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Goodbye Petrodollar: Russia and China Dump US Treasuries, Buy Gold

China does not have to back up the yuan with the gold as in the old sense, it just needs to reveal its way much higher gold reserve figure than the officially reported level to BIS at present. The much higher gold reserve will surely increase further the worldwide confidence upon the economic strength and healthy progress of China's economic engine.

Thus it is not exactly about the gold tied up currency as the pre-Bretton Woods era, but more to a currency being supported by huge gold reserves.

Well said, I think nobody is talking about the Yuan that is backed entirely by gold. The point here is gradual decoupling from the USD and giving the Yuan a stronger backing and increase global trust and confidence.

US DOESN'T have the 8500 tons of gold reserves it claims to have. their gold reserves have not been audited for over fifty years. there may not be a lot of gold in there except maybe foreign gold

Some people seriously doubt.

http://usawatchdog.com/fed-they-do-not-have-any-more-gold-paul-craig-roberts/
 
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Petrodollar system can not be replaced by hoarding gold.

To replace petrodollar system, you at least need an equivalent or superior. Like petro yuan system. Or electronic cross border payment system denominated in yuan backed by petroleum and gas sales by OPEC and major gas producers.
 
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The reason gold system did not work is because we can never mine gold faster than we are using it to develope a country, hence you can either choose one of the two. you either limit your country development so gold can keep up as backing of a payment, or you inflat the value of gold like it does with USD today, the only difference is, there are only 150k ton of gold in the world, and there are about 10 trillions of fiat currency in the world.

Gold Standard are abandoned because it cannot caught up with the developement during WW1, now imagine two things. 1.) There are less gold in public circulation than it was in 1900s, due to people collect gold, using it on item such as electronic. 2.) The world is being develope in a faster pace than it was in the 1900s.

People who think Gold Standard can be revived need to wake up and smell the coffee.
Gold standard was also the reason behind many wars since ancient times..beside..these days scientific intellectual property can worth a lot more than gold...as modern economy took shape...currency hedging shifted from gold to industrial and scientific knowledge..gold standard is not set in stone...any commodity can be used to hedge a currency and there are rare earth elements far more expensive than gold.
 
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Trumping the yuan in a volatile world
By Andrew Sheng/Xiao Geng
China Daily, February 10, 2017

At the recently concluded World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, President Xi Jinping mounted a robust defense of globalization, reaffirming his country's "open-door" policy and pledging never to seek to start a trade war or to benefit from depreciation of its currency. Soon after, US President Donald Trump, in his inaugural address, effectively made the opposite pledge: using the word "protect" seven times, he confirmed that his "America First" doctrine means protectionism.

Trump speaks of the United States as an economy in decline that must be revitalized. But the reality is that the US economy has been performing rather well over the last two years.

The dollar's value has risen particularly high in the last few months, as Trump's promises to increase government spending, lower business taxes, and cut regulation have inspired a flight to quality by investors. In contrast, the Chinese yuan has weakened significantly-from 6.2 yuan per dollar at the end of 2014 to 6.95 yuan at the end of last year-owing largely to declining investment and exports.

Trump has accused China of intentionally depreciating the yuan, in order to boost its export competitiveness. But the truth is the opposite: in the face of strong downward pressure on its currency, China has sought to keep the yuan-dollar exchange rate relatively stable-an effort that has contributed to a decline of more than $1 trillion in its official foreign exchange reserves.

China does not want the yuan to depreciate any more than Trump does. But no country has full control over its exchange rate.

China is already shifting from an export-driven growth model to one based on higher domestic consumption, so a stronger yuan might serve its economy better. China's current-account surplus fell to just 2.1 percent of GDP in 2016, and the International Monetary Fund projects it to narrow further, as exports continue to fall.

Even on the financial account front, a depreciating yuan doesn't serve China.

According to the IMF, by 2021, the US net investment position will probably deteriorate-with net liabilities rising from 41 percent of GDP to 63 percent-while China's net investment position may remain flat. This means other surplus countries such as Germany and Japan are likely to be financing the growing US deficit position, from both their current and financial accounts. (The expanding interest-rate differentials between the US and its advanced-country counterparts reinforce this expectation.)

But perhaps the biggest challenge for China today lies in its capital account. Since the yuan began its downward slide in 2015, the incentive to reduce foreign debts and increase overseas assets has intensified.

China's total foreign debts (public and private), already very low by international standards, fell from 9.4 percent of GDP ($975.2 billion) at the end of 2014 to 6.4 percent of GDP ($701.0 billion) by the end of last year. This trend seems set to continue, as Chinese citizens continue to diversify their asset portfolios to suit their increasingly international lifestyles. A weaker yuan will only bolster this trend.

Of course, Trump, who has repeatedly threatened to impose tariffs on China, could also influence China's exchange-rate policy. But, in a sense, Trump's irreverence makes him practically irrelevant. Judging by his past behavior, it seems likely that he will accuse China of currency manipulation, regardless of the policy path it chooses: a completely free float with full convertibility, the current managed float, or a pegged exchange rate.

So what is China's best option? A free-floating exchange rate can be ruled out, because in the current dollar-driven global monetary regime, such an approach would produce too much volatility.

But even the current regime is becoming difficult to manage. Considering the cost of recent efforts to maintain some semblance of exchange-rate stability, it seems that not even the equivalent of $3 trillion in foreign exchange reserves is enough to manage a currency float.

China can, and should, broaden and deepen its international investment position, in order to support currency stability. At the end of 2015, China's gross foreign assets were relatively low, at 57.2 percent of GDP, compared to about 180 percent for Japan and many European countries and around 130 percent for the US. China's net foreign assets amounted to only 14.7 percent of GDP, compared to 67.5 percent for Japan and 48.3 percent for Germany (negative 41 percent of GDP for the US). Reforms in the real and financial sectors would enable this level to rise.

For now, however, the best option for China may be to peg the yuan to the dollar, with an adjustment band of 5 percent, within which the central bank would intervene only lightly, to guide the market back to parity over the long term. Investors are, after all, focused almost exclusively on the yuan-dollar exchange rate.

Andrew Sheng is distinguished fellow of the Asia Global Institute at the University of Hong Kong and a member of the UNEP Advisory Council on Sustainable Finance. Xiao Geng, president of the Hong Kong Institution for International Finance, is a professor at the University of Hong Kong.
 
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Well makes sense to keep gold and keep it close to your own country's best defence center
These days "Paper" baed cash has no predictability

Today it is worth something , in 2-3 days the value can deminish 99% that is always the danger with Paper based money

You can't use this money into anything

At least with Gold you can make jewelry , you can make gold plated items (Cars, plates , utencils)
Also you can trade Gold coing , people take gold coin . And Gold is also used in High tech industry !!! Very good conductor etc. Not to mention in Space tech Gold plays a vital part

Paper money !!!! hmm... just turns into rubbish , lesson learned

The idea behind Paper money is very strange
 
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Gold standard was also the reason behind many wars since ancient times..beside..these days scientific intellectual property can worth a lot more than gold...as modern economy took shape...currency hedging shifted from gold to industrial and scientific knowledge..gold standard is not set in stone...any commodity can be used to hedge a currency and there are rare earth elements far more expensive than gold.

The only way the world could replace the USD as the world reserve currency is not to plug one or multiple currency and replace it direct, rather, the only way to displace USD as world reserve is a Global Certificate Currency type fiat currency which back by world banks (I mean banks around the world, not World Banks the organisation) The problem is, to be albe to pull this out, you will need the Western Banking institution. otherwise, without that endorsement, it's impossible for any currency, hard, fiat or whatever, to be able to take the USD place.

The next best system, believe it or not, is bartering.

Petrodollar system can not be replaced by hoarding gold.

To replace petrodollar system, you at least need an equivalent or superior. Like petro yuan system. Or electronic cross border payment system denominated in yuan backed by petroleum and gas sales by OPEC and major gas producers.

It's nearly (noted - NEARLY) impossible to have Petrol Yuan system.

1.) China is not a Oil Production country, it is a oil consumption economy.
2.) Oil production has been less and less able to influence the world economy, US can and will easily uses its massive reserve if someone is trying to dethrone the USD dominance via oil pegging payment. Look at how Russia and Venezuela as a prime example........

The only way Yuan can be denoted and trade with in oil is suddenly China discover more oil and gas (shale or crude) than the US and US allies put together. Mind you, this is a very hard task, as US + Canada + Saudi Arabia produce a lot of oil and gas, and ironically, most of them goes into China.

THe only feasible way to replace the USD is via the establishment of global currency, but that would need USD backing.
 
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It's nearly (noted - NEARLY) impossible to have Petrol Yuan system.

1.) China is not a Oil Production country, it is a oil consumption economy.
2.) Oil production has been less and less able to influence the world economy, US can and will easily uses its massive reserve if someone is trying to dethrone the USD dominance via oil pegging payment. Look at how Russia and Venezuela as a prime example........

The only way Yuan can be denoted and trade with in oil is suddenly China discover more oil and gas (shale or crude) than the US and US allies put together. Mind you, this is a very hard task, as US + Canada + Saudi Arabia produce a lot of oil and gas, and ironically, most of them goes into China.

THe only feasible way to replace the USD is via the establishment of global currency, but that would need USD backing.


It is not that hard but very hard for China to establish PetroYuan. All it needs to do is align with Russia, Central Asian oil states, Middle Eastern petro states, and have Iran onboard. Game over. US+Canada reserves are not that big in comparison.

Problem for China is its military weakness and technological backwardness.

There is no need for Western banks in anything. Most non-US Western banks will run to China if China starts oil pricing centre if it can get the petrostates to sell their oil and gas in Yuans. Of course, that would require Chinese military presence and capability to intervene in Middle East. Not possible in at least 2 more decades.
 
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It is not that hard but very hard for China to establish PetroYuan. All it needs to do is align with Russia, Central Asian oil states, Middle Eastern petro states, and have Iran onboard. Game over. US+Canada reserves are not that big in comparison.

Problem for China is its military weakness and technological backwardness.

There is no need for Western banks in anything. Most non-US Western banks will run to China if China starts oil pricing centre if it can get the petrostates to sell their oil and gas in Yuans. Of course, that would require Chinese military presence and capability to intervene in Middle East. Not possible in at least 2 more decades.

Actually, if what you are saying is tradition proven oil reserve, yes. US + Canada is nowhere near simply Russia + Iran + Venezeula combine. However, US oil shale, with its estimated 500 billions barrel technically recoverable, US alone could already been taken both Russia and Venezuela, in fact, the American is already doing this to punish Venezuelean and Russian government.

For PetrolYuan to be anywhere taken off, Yuan have to have a majority of Oil Production country backing (OPEC) and within OPEC and within OPEC, only Iran, Kuwait, Iran and Saudi Arabia are basically in any form of meaningful production rate. And China itself is not oil production country, infact, China depends much on importing oil and petrolium product, unlike the US, China would not have enough bargining power as much as the United States enjoy.

And finally, you will need US and Western banking institute to back PetroYuan, and it's not like you said "If China start oil pricing center and they will run to China" Chinese Yuan is not stable as of 2016, and it's not regulated as a currency, there are no transperency regarding how Yuan is trade. Will any bank simply go to China and hedge on something Chinese control tightly behind close door? Well, I wouldn't.
 
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Keynesianism and the crisis of modern economics
By Michael Roberts and Heiko Khoo
China.org.cn, January 30, 2017

In 2008, Britain's Queen Elizabeth, speaking at the London School of Economics, asked some eminent economists why they'd failed to foresee the economic crisis then unfolding? They could not explain the reason! The impotence of mainstream economics continues today.

Lord Robert Skidelsky is the award-winning author of an acclaimed three-volume biography of John Maynard Keynes. He believes that mainstream economics remains in a deep intellectual crisis.

He writes: "Let's be honest: no one knows what is happening in the world economy today. Recovery from the collapse of 2008 has been unexpectedly slow. Are we on the road to [regaining] full health or mired in 'secular stagnation?' Is globalization coming or going?"

He continues: "Policymakers don't know what to do. They press the usual (and unusual) levers and nothing happens. Quantitative easing was supposed to bring inflation 'back on target.' It didn't. Fiscal contraction was supposed to restore confidence. It didn't."

For Skidelsky, a big part of the problem with mainstream economics comes from its use of unrealistic models and mathematical formulae that fail to grasp the "whole picture." As a consequence, mainstream economics lacks a "common understanding of how things work, or should work."

He blames this on a tendency to view society as a machine designed to achieve an equilibrium of supply and demand, in which "deviations from equilibrium are 'frictions' or mere 'bumps in the road;' barring them, outcomes are pre-determined and optimal."

However, human behavior does not fit this mechanical equilibrium model of economics, because it takes no account of human unpredictability and change. Skidelsky blames this on the lack of a "broad education and outlook" among economists, who need to understand wider features of social organization and behavior and locate them within the context of broad historical development.

However, Skidelsky's arguments do not really explain why mainstream economics became divorced from reality. This is an automatic and deliberate consequence of avoiding questioning the system of capitalism itself. The great classical economists of the 18th and 19th centuries - Adam Smith, David Ricardo, James Stuart Mill etc. - developed "political economy" as an "objective" analysis of the economic system. However, as the capitalist form of labor exploitation became dominant, mainstream economics became transformed from an objective tool of analysis into an apologia for capitalism.

It is certainly true that mainstream economics is narrowly mathematical and is focused on economic models. However, there is nothing inherently wrong with using maths and models. The problem lies elsewhere - in the fact that economics no longer seeks to present an objective analysis of the laws of motion of capitalism.

Rather, economists perform like a choir singing hymns designed of praise -celebrating, justifying and protecting capitalism. Their assumption is that capitalism is the only viable system of human social organization.

They maintain only capitalism can meet people's needs. There is no alternative. The capitalist system works just fine if it's left alone. However, too often, outside forces like governments and "rent-seeking" monopolies interfere in markets. So, all that is required from government is to contain occasional "shocks" and correct "technical problem" that may arise in production and circulation.

However, Paul Krugman, the world's most prominent Keynesian economist, disagrees with Skidelsky. He disputes the claim that mainstream economics regarded deliberate fiscal contraction (austerity) as necessary to "restore confidence" after the Great Recession.

Indeed, Krugman says the Keynesian wing of mainstream economics argues the opposite: that greater government spending would have countered the economic depression. He says austerity is "strongly correlated with economic downturn." However, the evidence for this is weak. For example, the three main Keynesian solutions - easy money, zero interest rates and fiscal expansion - have all been tried and failed in Japan.

Krugman blames policymakers because they "refused to use fiscal policy to promote jobs; they chose to believe in the 'confidence fairy' to justify attacks on the welfare state, because that's what they wanted to do.

"And yes, some economists gave them cover. But that's a very different story from the claim that economics failed to offer useful guidance. On the contrary, it offered extremely useful guidance, which policymakers, for political reasons, chose to ignore."

It is true that policy makers may have chosen to ignore the option of fiscal spending in order to solve the "technical problem" of the Long Depression. And this was partly "for political reasons." However, these "political reasons" are rooted in the existing social and class structure, and the power that big business wields over politics and political ideology.

Even so, regardless of the enormous lobbying power of capitalists, increased government spending and bigger budget deficits will not produce an economic recovery if the profitability of capital is low. This is because profits are the driving force behind capitalist investment.

Low profits cause low investment. Therefore, the economic problems we face today are endemic to the capitalist system. The future of economics belongs to those who seek to replace it.

Heiko Khoo is a columnist with China.org.cn. For more information please visit:http://china.org.cn/opinion/heikokhoo.htm

Michael Roberts is a London based Marxist economist. He published the "The Great Recession" in 2008 and "Essays on Inequality" in 2014

Opinion articles reflect the views of their authors, not necessarily those of China.org.cn
 
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Keynesianism and the crisis of modern economics
By Michael Roberts and Heiko Khoo
China.org.cn, January 30, 2017

In 2008, Britain's Queen Elizabeth, speaking at the London School of Economics, asked some eminent economists why they'd failed to foresee the economic crisis then unfolding? They could not explain the reason! The impotence of mainstream economics continues today.

Lord Robert Skidelsky is the award-winning author of an acclaimed three-volume biography of John Maynard Keynes. He believes that mainstream economics remains in a deep intellectual crisis.

He writes: "Let's be honest: no one knows what is happening in the world economy today. Recovery from the collapse of 2008 has been unexpectedly slow. Are we on the road to [regaining] full health or mired in 'secular stagnation?' Is globalization coming or going?"

He continues: "Policymakers don't know what to do. They press the usual (and unusual) levers and nothing happens. Quantitative easing was supposed to bring inflation 'back on target.' It didn't. Fiscal contraction was supposed to restore confidence. It didn't."

For Skidelsky, a big part of the problem with mainstream economics comes from its use of unrealistic models and mathematical formulae that fail to grasp the "whole picture." As a consequence, mainstream economics lacks a "common understanding of how things work, or should work."

He blames this on a tendency to view society as a machine designed to achieve an equilibrium of supply and demand, in which "deviations from equilibrium are 'frictions' or mere 'bumps in the road;' barring them, outcomes are pre-determined and optimal."

However, human behavior does not fit this mechanical equilibrium model of economics, because it takes no account of human unpredictability and change. Skidelsky blames this on the lack of a "broad education and outlook" among economists, who need to understand wider features of social organization and behavior and locate them within the context of broad historical development.

However, Skidelsky's arguments do not really explain why mainstream economics became divorced from reality. This is an automatic and deliberate consequence of avoiding questioning the system of capitalism itself. The great classical economists of the 18th and 19th centuries - Adam Smith, David Ricardo, James Stuart Mill etc. - developed "political economy" as an "objective" analysis of the economic system. However, as the capitalist form of labor exploitation became dominant, mainstream economics became transformed from an objective tool of analysis into an apologia for capitalism.

It is certainly true that mainstream economics is narrowly mathematical and is focused on economic models. However, there is nothing inherently wrong with using maths and models. The problem lies elsewhere - in the fact that economics no longer seeks to present an objective analysis of the laws of motion of capitalism.

Rather, economists perform like a choir singing hymns designed of praise -celebrating, justifying and protecting capitalism. Their assumption is that capitalism is the only viable system of human social organization.

They maintain only capitalism can meet people's needs. There is no alternative. The capitalist system works just fine if it's left alone. However, too often, outside forces like governments and "rent-seeking" monopolies interfere in markets. So, all that is required from government is to contain occasional "shocks" and correct "technical problem" that may arise in production and circulation.

However, Paul Krugman, the world's most prominent Keynesian economist, disagrees with Skidelsky. He disputes the claim that mainstream economics regarded deliberate fiscal contraction (austerity) as necessary to "restore confidence" after the Great Recession.

Indeed, Krugman says the Keynesian wing of mainstream economics argues the opposite: that greater government spending would have countered the economic depression. He says austerity is "strongly correlated with economic downturn." However, the evidence for this is weak. For example, the three main Keynesian solutions - easy money, zero interest rates and fiscal expansion - have all been tried and failed in Japan.

Krugman blames policymakers because they "refused to use fiscal policy to promote jobs; they chose to believe in the 'confidence fairy' to justify attacks on the welfare state, because that's what they wanted to do.

"And yes, some economists gave them cover. But that's a very different story from the claim that economics failed to offer useful guidance. On the contrary, it offered extremely useful guidance, which policymakers, for political reasons, chose to ignore."

It is true that policy makers may have chosen to ignore the option of fiscal spending in order to solve the "technical problem" of the Long Depression. And this was partly "for political reasons." However, these "political reasons" are rooted in the existing social and class structure, and the power that big business wields over politics and political ideology.

Even so, regardless of the enormous lobbying power of capitalists, increased government spending and bigger budget deficits will not produce an economic recovery if the profitability of capital is low. This is because profits are the driving force behind capitalist investment.

Low profits cause low investment. Therefore, the economic problems we face today are endemic to the capitalist system. The future of economics belongs to those who seek to replace it.

Heiko Khoo is a columnist with China.org.cn. For more information please visit:http://china.org.cn/opinion/heikokhoo.htm

Michael Roberts is a London based Marxist economist. He published the "The Great Recession" in 2008 and "Essays on Inequality" in 2014

Opinion articles reflect the views of their authors, not necessarily those of China.org.cn
Skidelsky is correct. early 19th and 20the century economic models only try to prove that western capitalism is the best form of resource distribution. it's really a political and racial theory to prove Caucasian are superior. At the time it probably made sense because only western countries were participants of the "new" econimc system. Combine this with imperialism, white countries had abundance of resources exploiting non white countries.
Western economic theories are wonderful as they distribute resources fairly. in Canada, it's so fair that only two families control 50% of the wealth :lol:
 
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Keynesianism and the crisis of modern economics
By Michael Roberts and Heiko Khoo
China.org.cn, January 30, 2017

In 2008, Britain's Queen Elizabeth, speaking at the London School of Economics, asked some eminent economists why they'd failed to foresee the economic crisis then unfolding? They could not explain the reason! The impotence of mainstream economics continues today.

Lord Robert Skidelsky is the award-winning author of an acclaimed three-volume biography of John Maynard Keynes. He believes that mainstream economics remains in a deep intellectual crisis.

He writes: "Let's be honest: no one knows what is happening in the world economy today. Recovery from the collapse of 2008 has been unexpectedly slow. Are we on the road to [regaining] full health or mired in 'secular stagnation?' Is globalization coming or going?"

He continues: "Policymakers don't know what to do. They press the usual (and unusual) levers and nothing happens. Quantitative easing was supposed to bring inflation 'back on target.' It didn't. Fiscal contraction was supposed to restore confidence. It didn't."

For Skidelsky, a big part of the problem with mainstream economics comes from its use of unrealistic models and mathematical formulae that fail to grasp the "whole picture." As a consequence, mainstream economics lacks a "common understanding of how things work, or should work."

He blames this on a tendency to view society as a machine designed to achieve an equilibrium of supply and demand, in which "deviations from equilibrium are 'frictions' or mere 'bumps in the road;' barring them, outcomes are pre-determined and optimal."

However, human behavior does not fit this mechanical equilibrium model of economics, because it takes no account of human unpredictability and change. Skidelsky blames this on the lack of a "broad education and outlook" among economists, who need to understand wider features of social organization and behavior and locate them within the context of broad historical development.

However, Skidelsky's arguments do not really explain why mainstream economics became divorced from reality. This is an automatic and deliberate consequence of avoiding questioning the system of capitalism itself. The great classical economists of the 18th and 19th centuries - Adam Smith, David Ricardo, James Stuart Mill etc. - developed "political economy" as an "objective" analysis of the economic system. However, as the capitalist form of labor exploitation became dominant, mainstream economics became transformed from an objective tool of analysis into an apologia for capitalism.

It is certainly true that mainstream economics is narrowly mathematical and is focused on economic models. However, there is nothing inherently wrong with using maths and models. The problem lies elsewhere - in the fact that economics no longer seeks to present an objective analysis of the laws of motion of capitalism.

Rather, economists perform like a choir singing hymns designed of praise -celebrating, justifying and protecting capitalism. Their assumption is that capitalism is the only viable system of human social organization.

They maintain only capitalism can meet people's needs. There is no alternative. The capitalist system works just fine if it's left alone. However, too often, outside forces like governments and "rent-seeking" monopolies interfere in markets. So, all that is required from government is to contain occasional "shocks" and correct "technical problem" that may arise in production and circulation.

However, Paul Krugman, the world's most prominent Keynesian economist, disagrees with Skidelsky. He disputes the claim that mainstream economics regarded deliberate fiscal contraction (austerity) as necessary to "restore confidence" after the Great Recession.

Indeed, Krugman says the Keynesian wing of mainstream economics argues the opposite: that greater government spending would have countered the economic depression. He says austerity is "strongly correlated with economic downturn." However, the evidence for this is weak. For example, the three main Keynesian solutions - easy money, zero interest rates and fiscal expansion - have all been tried and failed in Japan.

Krugman blames policymakers because they "refused to use fiscal policy to promote jobs; they chose to believe in the 'confidence fairy' to justify attacks on the welfare state, because that's what they wanted to do.

"And yes, some economists gave them cover. But that's a very different story from the claim that economics failed to offer useful guidance. On the contrary, it offered extremely useful guidance, which policymakers, for political reasons, chose to ignore."

It is true that policy makers may have chosen to ignore the option of fiscal spending in order to solve the "technical problem" of the Long Depression. And this was partly "for political reasons." However, these "political reasons" are rooted in the existing social and class structure, and the power that big business wields over politics and political ideology.

Even so, regardless of the enormous lobbying power of capitalists, increased government spending and bigger budget deficits will not produce an economic recovery if the profitability of capital is low. This is because profits are the driving force behind capitalist investment.

Low profits cause low investment. Therefore, the economic problems we face today are endemic to the capitalist system. The future of economics belongs to those who seek to replace it.

Heiko Khoo is a columnist with China.org.cn. For more information please visit:http://china.org.cn/opinion/heikokhoo.htm

Michael Roberts is a London based Marxist economist. He published the "The Great Recession" in 2008 and "Essays on Inequality" in 2014

Opinion articles reflect the views of their authors, not necessarily those of China.org.cn
strange. I thought the modern economic theory is no longer Keynesianism, but that of Chicago school.
 
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Gold shares up on safe-haven idea
China Daily, February 13, 2017

6c0b840a2e381a0b4d0303.jpg

Customers select bracelets at a jewelry store in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, on Jan 31. [Photo/China Daily]

Share prices of companies producing or selling gold have surged in the past few weeks thanks to rising demands for the metal as a safe haven for investors.

Analysts said that they recommend investors to hold gold-related products, from bar and coin to gold-backed exchange traded funds, as demands for gold as a hedging tool would stay strong in the near future.

The share price of miner Shandong Gold Group Co Ltd rose by 9 percent in the past 20 days from 35.41 yuan ($5.15) per share to 38.71 yuan per share.

Other Shanghai-listed gold miners Zhongjin Gold Corp Ltd, Chifeng Jilong Gold Mining Co Ltd and Hunan Gold Corp Ltd rose by more than 3 percent in the past week. Gold products retailers such as Beijing Kingee Culture Development Co Ltd rose by 5 percent.

A research note from China Galaxy Securities Co Ltd said: "The robust demands for gold in 2016, particularly the fourth quarter, helped gold to consolidate its position. Demands for gold as a tool for hedging risks are likely to remain robust in the first quarter of 2017, after a strong Q4 in 2016. Bar and coin, ETFs and gold-related companies' shares are all likely to benefit from the demands."

The final quarter of 2016 was the buying opportunity many retail investors had been waiting for, after the precious metal's price had been subdued for most of the year. The fourth quarter was also China's strongest quarter of bar and coin demand since the second quarter in 2013, the research note said.

A report from the World Gold Council in 2016 said: "A four-year high in investment drove price gains and demand growth."

According to World Gold Council data, 2016 full-year gold demand rose by 2 percent to reach a three-year high of 4,308.7 metric tons, and annual inflows into ETFs reached 531.9 tons, the second highest on record.

Investment demand was up by 70 percent in 2016, reaching its highest level since 2012. Annual ETF inflows were the strongest since 2009.

Retail investors' positive response to the price fall in October and November pushed Q4 bar and coin demand to its highest quarterly level since Q2 2013.

In China, consumer demand is estimated at 900 to 1,000 tons in 2017, according to the World Gold Council.

Yang Jie, an analyst with Shanghai-based Seawonder Precious Metal Investments Ltd, said: "Uncertainties over new policies that could be introduced by the Trump administration in the US and changes in Europe and Britain after Brexit would also push up demand for gold."

From a retail perspective, an increased demand for gold jewelry from December 2016 to the end of February is also likely to help boost the share prices of gold retailers.

Xin Yufen, sales manager with Yayi Jewelry in Shanghai, said: "Gold jewelry demand often rises significantly around festivals, such as Christmas and the New Year and China's Lunar New Year, as giving gold as a gift is a tradition. In recent years, as gold products became popular among young consumers, St Valentine's Day also sees a peak in gold jewelry consumption."
 
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glad if it will happen, just need more time I think. Time will tell.
 
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