westwoody said:
Look at defense programs in the US, instead of buying the best equipment for the money, procurement is turned into porkbarrelling. The B2 Spirit fiasco is a good example. The whole program was wildly over budget and behind schedule, but no congressman wanted to cancel it because the prime contractors had shrewdly divided up the subcontracts. Almost every congressional district had a company that was doing some work for the program, and no congressman wants to cut jobs in his own district.
Damn I haven't heard anything that poignant in a long time, poignant and true. Thanks.
luckydog71 said:
I believe they will be the next super power and the US will have roll in the world equal to about what Britain has today.
Although few would agree with me, the US as an empire has been a very easy going super power in comparison to Britain during its glory days, or Germany, or the Romans.
I wonder if China or India will be as easy. I doubt it. I think they will be more domineering, more dictatorial, and more militaristic. They will not be going to the UN and passing a resolution for the return of Taiwan. They will send their army in and dare the US or any other country to try and do something about it.
I would have to disagree with you LD that the next superpower will be China (or India). I think the US will remain the sole superpower for another 20 years, and that China, India, EU will remain regional powers only. The extent of the power of the US is not known to most Americans. The US is much much more powerful and is in a strategic position such as no power in history has been for world domination. Also, in comparison to barbaric times of yore, the US looks like an easy going empire.... but then again, most Americans don't know just how barbaric the US has been in modern times.
As for Taiwan, it may be true that China muscles in and just takes over, with the US' hands tied unable to do much. But what is Taiwan to China? It is the same virtually to China as it is to the US: a leverage by the US against China. The best that the US can hope for is to make that leverage last as long as possible, but that would take a completely protectionist US trade policy. That's not going to happen. All the US will lose is that leverage. If the Korean peninsula were to resolve without US intervention, then I would say there is trouble for the US and that lost Taiwan leverage is going to matter more. But so far, this is not seen to be happening.
Now back to the original post: China decides it will let its currency float to within 3% of a "group of currencies". This is just a ploy. China pegged its RMB to the USD precisely because it knew that the USD was over inflated, and that it was over inflated was because Americans needed to buy resources cheaply or otherwise be faced with the real equilibrium for the American economy right now: deep recession. So because the US is unwilling to face that economic equilibrium, which would be a recession, it must keep its dollar artificially high and consequently be unable to stop the currency manipulation that China uses. Not wanting to seem like the bad guy, the Chinese have finally decided that they will move away from pegging against the US currency, but instead peg against a group of other currencies, and only within 3%. But the truth is, is that other currencies are pegged against the USD. Take the Canadian dollar for example. It is also manipulated and pegged against the USD, keeping it artificially around 1.25.
No currency is truly free floating anymore.... there is only a tacit "agreement" between nations when exchange rates become uncomfortable, one nation pipes up and makes all kinds of threats. That is the case with the US vis-a-vis China, and the reason for the slight shift in international monetary policy by the Chinese. Effectively, this shift still means the RMB is going to be comparatively valued lower than the USD but now the US will have less room to make "legitimate" complaints.
The American economic equilibrium has been recession (for years) and will remain recession for some time to come. The only way the US can pull itself out of it is to alter the supply side of the equation, because the demand side is not going to change any time soon. The only way to alter the supply side of the equation is to alter external factors because internal factors can no longer change. Once the oil in Iraq and Central Asia makes it through the Caspian and Turkish pipelines, that equation will change. The only hope for America to get out of its predicament is to make more foreign oil fields available to itself, as directly as possible.