Para quem nao tem paciência, é favor passar às linhas a bold. Pelo menos essas camaradas...
Sao textos destes que ajudam a antecipar 2013 e 2014 e a perceber que a coesao europeia é uma utopia.
Os alemaes vao rebentar com os paises periféricos para que a sua banca (que é credora dos países resgatados) recupere, com lucro, todo o dinheiro empatado nas compra de dívida.
Depois, é só esperar a saída da Grécia e a queda do euro para voltar ao Marco, usando como garantia as segundas maiores reservas de ouro do mundo.
Metade da europa estará de gatas e a Alemanha, com uma moeda forte, dominará os mercados.
Ora...Portugal vive o mesmo que a Grécia vive com 12 meses de atraso.
Precisamos mesmo de esperar pela execucao do OE hoje aprovado para percebermos o molho de bróculos em que nos enfiámos?
Eu acho que nao.
O cerco à AR tem que continuar. O Passos tem que cair. O Seguro nao pode subir.
Somos nós, gente normal e honesta com CVs feitos fora das jotas, com a missao de servir e nao de enriquecer, que devemos decidir e controlar os destinos do nosso pais.
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By Matthew Lynn
LONDON (MarketWatch) — Where does Germany keep its gold reserves? It
might sound like a silly question. In Germany, of course. Probably in a
very deep vault somewhere in Frankfurt, surrounded by the best security
systems that Teutonic technical brilliance can create.
As it turns out, however, that is the wrong answer.
Much of the German gold, the second largest national reserves in the
world, is held in New York, London and Paris. Now there is a campaign
under way in Germany to bring the metal back home — and it is gathering
strength all the time.
That tells us three things about the global monetary system, none of them especially reassuring.
Part of the appeal of gold as money is that you can see it and touch it,
and Germans can’t see the gold that’s hidden away in New York and
London.
The German gold reserves are among the most significant in the world.
The country controls 3,396 tons of the stuff. That is a lot less than
the United States’ 8,133 tons, but then Germany is a smaller country,
and it has never had the world’s reserve currency. It is a lot more than
the 2,451 tons held by the Italians or the 2,435 tons held by the
French.
Much of it was built up under the old Bretton Woods system that operated
from the end of World War II until 1971. Trade deficits and surpluses
were settled by central banks in gold, and since Germany regularly ran
big surpluses it ended up with a lot of the metal.
But most of it was not held in Germany itself. Much of it was held
abroad, mostly in the U.S., U.K. or France. An estimated 66% is held at
the New York Federal Reserve, 21% at the Bank of England, and 8% at the
Bank of France. The old West Germany was on the front line of the Cold
War and if the Russians had ever invaded their tanks would have headed
straight for the bullion vaults. There was no point in leaving such a
tempting target open to attack.
With the Cold War a distant memory, many Germans want the gold returned
to their own country. A campaign called ‘Bring Back Our Gold’ has
gathered significant support. Politicians and the popular press have
jumped on the bandwagon.
Earlier this month the German Court of Auditors demanded that the
Bundesbank audit its official gold holdings, and called for the
repatriation of 150 tons in the next three years so that its quality can
be inspected. As anyone who has ever bought some gold jewelry in a
market will know, there are all kinds of tricks that an unscrupulous
dealer can get up to — all that glitters is not necessarily gold.
And while it takes a fairly fevered imagination to speculate that staff
at the Federal Reserve or the Bank of England have been nipping down to
the vaults and replacing the German gold with some ingots they picked up
at a souk in Cairo, the hysteria around the issue is growing so intense
an audit is now judged necessary.
The Bundesbank doesn’t usually give in to popular pressure – it is not
that kind of institution — but last week it put out a statement
attempting to reassure people the gold was safe and promising to check
on the stocks held abroad.
The cargo planes are not quite being loaded yet. But within the next
five years, it is a fair bet that some new vaults will be needed in
Frankfurt and some space will be going spare in New York and London.
What does the campaign tell us about the state of the global economy? Three things.
One, this generation of Germans is far more assertive about their
national interest than their parents were. For 50 years, most Germans
were anxious to show they were citizens of the world. They dealt with
post-war guilt by signing up for every international body available. Now
they are quite happy to be citizens of Germany, and to stand up for
their own interests.
Two, trust in financial institutions is dwindling all the time. Central
banks built up a system of debits and credits because it was easier to
move gold around on a ledger than to move it around on trucks. There are
few more tempting targets for thieves, after all, than a cargo of
ingots.
So it made sense for German gold to be stored elsewhere. But now people
no longer trust those systems. They are increasingly unhappy with assets
that are simply recorded on a bank’s balance sheet somewhere; they want
something physical they can see and touch. That is true of national
gold reserves, but it is increasingly true of other assets as well.
Thirdly, and most importantly, German sentiment is hardening against the
single currency with each month that passes. After all, what is a whole
vault full of gold in the basement of your central bank good for
exactly? Starting a new currency, of course. And, er ... that’s about
it.
There’s nothing else you can do with it. In the most extreme
circumstances, if the euro broke down chaotically, and national
currencies were bought back overnight, one of the key things the foreign
exchange markets would look at when putting a value on the new
deutschemarks, lire or francs would be the amount of gold the central
bank could back it with. That gold would seem a lot more valuable if it
was held in your own country rather than a foreign one.
The campaign to bring back the German gold is in reality a campaign to
bring back money that people can trust. The political establishment
might not have caught up yet. But popular opinion believes it was sold a
dog when it joined the euro and is already looking forward to the day when it escapes responsibility for endless bailouts of its neighbors.
Yet it is hardly confined to Germany. Distrust of central banks rigging
the monetary system is spreading from country to country. There will be
many staging posts in the long road back to some form of gold-backed
money — and the German campaign is just the beginning.
Matthew Lynn is a financial journalist based in
London. He is the author of "Bust: Greece, the Euro and the Sovereign
Debt Crisis," and he writes adventure thrillers under the name Matt
Lynn.
"
3 comentários:
Boa tarde
O sistema monetário está condenado a colapsar é uma questão de tempo. Como vai a Alemanha prosperar quando os outros paises que lhes fornecem recursos estiverem arrasados?
Quem irá consumir os produtos que eles fornecem?
Irão viver só da economia interna?
E quando as empresas, um pouco por todo o mundo, gradualmente forem substituindo os empregados humanos por automação, subindo a pique o desemprego tecnológico, quem terá dinheiro para manter o sistema a girar?
Obrigado
Bem...se o sistema monetário é o euro, concordo.
A Alemanha, como país produtor que é, vai fazer o mesmo que os outros ou seja, virar-se para os mercados compradores...Ásia.
Neste momento sugam tudo o que podem dos paises com dívida, depois de terem passados duas decadas a enriquecer vendendo essencialmente para a zona euro.
A questao agora é saber como acontece a separacao. Segue cada um para seu lado ou interrompe-se a paz na europa por causa dos conflitos sociais? Eu acho que a paz está seriamente ameacada.
A automacao nao acho sinceramente que seja um perigo...
Primeiro porque existirao sempre funcoes que apenas humanos conseguirao fazer. Depois porque os autómatos sao desenvolvidos e mantidos por humanos :)
Por outro lado, a propria evolucao da tecnologia cria emprego.
Sim, um robot pode apertar parafusos numa fabrica. Mas alguem tem que o construir e outro alguem tem que ir "mudar o óleo" :)
Basta ver as vagas de emprego criadas pela tecnologia. Há 50 anos existiam "oficinas de iPhone"? ou "especialistas em servidores Linux"?
O problema maior que nós portugueses enfrentamos é a dramática reducao do poder de compra e a destruicao da classe média. Trabalhamos apenas para pagar juros de uma divida feita para enriquecer uma minoria. E pior do que tudo, continuamos sem produzir nada, nem para consumo interno.
Caro blogger obrigado pela sua resposta, quando referi sistema monetário estava a falar no sistema de uso de dinheiro/moeda, seja de que origem for, e que é baseado em dívida constante e infinita. É uma espiral impossível de parar, basta olhar para as dívidas dos países. É o capitalismo a um passo do abismo que ele próprio criou.
Aconselho-o a assistir aos documentários Money As Debt.
A automação não é um perigo, é uma necessidade e uma ferramenta para libertar as pessoas para ocupações realmente estimulantes e de valor intelectual.
Actualmente há máquinas para todo o tipo de funções mesmo algumas que nem se consideravam possiveis ou até essenciais. Já não se reduz a parafusos em fábricas, já se realizam cirurgias e há certos tipos de produção totalmente autónomos. Reparações ou ajustes também não vejo que não possam acontecer automaticamente ou com diminuta participação humana.
Haverão sempre funções para pessoas mas vai chegar a um ponto em que serão uma espécie de serviços mínimos.
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