[Marxism] the ficticious credit crunch and dollar hegemony
Dbachmozart at aol.com
Dbachmozart at aol.com
Tue Sep 2 09:17:50 MDT 2008
By William Bowles --
clip --
For the past five centuries Western capitalism has sought to extend its
control over the entire planet, a process delayed for around seventy-five years
by the Russian and associated revolutions. Denied access to markets and
resources that capitalism, in order to survive, has to have, in 1991 the world
became capitalism’s oyster, the ‘market’ reigned supreme, we were promised a
future of unfettered expansion and wealth (remember the ‘trickle-down theory’
?). But it took was less than twenty years for the entire edifice to come
crashing down as the inherent contradictions of a now-globalized capitalism
floated to the surface like so much scum. The over-accumulation of capital produced
by the ‘free market’ desperately needs new markets but likewise,
globalizing production produced a vast over-production of goods and commensurately
nobody to buy them. These twin elements, over-accumulation and over-production
are the direct result of moving production to the world’s cheap labour markets,
which in the short-term produced vast profits for a handful of giant
transnational corporations (and ‘cheap’ goods for the minority of the world’s
population who live in the so-called developed countries. ‘Cheap’ because they’ve
been purchased using borrowed money).
“World trade is now a game in which the US produces dollars and the rest of
the world produces things that dollars can buy. The world's interlinked
economies no longer trade to capture a comparative advantage; they compete in
exports to capture needed dollars to service dollar-denominated foreign debts and
to accumulate dollar reserves to sustain the exchange value of their
domestic currencies. To prevent speculative and manipulative attacks on their
currencies, the world's central banks must acquire and hold dollar reserves in
corresponding amounts to their currencies in circulation. The higher the market
pressure to devalue a particular currency, the more dollar reserves its
central bank must hold. This creates a built-in support for a strong dollar that in
turn forces the world's central banks to acquire and hold more dollar
reserves, making it stronger. This phenomenon is known as dollar hegemony, which is
created by the geopolitically constructed peculiarity that critical
commodities, most notably oil, are denominated in dollars.” — _‘US dollar hegemony
has got to go’_ (http://www.atimes.com/global-Econ/DD11Dj01.html) By Henry C
K Liu.
The media go to great lengths to push the totally ficticious idea as to the
cause of the current crisis of capital by labelling it as the “credit crunch”
, that is to say, a shortage of cash in circulation, or more precisely,
access to cash via credit with which to purchase things.
full - _http://www.creative-i.info/?p=415_
(http://www.creative-i.info/?p=415)
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