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global politics

  • J

    The U.S. Trade Deficit: Tariffs vs. Borrowing Less. When people talk about America’s trade deficit, tariffs often come up as the “solution.” Put a tax on imports, make them more expensive, and the deficit will shrink, right? The problem is that tariffs do not actually fix the underlying imbalance. They just shift trade patterns, raise consumer costs, and invite retaliation.

    The deeper reason the U.S. runs such persistent trade deficits is its habit of borrowing heavily. Here is how the cycle works:

    1. The U.S. government runs budget deficits and issues lots of Treasuries.
    2. Foreign investors, companies, and central banks buy those Treasuries, sending capital into the U.S.
    3. This extra demand for dollars pushes the dollar up in value.
    4. A strong dollar makes imports cheaper and exports less competitive.
    5. The result is a larger trade deficit.

    In other words, America’s borrowing habit and its trade deficit are two sides of the same coin.

    If the U.S. reduced its borrowing, capital inflows would ease, the dollar would weaken, and the trade deficit would naturally shrink. Exports would rise and imports would fall, without tariffs, trade wars, or artificial distortions.

    That is why many economists argue that reducing borrowing is far better than raising tariffs. It works with global market forces rather than against them. Tariffs can protect certain industries in the short run, but they do not touch the root cause. Borrowing less does.

    Of course, the catch is political. Borrowing less means either cutting government spending or raising taxes, both of which are unpopular. Tariffs, on the other hand, are easy to sell as “protecting American jobs.” But if we are serious about addressing the trade deficit, the smarter path is to look at the borrowing side, not just the border.

    Editec•...
    "A country whose currency is the global reserve currency, held by other nations as foreign exchange (FX) reserves to support international trade, must somehow supply the world with its currency in order to fulfill world demand for these FX reserves." As worldwide confidence in...
    economics
    global politics
    international trade
    foreign exchange
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    An US - Iran Thread, especially as it relates to personal sense-making and 'waking up' frames. I'd love help making sense of what's going on. I don't have a lot of geopolitical history other than reading books by Tim Marshall and I don't even really know what kind of questions to answer, so here are some of the ones I'm thinking about. I'll post some thoughts about them in different comments below so we can start a bunch of convos if anyone likes.

    • How do we embody love in response to global events?
    • Nondual ethics... ?
      • eg there's obvious love/compassion for all leading to a "no war" and noninterventionism, but also how to make sense of involvements, boundary enforcements and safety and prevention as expressions of the infinite; there's Arjuna on the battlefield in the Gita; activism / spirituality as engagement in world affairs a la Terry Patten, or the Bauls of Bengal, or Islam for that matter?
    • Catching our projections onto what's happening and taking responsibility for that in ourselves; 
      • how can we help each other do this, see the world as the mirror it is (projection makes perception); eg not spiritually bypassing our pain by putting it out there
      • and also do it without disengagement or "spiritually bypassing" the geopolitical realities of our world?
    • Recognizing and side-stepping drama triangles, including meta-drama triangles of making drama trianglers wrong or victims
    • Illusions of control — mostly it's not up to us, yet also we're interdependent and much more than individuals and it's up to someone?
    jordanSA•...
    How do we embody love in response to global events like US-Iran bombing? There are a few easy naive mistakes on how to apply this, but there's also a pre-trans fallacy thing where the deeply embodied spirituality often looks like the naive one. Smattering of thoughts......
    ethics
    spirituality
    philosophy
    international relations
    global politics
    Comments
    0
  • J

    China's Economic Slowdown: Challenges, Debt, and an Uncertain Future. This excellent video explores China's economic challenges, particularly its slowing growth, increasing debt, and the risks associated with these trends. Despite expectations that China would become the world's dominant superpower due to its rapid economic rise, issues such as economic mismanagement, deflation, and high debt levels are creating significant problems. The country's debt crisis, fueled by heavy borrowing for infrastructure and real estate projects, is especially concerning, as it's tied to unsustainable growth expectations.

    The housing market in China, reliant on speculative investment and inflated property prices, is a key driver of the country's economic issues. Additionally, China is facing increased internal unrest, particularly among younger workers, and a significant reliance on state-owned companies that have been over-leveraged.

    While these problems are concerning, experts argue that an outright collapse of China's economy is unlikely due to its financial safeguards and global influence. However, China’s rise to dominance may have plateaued, and its future remains uncertain. The country's economic future will have significant implications for the global economy, but it's unclear whether it will stabilise, stagnate, or eventually surpass the U.S. economically.

    Despite the severity of China's economic challenges, many experts believe that a total collapse is improbable. Rather, China's economic slowdown will likely lead to a period of stagnation and reform, with possible long-term adjustments to its economic structure. However, it's clear that the expectations surrounding China's dominance have not materialised, and its future is now filled with uncertainty.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GK4cVoqVQsk
    jordanSA•...
    Separately, I think AI changes the game again, where we currently have global superpowers and multi-national corporations as dominant power structures; I'm not sure what's next but I think it's not going to obviate the existing structures but rather be another layer on top of...
    technology and society
    artificial intelligence
    global politics
    corporate governance
    Comments
    0
  • jordan avatar

    AI, cameras, drones, and an attempt at a construct-aware take on “crime”. Companies like Flock claim their traffic cameras, drones, and AI can reduce crime to nothing. 

    There are Minority Report concerns but they try to say they that 10% of reported crime is solved by Flock. 

    here's my issue: all the claims and statistics assume an agreed upon definition of crime. But clearly we don't agree: is abortion a crime? What about immigration? Gun ownership? Pollution?

    crime never existed / doesn't / will always depending on the frame we take. We have to take a frame—not trying to go all postmodern here—but I'd like to be more honest and self-aware of it. I'd like to claim our direction, and where we're coming from: fear or love? I think we'd build different systems with more evolutionary processes and back doors, for example. We'd ask questions like "how does crime fit with forgiveness, accountability with love, safety with the illusion of ego and control? Idk, just trying to put some provocative questions out to point to deeper (as in more causative) structures at play here.

    i love police and want to transcend and include traditional definitions of safety, in the same way uptrust transcends and includes algorithms.

    What do you think?

    jordanSA•...
    Nicely put: Can society trust tech oligarchs and their moral compass to wield their immense power responsibly? History suggests that aligning financial incentives with the greater good has always been a challenge It's an immense experiment that we're running....
    ethics
    technology and society
    global politics
    Comments
    0
  • Philip avatar

    Partisan Politics: The Ultimate Smokescreen? The Left demonizes the Right. The Right demonizes the Left. The media, for the most part, only stokes this rivalry. Both sides are up in arms, believing that they have to keep the other side from winning at all costs.

    Meanwhile, governments and central banks everywhere keep issuing more money, devaluing its purchasing power in the process (causing inflation). They do this to finance wars, to bail out banks, to fund massive bureaucracies and social programs and/or to stimulate the economy. They do this regardless of which party is in power.

    And they do it because they can. Because our money used to be backed by gold or other scarce commodities, now it’s backed by nothing. Therefore its supply can be inflated at will (and this is what the original meaning of the word inflation alludes to).

    I don’t think they do it out of malice. They likely often have the best intentions, and entire economic theories have been created and are espoused by Nobel-winning economists and academics to justify why they do it. But at the end of the day, the power to issue money out of thin air is just too great for any person or group to wield responsibly. It inevitably gets misused and abused.

    And it has disastrous consequences. Most people around the world are getting poorer in real terms, regardless of how hard they work, because their purchasing power is being inexorably eroded. And most people don’t fully realize that this is what’s happening. They intuit that something’s fundamentally very wrong, but don’t really know what it is. Stress, depression, anger, frustration and despair run rampant, and are usually misdirected.

    And so governments of every stripe and their central banks keep diluting everyone’s purchasing power, effectively stealing our time and energy. You work to earn money, and the money you earn buys you less and less over time. This isn’t an accident, and it isn’t because of corporate greed, or because illegal immigrants are taking what’s yours. It’s the result of deliberate governmental monetary policy, and it’s a global phenomenon.

    And they get to keep doing this because almost everyone is too busy fighting the other side to even notice or understand that it’s happening.

    blakeSA•...
    Object-level: I agree that the governments get a whole bunch of extra money via inflationary monetary policy. I agree people don’t seem to be aware of this, and that sucks....
    cryptocurrency
    economics
    productivity
    monetary policy
    global politics
    government policy
    public awareness
    gdp growth
    Comments
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