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India pushes for $2.6 billion Iran smelter

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Now I am cent percent sure about your blah blah syndrome.

Jalne wale jalte rahenge....India-Iran relation strong hote rahenge :D:yay:
Phil hall tu Kashmir ki fiker karo, they raised the Pakistani flag again, go burn.
 
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there is no "before sanction" Iran , you imbecile person .

Iran was sanctioned since 1979 .

Iran has always been an economic , diplomatic and military powerhouse in the same region that you live in while decisions made in islamabad don't effect 1 cm away from it's own borders .
why negative rating for this,is this some kind of a joke, @the guy give me one reason for negative rating for this post,@Irfan Baloch does this post deserve negative ratings.
 
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Brother , their forum their rules .

i'm a guest here so no objections here :)

Tnx anyway

I think it is because you called him an "imbecile"

If you edit that word out they would probably remove the negative rating
 
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No it won't. It wasn't one before sanctions, it wont be one after sanctions.
Don't be pessimistic. Iran has massive potential and the Iranian people want to see their nation and country move ahead, unlike some others who put religion above their nation.
 
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well the thread is about economic cooperation between India and Iran... and the thread running out of the topic... hahaha
 
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Can you elaborate on the effect or lack thereof debt on currency valuations?

AFAIK dollar value depends a lot on risk on/off mentality in currency markets.

May be there is some causal relation b/w debt and currency valuations but then there is a lot of factors affecting currency valuations and the contribution of debt is debatable.

As long as US can service the debt there should be no issue. The primary reason for upwards movement of dollar these days is due to flight to safety in times of turbulence in global markets.

@asquare your opinion?
Well in simple terms, the rule of supply and demand applies to currencies as well.

When a government overspends money meaning it spends money that it doesn't have, then it has to start printing money to pay for the over budget costs. This is called Government Debt which is a result of budget deficit. By doing that, there is an increase in supply side of that currency which in absence of mutual demand in the international market will decrease its value. That's why budget deficit is a bad thing that every government should avoid.

Now in case of US, ever since WWII or even earlier, the government has been spending like crazy and that is exactly how it has been able to fund mega projects like Apollo program or build such a massive army. It has been spending the money it did not have:

420px-FederalDebt1940to2012.svg.png


currently its debt is larger than the size of its economy. Any other country in the same situation would see its currency value drop to worthless.

But a wise move that US did was to offer protection to Saudi Arabia when they felt threatened by Soviet Union in exchange of SA selling all its oil in US dollars. Besides that, after WWII, US and Canada were the only industrial countries that had remained out of harm and had full scale industries so there was a great demand for their products and while the rest of the big economies of pre WWII like Britain, Germany and France were in shambles, US dollar became the preferred currency for international trade and ever since US has been very diligent to keep it that way.

Now what it does is that it creates the international demand that can balance US government money printing. The fact that countries like yours need to buy US dollars to be able to make international procurement guarantees there would always be a demand for US Dollar.

I personally believe that one of the reasons that Obama was wise enough to reach a deal with Iran was the above. With the sanctions in place Iran, Russia, Cuba and China were more motivated to move away from the US Dollar for their exchange, and who knows, other countries might had gradually join them and eventually, demand for US dollar would decrease and then it value would drop to where it should be.
 
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Well in simple terms, the rule of supply and demand applies to currencies as well.

When a government overspends money meaning it spends money that it doesn't have, then it has to start printing money to pay for the over budget costs. This is called Government Debt which is a result of budget deficit. By doing that, there is an increase in supply side of that currency which in absence of mutual demand in the international market will decrease its value. That's why budget deficit is a bad thing that every government should avoid.

Now in case of US, ever since WWII or even earlier, the government has been spending like crazy and that is exactly how it has been able to fund mega projects like Apollo program or build such a massive army. It has been spending the money it did not have:

420px-FederalDebt1940to2012.svg.png


currently its debt is larger than the size of its economy. Any other country in the same situation would see its currency value drop to worthless.

But a wise move that US did was to offer protection to Saudi Arabia when they felt threatened by Soviet Union in exchange of SA selling all its oil in US dollars. Besides that, after WWII, US and Canada were the only industrial countries that had remained out of harm and had full scale industries so there was a great demand for their products and while the rest of the big economies of pre WWII like Britain, Germany and France were in shambles, US dollar became the preferred currency for international trade and ever since US has been very diligent to keep it that way.

Now what it does is that it creates the international demand that can balance US government money printing. The fact that countries like yours need to buy US dollars to be able to make international procurement guarantees there would always be a demand for US Dollar.

I personally believe that one of the reasons that Obama was wise enough to reach a deal with Iran was the above. With the sanctions in place Iran, Russia, Cuba and China were more motivated to move away from the US Dollar for their exchange, and who knows, other countries might had gradually join them and eventually, demand for US dollar would decrease and then it value would drop to where it should be.

Very well said, the historical background is accurate and explains why dollar remains unaffected by debt due to its position as international transactional currency and the contribution of Gulf states in helping achieve dollar that preeminent status.

Your view extrapolating these fundamentals to Iran Nuclear Deal is also extremely interesting. I had not considered it from that angle but it makes a lot of sense.

Good Job!
 
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Very well said, the historical background is extremely accurate and explains why dollar remains unaffected by debt due to its position as international transnational currency and the contribution of Gulf states in helping achieve dollar that preeminent status.

Your view extrapolating these fundamentals to Iran Nuclear Deal is also extremely interesting. I had not considered it from that angle and it makes sense.

Good Job!
My pleasure sir! Thank you.
 
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