....................... Who's flying high now? Let's see how we're doing.
....................... Who's flying high now?
.................... A South Sea Bubble playing card
Illustration from THE GOLD RUSH DIARY OF FRANK McCREARY (1850)
Thomas Nast: "The Comet of Chinese Labour" (1870)The use of cheap foreign labour to undercut unionised American workers and benefit big business, is not new. But as this cartoon shows, it is easy, perhaps politic, to focus on the foreigner, who after all is merely trying to earn a living like the rest of us, and deserves decent treatment, out of common humanity.
"Pacific Chivalry" (August 7 1869)
How do we get a balance between the advantages of international trade, and the obligation of each State to look after its own people?
"By inflation you will burst - let well enough alone, and don't make it worse" (Thomas Nast, 20 December 1873)
Stanley Berkeley's "Gordons and Greys to the front", also known as the Stirrup Charge at Waterloo; a deed to stir any man's heart. Apologies for the trivial use.I have often wondered about chartists - investment analysts who look for patterns in trading to predict future developments. Here's a video posted on YouTube by Inthemoneystocks.com, an outfit set up this year. The report comments on yesterday's dramatic drop in the Dow.
Sometimes I think it's like astrology; but there may be a grain of truth in it. If relevant market information is already known, then (barring catastrophic surprises) some change happens because of the variable mood of the investors and their predictions of each others' behaviour. Perhaps this chart-reading is less a science and more a pragmatic art related to mass psychology and game-playing strategies.
As the stockmarkets gyrate, Marc Faber is still optimistic about Asian real estate. Tientip Subhanij, in today's Bangkok Post, says:
I've compared the growth of the Dow and the FTSE with the increase in national annual average earnings in each country. As you see, the Dow has advanced much more rapidly.
Doubtless there's problems with the methodology - PPP may well change as each country's nominal GDP increases. And it seems clear that the whole world can't live exactly like Americans do today. (It's also interesting to note that pricey, high-tax countries like the UK and Japan can't catch up with the USA without exceeding the latter's per capita GDP.)
But on these figures, China could match American living standards, on a quarter the income. So the low-pay trading advantage it enjoys is huge now, and is likely to remain so.
And look at India and Vietnam - they'd only need about one-fifth American per capita income to have the same in PPP terms. In fact, they could out-compete China in labour costs, which is one reason for China to move away from labour-intensive work like trainer-stitching, and towards heavy industry.
So Vietnam undercuts China undercuts America...
And given India's enormous population, its higher proportion of cultivatable land (compared with China), its well-established political and legal institutions, and its many millions of English-language speakers, it may be that India is the economy to watch this century.
IMF per capita GDP figures quoted from Wikipedia here (nominal) and here (PPP).
Looking at the German stock exchange (^GDAXI in the sidebar widget), the market has opened lower. For Reuters comment, see here.
As China industrialises, the difference between rich and poor is rising, as measured by the Gini Index. (The above chart is from the Wikipedia entry. 0 is perfect income equality, 100 means all the income is held by one person. ) The Gini score for China is around the same as for the USA.
The Market Oracle yesterday and Gold Seek today both feature an article by Michael Kosares from his own site (USA Gold) on why he thinks you should own gold."[U]nder the placid surface there are disturbing trends: huge imbalances, disequilibria, risks -- call them what you will. Altogether the circumstances seem to me as dangerous and intractable as any I can remember, and I can remember quite a lot. What really concerns me is that there seems to be so little willingness or capacity to do much about it. . . We are skating on thin ice." - Paul Volcker, Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve (Washington Post, 10 April 2005)
"[W]e live in a globalized environment and in a country which has enormous fiscal and external deficits. So you have to figure out some way -- which I have not done I might add -- to protect yourself if we should have a real currency problem here." - Robert Rubin, Former Treasury Secretary (interview with Kim Schoenholtz, Citigroup New York, 10 October 2006)
He discusses 6 trends: the US National Debt, the trade deficit, dropping real rates of investment return, derivatives, debt to foreigners, the US dollar's decline.
The conclusion, obviously, is that in times of doubt and distrust, gold will act as a haven for real wealth, as it has done in the past. "Price appreciation... is a sidebar to gold ownership. The main story is gold's asset preservation qualities."
Further to the last, it's worth struggling through Brad Setser's presentation to the Congressional committee even if (like me) you're not an economics buff. But it can't go on for ever. Either America's debts will continue to increase, or foreign sovereign wealth funds will buy more and more equities, or both. If foreigners slacken in their support for US debt, interest rates will rise; and losing equities to foreign owners takes away from America's future wealth and income.
Setser concludes:
The US will likely both have to sell more equity to the rest of the world and pay a somewhat higher interest rate on its external debt than it has recently...
While rapid central bank reserve growth and large official financing of the US deficit can help the US postpone the necessary adjustment, the longer the adjustment is deferred, the greater the long-term risks...
Bringing the US deficit and emerging economy surpluses down without tremendous costs will also take time. If the US and the world are to adjust gradually, they need to get started.
Yet again, I wonder whether the UK's enormous purchases of US dollar-denominated securities since June 2006 make sense for Britain.
Another thought: seeing two late market interventions last week, Dan Denning in The Daily Reckoning Australia (3 August) speculated that there may be "...in the financial market a buyer of last resort who comes in to goose the indexes at critical times, when investor confidence is especially fragile."
Rather than the Plunge Protection Team, could it be foreign sovereign wealth funds buying-in on the dips? Maybe that's why the Dow has bounced back 286 points today, as I write.
