income are evident. The burgeoning ‘real’ labor pool, and demand for higher-wage work is suppressing wages. Companies further opt for increasing productivity, outsourcing, and streamlining employment boost profit margins. However, the cost of living continues to increase from rising food, energy, and health care prices. Without a compensatory increase in incomes – more families are forced to turn to assistance just to survive.”

Without government largesse, many individuals would be living on the street. The chart above shows all the government “welfare” programs and current levels to date. The black line represents the sum of the underlying sub-components. Since the onset of the “pandemic,” both unemployment insurance and “other benefits” have surged by $3 trillion along with continued rises in all other benefits, like social security, Medicaid, and Veterans’ benefits.

Importantly, for the average person, these social benefits are critical to their survival. Government assistance now makes up ~38% of real disposable personal incomes. With more than 1/3rd of incomes dependent on Federal assistance, it should not be surprising the economy continues to struggle. Recycled tax dollars used for consumptive purposes, has virtually no impact on increasing economic activity.

Time To Wake Up

MMT is not a free lunch. Individuals pay for it through a reduced value of the dollar and ergo your purchasing power. MMT is a hidden tax paid for by everyone holding dollars. As Michael Lebowitz outlined in Two Percent for the One Percent, inflation tends to harm the poor and middle class while benefiting the wealthy.

The inflation problem is masked by the inability to calculate inflation in one meaningful number accurately. Even if you believe everything about MMT, how can you practice it without an accurate reading on its most crucial gauge, inflation?

For the last 30 years, each Administration and the Federal Reserve have continued to operate under Keynesian monetary and fiscal policies believing the model worked. However, the reality has been most of the aggregate growth in the economy has been financed by deficit spending, credit expansion, and a reduction in savings. In turn, the reduction of productive investment into the economy has led to slowing output. As the economy slowed and wages fell, it forced the consumer to take on more leverage, which also decreased savings. As a result of the increased leverage, it diverted more of their income into servicing the debt.

Without debt, there has been no actual organic growth since the 1970’s.

Secondly, most of the government spending programs redistribute income from workers to the unemployed. Such, as Keynesians argue, increases the welfare of the many hurt by the recession. What their models ignore, however, is the reduced productivity that follows a shift of resources toward redistribution and away from productive investment.

MMT Sounds Great In Theory

In its essential framework, MMT correctly suggests debts and deficits don’t matter as long as the money borrowed is spent for productive purposes. Such means that the investments made create a return higher than the carrying cost of the debt used to finance the projects.

Again, this is where MMT supporters go astray. Free healthcare, education, childcare, living wages, etc., are NOT productive investments that have a return higher than the carrying cost of the debt. In actuality, history suggests these welfare supports have a negative multiplier effect in the economy.

Most telling is the inability of the current economists, who maintain our monetary and fiscal policies, to realize the problem of trying to “cure a debt problem with more debt.”

The Keynesian view that “more money in people’s pockets” will drive up consumer spending, with a boost to GDP being the result, has been wrong. It hasn’t happened in 30 years.

Conclusion

MMT supporters believe that if the Government hands out money, it will create more robust economic growth. No evidence supports such is the case.

We fear that MMT, which promises “free everything” with no consequences, instead delivers inflation, generates further income inequality, and ultimately higher social instability and populism. Such was the result in every other country which has run such programs of unbridled debts and deficits.

While MMT sounds excellent at the conversational level, so does “communism” and “socialism.” In practice, the outcomes have been vastly different than the theory.

As Dr. Brock suggests:

“It is truly ‘American Gridlock’ as the real crisis lies between the choices of ‘austerity’ and continued government ‘largesse.’ One choice leads to long-term economic prosperity for all; the other doesn’t.”

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2ZJUTc6 Tyler Durden

AMZN Tops $3,000; TSLA Above $1,300 As Nasdaq Soars To Record Highs

AMZN Tops $3,000; TSLA Above $1,300 As Nasdaq Soars To Record Highs

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 10:55

While the rest of the US equity market is struggling a little since the cash open and the “good news” from ISM, the big-tech buying panic continues.

AMZN is up over 4% and topped $3,000 for the first time..

Because fun-durr-mentals…

TSLA just won’t stop after Musk’s short-seller slams over the weekend…

Alphabet is back above the trillion-dollar market cap level…

All of which is enabling Nasdaq to buck the trend…

Sending valuations back to dotcom boom highs for big-tech…

Buy the F**king Record High?

As @RampCapitalLLC mocked…

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3gvtGAH Tyler Durden

Hundreds Of “Justice” Protesters Return To Armed Couple’s Home In St.Louis

Hundreds Of “Justice” Protesters Return To Armed Couple’s Home In St.Louis

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 10:46

Via Summit.News,

After a couple gained notoriety last week for taking up arms to defend their home in St Louis from protesters who broke into the private property, hundreds returned to the scene this past weekend, vowing that the couple shouldn’t be allowed to live in peace.

The AP reported that “Protesters marched along the busy public boulevard called Kingshighway, which intersects with Portland Place, a private street that is the site of the Renaissance palazzo-style home of Mark McCloskey, 61, and his 63-year-old wife, Patricia.”

The report notes that protesters lingered close to the McCloskeys’ house for around 15 minutes, without this time trespassing through the barriers to the private street.

The couple appear to have hired security personnel, as around a dozen ‘men in plain clothes’ were seen surrounding the property.

The footage shows the protesters chanting “If we don’t get no justice, then they don’t get no peace.”

Mark McCloskey was interviewed by Tucker Carlson last week, telling the host that he feared for his life during the first incident.

“I was literally afraid that within seconds they would surmount the wall, and come into the house, kill us, burn the house down and everything that I had worked for and struggled for for the last 32 years,” Mr McCloskey noted.

“I saw it all going up in flames, and my life destroyed in an instant. And I did what I thought I had to do to protect my hearth, my home and my family,” he urged.

In a further interview with CNN’s Chris Cuomo, McCloskey urged that the incident represents a ‘broader horrible picture of what’s going on in America right now’.

Police are investigating last week’s incident as a case of trespassing and fourth-degree assault by intimidation, according to the St. Louis Dispatch.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/38v4tDC Tyler Durden

Supreme Court Rules States Can Stop “Faithless” Presidential Electors

Supreme Court Rules States Can Stop “Faithless” Presidential Electors

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 10:32

In a rare unanimous decision for the US Supreme Court, on Monday the nine Justices ruled unanimously that states can require presidential electors to back their states’ popular vote winner in the Electoral College. The ruling arose out of a case from Washington state, essentially gives states the right to outlaw so-called “faithless electors” who cast their votes for people other than those chosen by their voters.

The decision comes just four months before the 2020 election, leaves in place laws in 32 states and the District of Columbia that bind electors to vote for the popular-vote winner, and electors almost always do so anyway.

While so-called “faithless electors” have not been critical to the outcome of a presidential election, that could change in a close race decided by just a few electoral votes. As a reminder, it takes 270 Electoral College votes to win the presidency.

When the court heard arguments by telephone in May because of the coronavirus outbreak, justices invoked fears of bribery and chaos if electors could cast their ballots regardless of the popular vote outcome in their states.

Justice Elena Kagan wrote for the court that a state may instruct “electors that they have no ground for reversing the vote of millions of its citizens. That direction accords with the Constitution — as well as with the trust of a Nation that here, We the People rule.”

As AP adds, the justices had scheduled arguments for the spring so they could resolve the issue before the election, rather than amid a potential political crisis after the country votes.

The issue arose in lawsuits filed by three Hillary Clinton electors in Washington state and one in Colorado who refused to vote for her despite her popular vote win in both states. In so doing, they hoped to persuade enough electors in states won by Donald Trump to choose someone else and deny Trump the presidency.

The justices had scheduled arguments for the spring so they could resolve the issue before the election, rather than amid a potential political crisis after the country votes.

The closest Electoral College margin in recent years was in 2000, when Republican George W. Bush received 271 votes to 266 for Democrat Al Gore. One elector from Washington, D.C., left her ballot blank. Back then the Supreme Court played a decisive role, ending a recount in Florida, where Bush held a 537-vote margin out of 6 million ballots cast.

The justices scheduled separate arguments in the Washington and Colorado cases after Justice Sonia Sotomayor belatedly removed herself from the Colorado case because she knows one of the plaintiffs.

In asking the Supreme Court to rule that states can require electors to vote for the state winner, Colorado had urged the justices not to wait until “the heat of a close presidential election.”

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2Z3f1H5 Tyler Durden

COVID-19 Close To Losing Its Epidemic Status In The US, According To The CDC

COVID-19 Close To Losing Its Epidemic Status In The US, According To The CDC

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 10:25

Authored by Daniel Payne via JustTheNews.com,

Coronavirus deaths in the country have nearly reached a level where the virus will cease to qualify as an epidemic under Centers for Disease Control and Prevention rules, the federal agency reported on Friday. 

The CDC qualifies a disease outbreak as an “epidemic” if the number of deaths attributable to the disease exceeds a certain percentage of total deaths per week. That threshold for pneumonia, influenza and COVID-19 fluctuates slightly depending on the time of year, ranging from around 7% at the height of flu season to around 5% during less virulent months. 

CDC data indicate that deaths from those ailments began skyrocketing in the country around the second week of March, hitting a peak around early May and then plummeting quickly after that. 

The latest data show that the percentage of deaths in the country attributable to those factors had as of the last week in June reached its lowest point since the end of last year, becoming “equal to the [current] epidemic threshold of 5.9%,” the CDC said.

The agency notes that the official tally of deaths “will likely change as more death certificates are processed, particularly for recent weeks.” Yet the number of deaths attributable to COVID-19, pneumonia and influenza have been declining for 10 straight weeks, the agency said on its website, suggesting COVID-19 may cease to qualify as an epidemic in the next few weeks. 

[ZH: President Trump continues to battle the mainstream fearmongering with some facts: ]

As the chart below shows…

The welcome news comes as fear over a “second wave” of the virus has gripped the U.S., with some states experiencing fresh surges of COVID-19 along with increased hospitalizations. 

Though infections are significantly up in some places, deaths throughout the country have remained flat, due likely to several factors including a younger cohort of infections as well as improved treatment methods. 

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2Z1BvIs Tyler Durden

Stocks Stumble As Investors Realize ISM “Good News” Is “Bad News” For Liquidity Lifelines

Stocks Stumble As Investors Realize ISM “Good News” Is “Bad News” For Liquidity Lifelines

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 10:16

After overnight exuberance – on the heels of China’s stock market surge – US equity markets are rapidly reversing gains after the record surge in ISM Services data this morning as investors begin to reslize that “good news is bad news” when it comes to keeping this alternative reality market afloat…

For now, Small Caps are getting hit the hardest…

Buy the dip?

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2BLpNcf Tyler Durden

Ghislaine Maxwell May Appear In Court As Soon As Friday

Ghislaine Maxwell May Appear In Court As Soon As Friday

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 10:10

US Prosecutors have requested a Friday bail hearing in New York for Ghislaine Maxwell – the longtime associate of Jeffrey Epstein, who is accused of procuring underage girls for the dead pedophile.

In a Sunday letter to Judge Alison Nathan of the US District Court for the Southern District of New York, acting US Attorney Audrey Strauss said that defense attorney Christian Everdell requested a Friday, July 10 hearing for the 58-year-old Maxwell, according to Reuters.

Maxwell is charged with four criminal counts related to procuring and transporting minors for illegal sex acts and two of perjury, according to the indictment by federal prosecutors in New York.

Epstein was awaiting trial on federal charges of trafficking minors between 2002 and 2005 when he was found hanged in an apparent suicide while in a New York City jail in August. He was 66. –Reuters

Ghislaine has been accused by three women of procuring and training young girls to perform massage and sexual acts on Epstein and his associates. 

Virginia Giuffre (previously named Virginia Roberts), one of Epstein’s alleged victims, claimed in a civil lawsuit that Maxwell “recruited” her into Epstein’s orbit, where she was forced to have sex with Epstein and his powerful friends, including Prince Andrew.

Giuffre asserts in her complaint that Maxwell, the sole defendant in the suit and the daughter of late publishing magnate Robert Maxwell, routinely recruited underaged girls for Epstein and was doing so when she approached the $9-an-hour locker room attendant at Mar-a-Lago in 1999 about giving massages to the wealthy investment banker.

Giuffre alleges that Maxwell ultimately trained her in how to give “massages” to Epstein that involved sex acts and, essentially, prostitution. When Maxwell publicly denied the allegations and called Giuffre a liar in 2015, that gave her the opening to head to federal court and file the defamation suit now headed for trial. –Politico

Though multiple survivors have alleged that Maxwell participated in Epstein’s alleged crimes, Maxwell had never been criminally charged until now. One thing that could stymie potential efforts to level charges against her – as a seemingly nervous Alan Dershowitz noted last week, is the infamous 2008 plea deal that Epstein struck with the US Attorney for Miami, Alexander Acosta, which found him serving just 13 months in prison after initially facing charges that could have garnered him a life sentence.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3grjPf6 Tyler Durden

Surveys Suggest US Business Activity Saw Record Surge In June

Surveys Suggest US Business Activity Saw Record Surge In June

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 10:04

After US manufacturing surveys  soared by a record in June, the services sector surveys were both expected to confirm the re-opening euphoria… with all four surveys beating expectations and rising fast…

  • ISM Manufacturing in Expansion – 52.6 vs 49.8 expectations and 43.1 prior – best since April 2019

  • PMI Manufacturing in Contraction – 49.8 vs 49.6 expectations and 39.8 prior – a record 10 point jump

  • ISM Services in Expansion – 57.1 vs 46.9 expectations and 45.4 prior – record jump

  • PMI Services in Contraction – 47.9 vs 49.6 expectations and 37.5 prior – record jump

A massive surge in ISM’s Service survey, back to pre-Virus levels…

Source: Bloomberg

The purchasing managers’ measure of service-related business activity, which parallels the ISM’s factory production index, jumped a record 25 points to 66 in June, the second-highest in records dating back to 1997.

Source: Bloomberg

A gauge of new orders climbed nearly 20 points to a four-month high of 61.6.

The record surge in ISM was all driven by optimism (as opposed to real hard data flows):

  • “Advertisers are starting to place more advertisements and the media business is turning around. Generally, we are at the end of the employee furloughs and layoffs. Our work efforts have been focused on navigating COVID-19. We are now shifting to value-add projects. We are cautiously optimistic, although as we get closer to the presidential election, we are on guard of unprecedented civil and social unrest.” (Information)

  • “Activity level is holding steady, with the potential of a rebound in the near future.” (Mining)

  • Sales have picked up tremendously. Sporadic supply issues. Biggest concern for us is lumber shortages.” (Construction)

  • Surprising recovery to sales volume over the past four weeks.” (Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing & Hunting)

  • “Businesses are starting to reopen and the economy seems to be on the road to recovery, but let’s not get too complacent, [as] COVID-19 is still a pandemic, [and] a vaccine has not been developed. Economics is the reason for the push for businesses to reopen. Utmost care and awareness still needs to be cautiously and religiously followed.” (Accommodation & Food Services)

The ISM’s measure of services employment, however, remains weak and continues to signal job cuts. The gauge advanced to 43.1 in June from 31.8, but is well below a year-ago level of 55.2 as the pandemic continues to upend the labor market across industries.

Now that all the data is in, the IHS Markit Composite PMI Output Index posted 47.9 in June, up significantly from 37.0 in May, and was also higher than the earlier released ‘flash’ figure of 46.8. The slower overall decline in output was linked to the resumption of operations at manufacturers and many service providers.

Commenting on the latest survey results, Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at IHS Markit, said:

June saw a record surge in the PMI’s main gauge of business activity in the US as increasing numbers of companies returned to work and expanded their operations amid the reopening of the economy. The survey points to a strong initial rebound from the low point seen at the height of the pandemic lockdown in April, with indicators of output, demand, exports and employment all showing steep gains. Financial services and technology companies are now reporting improved demand, as are many consumer-facing companies. Many, however, remain constrained by social distancing measures.

“With business confidence in the outlook picking up again in June, a return to growth for the economy in the third quarter looks likely, though this will very much depend on the extent to which demand continues to strengthen. There remains a strong possibility that growth could tail off after the initial rebound due to weak demand and persistent virus containment measures. The need to reintroduce lockdowns to fight off second waves of coronavirus infections will pose a particular threat to recovery momentum, and could drive a return of the recession.

Companies expressed optimism towards the outlook for output over the coming year for the first time since March.

Source: Bloomberg

Behold the “V”-shaped recovery in soft survey sentiment data.

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Rabobank: The US Might Swap ‘The Apprentice’ For ‘Keeping Up With The Kardashians’

Rabobank: The US Might Swap ‘The Apprentice’ For ‘Keeping Up With The Kardashians’

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 09:47

Submitted by Michael Every of Rabobank

“Go West!”

Markets are starting to focus on the 2020 US elections. There are lots of headlines in the traditional mould of ‘This candidate is doing better than that candidate, and hence might win’: Biden is indeed polling far stronger than Trump across the board, in key states, and in key demographics.

However, it’s not hard to find articles suggesting that: Trump might step down if it looks like he is going to lose (in which case who would run?); Trump will find a constitutional trick to stay in office if he loses (which seems to counter the other story); Biden will step down for health reasons even if he wins; that a Dark Horse Duo plan might re-write the election; and that Fox News anchor Tucker Carlson might be the Republican candidate in 2024 if Trump loses (i.e., no return to pre-populism is on the cards in the long run).

Now we have a new wild card: Kanye West has announced he is running for president and has already been supported be Elon Musk, raising the possibility the US might swap The Apprentice for Keeping Up With The Kardashians. There are serious legal hurdles to getting on the ballot in all 50 states at this stage: either West must secure the backing of a small political party or run as an independent, where registration deadlines have already passed in New Mexico and North Carolina. However, he certainly has the money to run if he wishes to, further muddying the electoral waters. Might it draw votes from Biden and hence help Trump? Nothing is certain but uncertainty. Even within the traditional Republican-Democrat dyad there is little clarity on what each candidate is offering. Trump’s 4 July speech attacked “far-left fascism” and the economic messaging remains vaguely #MAGA; Biden’s policy platform (and even who his advisors are) is still far more of a mystery

“Go, West!”

Certain interested parties are trying to do scenario planning, however. One of them is Europe, where it is unclear if remaining bridges across the Atlantic will be rebuilt or burned a few months from now. Another is China. Note this South China Morning Post article titled “Time for China to decouple the yuan from US Dollar, former diplomat urges”. Zhou Li, a former deputy director of the CCP’s International Liaison Department is “the latest in a series of voices in China” to warn the USD Weapon is real and “has us by the throat”, will pose an “increasingly severe threat” to Chinese development –USD oil sanctions seen as a key area of vulnerability– and so preparations for gradual decoupling and CNY internationalisation should begin “now”. Li adds China should “give up the illusion” of friendship and instead prepare for full-fledged conflict with the US.

His specific proposal is to increase cross-border payments and clearing, local FX settlement, and maximize CNY usage in industrial supply chains. The problems in internationalizing CNY are manifold, however, which is why the USD weapon exists. The capital account would need to be opened, precipitating a collapse in CNY as money floods out. To try to counter that, it’s China bubble time again – not just in property, but in stocks: the Shanghai exchange was up 4% at time of writing today, and 7% last week, as Chinese press openly talk up a new bull market –despite a flat economy– going so far as to imply this is part of the struggle between the “world’s powers”, according to Bloomberg: with different percentages, the same dynamic is of course true in the US. Yet for both this is lethal can-kicking at best that only creates far larger problems.

Moreover, we are literally talking about Australia, for example, being persuaded to accept CNY and not USD from China for its iron ore shipments in the near future. To say the timing of such a shift is not politically auspicious is an understatement.    

“GoW-est”

Indeed, the global backdrop is of Cold War and, indeed, of ‘Gods of War’. Last week’s announcement of a 40% increase in the Aussie defence budget came alongside PM Morrison saying: “…we have not seen the conflation of global economic and strategic uncertainty now being experienced here in Australia, in our region, since the existential threat we faced when the global and regional order collapsed in the 1930s and 1940s.” Aussie public broadcaster ABC comments: “If Morrison’s defence strategy sounds like war talk, that’s because it is”. The same is true in India, where military forces continue to build up along the border opposite those of China. Yes, talks are ongoing: and so is mobilisation. The US also has two aircraft carrier strike groups near Taiwan at the moment: that’s not mobilisation, but it is a clear message. (While the EU is setting up a committee that might greenlight a working paper on a potential future petition.)

In short, this is not a backdrop in which Australia will be accepting CNY for its iron ore. No more than the UK will be accepting Huawei in its 5G, according to the British press. Indeed, irrevocable splits appear closer and closer. One could look at the dichotomy in the United Nations Human Rights Council over the new Hong Kong national security law. Or one could read the Wall Street Journal saying “For the US to stay in the WTO, China may have to leave”, underlining that technically tricky and unthinkable as that outcome is, it may be where we are heading anyway.

US election result depending, of course. What is Kanye’s policy on the WTO and China? What is Biden’s?!

Go, West!”

Meanwhile, the West continues to try to jumpstart its flailing economy. The latest example being floated is from the forward-looking UK Chancellor Sunak. UK furlough schemes may be rolled back going forwards now pubs are open again but Sunak is perhaps set to introduce GBP500 time-delimited consumption vouchers for all adults targeted towards struggling bricks-and-mortar and services firms to try to jump-start that part of the economy.

When we see that this is all back-stopped by the BoE, and that the UK goods sold must be made in the UK, then I, like Kanye West, will be dropping the mic and walking away. One wonders which politicians looking to be elected in 2020 will pick it up.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3e5nhdM Tyler Durden

“Anarchists Have No Bounds” – Trump Rage-Tweets After Black Abolitionist Statue Torn Down In Rochester

“Anarchists Have No Bounds” – Trump Rage-Tweets After Black Abolitionist Statue Torn Down In Rochester

Tyler Durden

Mon, 07/06/2020 – 09:24

Update (0900ET): President Trump has https://t.co/8iEBxSHm52 via @BreitbartNews. This shows that these anarchists have no bounds!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 6, 2020

“>rage-tweeted his disgust and confusion at the actions of whoever tore down the statue, blasting that:

“This shows that these anarchists have no bounds!”

*  *  *

As  Summit News’ Paul Joseph Watson detailed earlier, a statue of black anti-slavery activist Frederick Douglass was torn down overnight in Rochester, New York.

“Rochester Police are investigating damage done to a statue of Frederick Douglass in Maplewood Park. It happened over the weekend, and police say that the statue was torn off its base, and left about 50 feet from its pedestal. The statue had been placed over the fence to Genesee River gorge and was leaning against the fence,” reports WXXI News.

“Police say in addition to the damage at the bottom of the statue, one of the fingers on the left hand of the statue was damaged. Aside from that damage, there was no graffiti on the statue or in the surrounding park. The statue has been removed for repairs.”

Frederick Douglass was a social reformer who escaped from slavery in Maryland and went on to become a national leader of the abolitionist movement in Massachusetts and New York who was noted for his outstanding speeches and antislavery writings.

A 2 minute perusal of Wikipedia would have confirmed this fact for whoever decided to topple the statue, but facts don’t seem to matter anymore.

The possibility remains that the statue could have been removed by an anti-BLM agitator, but other statues of abolitionists and anti-slavery activists have been removed by Antifa and BLM mobs across the country.

Whoever took down the statue has not been caught and police say the motive remains unknown.

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