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Autor Tema: PPCC: Pisitófilos Creditófagos. Primavera 2024  (Leído 99248 veces)

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Re:PPCC: Pisitófilos Creditófagos. Primavera 2024
« Respuesta #1500 en: Hoy a las 11:27:41 »







La Ranchera
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c2wyfmh9sTo

Igual que en los tiiempos de la Union Sovietica decian que los diplomaticos occidentales necesitaban un kemlinologo para interpretar las declaraciones que salian del kremlin,  en este foro vamos a necesitar un suddenologo para que nos explique  el sentido de los memes de Sudden, si es que tienen alguno.
Ceterum censeo Mierdridem esse delendam

Derby

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Re:PPCC: Pisitófilos Creditófagos. Primavera 2024
« Respuesta #1501 en: Hoy a las 11:33:01 »
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/chinas-xi-jinping-visits-europe-ukraine-trade-investment-109893753

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As China's Xi Jinping visits Europe, Ukraine, trade and investment are likely to top the agenda

Ukraine, trade and investment are expected to dominate Chinese leader Xi Jinping's first trip to Europe in five years, which starts in France on Monday


TAIPEI, Taiwan -- Ukraine, trade and investment are expected to dominate Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s first trip to Europe in five years, as the Asian giant rebuilds its foreign relations after a prolonged absence during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Xi will start the tour in Paris on Monday, meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron, who has been stressing the idea of European strategic autonomy from the U.S. On a visit to Beijing last year, Macron courted controversy by saying France would not necessarily always align with the U.S. in foreign policy, an apparent reference to American support for the self-governing republic of Taiwan, which China claims as its own territory to be annexed by force if necessary.

After leaving France, Xi will visit Hungary and Serbia, both seen as China-friendly and close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, rebuffing Western criticism of his full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Xi’s European visits will be closely followed in Washington for signs of diminishing support for its key foreign policy goals.

The Chinese leader will arrive in France just as Paris is putting the finishing touches on its preparations for hosting the Summer Olympics, an event in which China invests huge amount of national prestige.

France sees Xi's visit, which officially marks 60 years of French-Chinese diplomatic relations, as an important diplomatic moment, and wants to focus on China’s broader relations with the EU. Macron invited European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to the talks Monday.

It comes a month before Macron, who positions himself as the diplomatic leader of Europe, hosts Biden for a similar state visit.

It is also a sign of “the good vibes from Macron’s visit to China in April last year," said Kerry Brown, professor of Chinese Studies and director of the Lau China Institute at King’s College London.

“This is a highly strategic visit to Europe by Xi. And in his itinerary you can divine the runes of Chinese policy on Europe now, bolstering the traditional links as far as possible, and reinforcing new ones,” Brown said.

Xi's is also visiting Budapest, where Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, in power for 14 years, is facing political challenges from the opposition over his authoritarian style.

Hungary has straddled a middle ground between its membership in the EU and NATO and an unusual openness to diplomatic and trade relationships with eastern autocracies such as Russia and China.

Orbán, a right-wing populist who has forged close ties with Russia, delayed Sweden’s entry into NATO for months. China has cited NATO expansion as provoking Russia to invade Ukraine.

Hungary is the first EU member to participate in Xi's signature Belt and Road Initiative that seeks to build billions of dollars of roads, ports, power plants and other infrastructure across Asia, Africa and beyond.

Orbán was the only EU leader to attend a conference in Beijing on the BRI, which has been criticized for burying participating countries in debt and failing to deliver on promised investments, something that prompted Italy to drop out last year.

Despite that, Hungary’s government has deepened its economic ties with China, with the proliferation of Chinese electric vehicle (EV) battery factories across the country gaining the most attention. Near Debrecen, Hungary’s second-largest city, construction is underway of a nearly 550-acre, 7.3 billion euro ($7.9 billion) EV battery plant, Hungary’s largest-ever foreign direct investment.

China has also invested heavily in infrastructure to link Hungary with its southern neighbor Serbia, Xi's next stop on his European tour.

In 2014, Hungary and Serbia concluded an agreement with Beijing to modernize the railway between their capitals of Budapest and Belgrade, part of a Belt and Road plan to link up with the Chinese-controlled port of Piraeus in Greece, to the south, an entry point for Chinese goods to Central and Eastern Europe.

The more than $2 billion project is expected to be completed in 2026, after numerous delays.

In Serbia, Xi will hold talks with President Aleksandar Vucic, with whose government China has built strong relations.

The two countries have a long history of friendship, particularly since 1999, when NATO bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, killing three Chinese nationals, during the air war to end Serbia’s brutal crackdown on ethnic Albanian separatists in Kosovo.

The U.S. apologized, saying faulty target selection was to blame, but the incident led to violent attacks on U.S. diplomatic installations in China and fueled anti-American sentiment in both countries that endures to this day.

In 2022, shortly after the Russian assault on Ukraine, Serbia took semi-secret delivery of a sophisticated Chinese anti-aircraft system flown in on six Chinese Air Force Y-20 transport planes. The arms delivery over the territory of at least two NATO member states, Turkey and Bulgaria, was seen by experts as a demonstration of China’s growing global reach.

China claims neutrality in the Ukraine conflict but Xi and Putin declared their governments had a “no limits friendship” before Moscow’s attack on Ukraine. China has refused to call the Russian assault an invasion and has been accused of bolstering Russia’s capacity to produce weapons and its military advantage against Ukraine, which is awaiting tens of billions in Western military aid.

A U.S. military aid bill passed last week allots $61 billion for Ukraine, as well as $8 billion to counter Chinese threats in Taiwan and the Indo-Pacific, which China has condemned as a dangerous provocation.

China’s foreign ministry said the U.S. position on Chinese defense trade with Russia was hypocritical when considered alongside the amount of military assistance Washington is providing to Kyiv.

China denies selling arms to Russia and the U.S. says it has found no direct evidence of such evidence of such. However, China does sell machine tools, microelectronics and other technology that Moscow in turn is using to produce missiles, tanks, aircraft and other weaponry for use in its war against Ukraine, according to a U.S. assessment.
“Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”— Viktor E. Frankl
https://www.hks.harvard.edu/more/policycast/happiness-age-grievance-and-fear

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Re:PPCC: Pisitófilos Creditófagos. Primavera 2024
« Respuesta #1502 en: Hoy a las 13:50:25 »
https://x.com/RnaudBertrand/status/1786272981058220187

https://findingmoneyfilm.com/

Resulta que Stephanie Kelton, entrevistadora del film Finding the Money dio una charla TED en octubre de 2021 sobre TMM que no tiene desperdicio. Pasen y vean...


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Intro

When things break, we have an opportunity. We can pick up the pieces and put them back together the old way, or we can look for better ways to build.

Covid broke everything. It put a spotlight on the many deficits in our economy —in employment, education, health care, housing— and it showed how inequality made it all worse.

Here in the US and around the world, governments did some extraordinary things. They sent money to people directly to help them buy food and pay rent. They provided free Covid testing and expanded health care to cover more of the population. They gave money to businesses to help keep them afloat while much of the economy was temporarily shut down. They offered debt relief to millions of people who borrowed money to go to college. They did all of this and more without raising taxes or having a prolonged battle over the usual question of how to pay for it.

How will you pay for it?

To me, this was exciting, and I'm an economist, so I don't say that a lot. But as someone who's been trying to change the way we think about deficits and government spending, I saw this as an opportunity to show why government budgets don't work like household budgets. Why all of their red ink is really our black ink. And why our nation can afford to keep investing in the things we need even after spending trillions to fight the pandemic.

For a while, it looked like the US and other countries were starting to break the mold on the old way of thinking about deficits and taxes. But now here we are, just a handful of months after all of that bold action, and we're sliding back into our old habits of thought.

Can we build affordable housing and fix crumbling infrastructure? Can we expand Medicare to include dental, vision and hearing? Can we tackle our climate crisis? As Congress debates these questions, everyone is back to asking, how will you pay for it?

It's the wrong question. In fact, the right questions don't involve money at all. Instead of worrying about where the financing will come from, we should be asking, are these things worth doing and do we have the real resources, the people, the equipment, the raw materials and the technology to do them? Well, they make society better off. And do we have the political will to act?

Finding the money

I'm one of a handful of economists who contributed to the body of academic scholarship known as MMT or Modern Monetary Theory.

MMT provides an accurate description of how a fiat currency like the US dollar or the British pound actually works. It reminds us that we're no longer on a gold standard, so finding the money to pay for the things we need is never an issue for countries like the US or the UK. If we're going to fix what's broken in our economy, we have to fix the way we think about the limits on government spending. Let me give you an example of the kind of broken gold standard thinking that still permeates our discourse.

Back in 1983, the prime minister of Great Britain, Margaret Thatcher, said these words: "If the state wishes to spend more, it can do so only by borrowing your savings or by taxing you more, and it is no good thinking that someone else will pay. That someone else is you. There is no such thing as public money. There is only taxpayers' money."

Maybe you've heard the contemporary version of Thatcher's dictum. "There is no magic money tree." It's just another way of saying that everything must be paid for and that the taxpayer is ultimately on the hook for whatever the government spends.

It sounds worrying. As individuals, we know that when we borrow money to go to college, start a business or buy a home, we're personally saddled with that debt. We have to find the money to pay it back. Taking on too much personal debt can lead to all sorts of problems. Even small businesses and large corporations have to walk a fine line when it comes to debt. But the federal government is fundamentally different. Unlike the rest of us, Congress never has to check the balance in its bank account to figure out whether it can afford to spend more. As the issuer of the currency, the federal government can never run out of money. It can afford to buy whatever is available and for sale in its own currency. Now that might mean spending on roads and bridges, a military arsenal or hospitals and schools. Finding the votes to pass a spending bill can be hard, but finding the money is never a problem. They just create it.

So here's how it works. Whenever Congress and the president agree to spend more, the government's bank, the Federal Reserve, works with the rest of the financial system to get that money into our accounts. Everything's done electronically, so there's no physical printing of money involved. If you got a 1,400-dollar check from the federal government earlier this year, or if your company received money to help cover payroll and other expenses, then you received some of the newly minted digital dollars that were created to support our economy. No taxpayers were involved in that process. It was all done using nothing more than a computer keyboard.

So why are we hearing so much about the need to raise taxes to pay for infrastructure and make other investments in our economy? In a word, deficits. We've all been conditioned to worry about deficits, so lawmakers are looking for ways to spend more without adding to the deficit. That's what this whole pay-for game is about.

Deficits

Unfortunately, deficits have gotten a bad rap. They're almost always seen in a negative light. And I would like to change that. When we hear the word "deficit," we probably think of a deficiency or shortfall. A deficit always sounds ominous. So when we hear that the federal government just ran a three-trillion-dollar budget deficit, it can sound worrying. And it can even anger people.

But there's another way to think about government deficits.

Just as a six becomes a nine when we view it from a different angle, a government deficit becomes a financial surplus when we look at it from another perspective


A deficit hawk might look at this picture and see nothing but a sea of worrying red ink.


That's not how I look at it. Here's what I see.


I see what's happening on the other side of the government's ledger.

When the government spends more than it taxes away from us, it makes a financial contribution to some other part of the economy. Their red ink is our black ink.

When you look at it this way, it becomes clear that every deficit is good for someone. The question is for whom and what are those deficits being used to accomplish?

It matters how the money is spent and who ends up with the resulting surplus. Tax cuts that deliver huge windfalls for those at the top without sparking investment and opportunity for the rest of the population don't make good use of deficits. On the other hand, spending trillions to support the economy during the pandemic put the deficit to good use. We just had the shortest recession in US history. To me, that was fiscally responsible Being responsible shouldn't mean running the government's finances like a household. Instead of trying to keep the deficit in check, Congress should be focused on keeping inflation in check. That's the real limit on spending and it's the thing to watch out for if you're thinking about spending trillions on things like infrastructure, health care and free college.

Instead of asking, "How will we pay for it?," Congress should be asking, "How will we resource it?"

To answer that question, think of people, factories, equipment and raw materials like wood and iron. If we're going to build high-speed rail, fix crumbling infrastructure and green our economy, then we'll need concrete, steel and lumber. We'll need construction workers, architects and engineers. We'll need companies that can fill thousands of orders for solar panels, EV charging stations and electric school buses. If our economy has the productive capacity to quickly supply all of those things, then we can easily resource it. Or take health care or free college. Paying the bills to expand Medicare, to include dental, vision and hearing is easy. The challenge is making sure we have enough dentists, optometrists and audiologists to treat everyone who needs care

 And if you want to resource free college, then you need the faculty, the classrooms and the dormitories to teach and house more students. In a full-employment economy, all of the resources you need are, well, fully employed. There's no spare capacity anywhere in the system. So if the government suddenly tried to make all of these investments at once, it would quickly discover that it doesn't have the people or the building materials to do the work. To get the resources it needs, it would have to compete with the private sector, bidding up wages and prices. That would be inflationary and it would be fiscally irresponsible. We are a long way from full employment. We have the resources we need to begin repairing our broken systems. But we have to believe it's possible.

We can't let words like debt and deficits hold us back. With a better understanding of public money, where it comes from and how it works we can take aim at the many real deficits that are bearing down on us. In every crisis lies an opportunity. We can pick up the pieces and try to reassemble the fragile systems that were in place before the pandemic or we can build anew, shaping our bountiful resources into the kind of world we want to live in, one that cares for our people and our planet. I truly hope we choose to be bold.

Thank you.
Saludos.
« última modificación: Hoy a las 14:05:01 por Cadavre Exquis »

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