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IMF contradicts Trump: China hasn’t manipulated its currencyThe IMF said Friday in its yearly review of China’s economy that the yuan has been “broadly stable” against other currencies, suggesting there’s been little intervention by the People’s Bank of China.
Stephen Moore: Need 'Emergency' Fed Meeting to Cut Rates, Pressure ChinaThe United States has a "threat of deflation," according to economic adviser Stephen Moore, who adds President Donald Trump needs a catalyst in the trade war with China and the Federal Reserve can cut interest rates to provide it."I am calling for the feds to have an emergency meeting next week to announce a decline in interest rates, which will help the economy – it will get it back," Moore, who was once a candidate to be on the Federal Reserve, told Sunday's "The Cats Roundtable" on 970 AM-N.Y. "It will help the stock market. And they will put pressure on China to make a deal."I don't think this can wait until September."Moore, a frequent critic of the Feds policies having obstructed President Trump's pro-growth agenda, told host John Catsimatidis the Fed should get on board with the administration with the economy has "some challenges ahead – no question about it.""[Trump] has had this story right for the last year, and the Fed has had it completely wrong," Moore said. "The Fed has kept raising rates. And they've been too slow in lowering them."And Trump has been on their tail saying, 'Come on, get more dollars in the economy,' which would strengthen the economy. It would strengthen Trump's hand in these negotiations with China."Saying "why wait" as the economic indicators are pointing to this, Moore warns of deflation of the U.S. dollar by the Feds' current monetary policy as investors around the world want pour money into the U.S. economy."If you've got global investors all over the world who want to buy dollars, and the Fed does not accommodate that by increasing the supply of dollars, then you're going to get a severe deflation," Moore concluded. "And that can be as bad for an economy as inflation."
En mi opinión, quien se va a comer los recortes va a depender de quien gobierne en España durante la Rerrecesión. Obviamente todos vamos a sufrir, pero está claro que si gobiernan los falsoliberales del pensamiento merchero -el PP, CS y Vox, con Lacalle, Garicano y Manso como referentes económicos- el sector público corre riesgo de ser privatizado, troceado y vendido a los amiguetes con la excusa de la terrible crisis. Es lo que llevaban buscando en la primera parte de la crisis -hasta 2012- y ahora tienen su oportunidad para saquear lo que queda. Ahí entraría la privatización del sistema de pensiones, el sistema de sanidad o el educativo.Lógicamente el ataque al funcionariado de carrera como tal es más complicado, por temas constitucionales, pero pueden hacer algo que ya se probó en Madrid con Aguirre en educación y fue no asignar plazas a los profesores funcionarios que estaban provisionales -tras sacar la oposición y no tener asignada plaza aun-, y tratar de dejarlos en casa con excedencia forzosa. Pero no olvidemos que está gente busca desmantelar y fagocitar al Estado para alimentar la caldera del popularcapitalismo y darle unos años más de vida.
A lo mejor esta vez los parásitos son los primeros en caer.A lo mejor conforman el mayor cupo de las bajas.A lo mejor se acaban para siempre las fantasías capitalistitas de ayer y de hoy.De hoy mismo en "publirreportajes inmobiliarios en horario de máxima audiencia": un "negocio de moda"https://www.lasexta.com/noticias/sociedad/convertir-un-local-comercial-en-vivienda-un-negocio-de-moda-con-una-normativa-estricta_201908115d5038480cf21cf740a826a6.htmlNapalm der gueno
En mi opinión, quien se va a comer los recortes va a depender de quien gobierne .....
Obviamente .........
Lo hueles chico... hueles el miedo... huele a victoria!!La falta de Gobierno y la guerra comercial frenan la venta de viviendahttps://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/10035655/08/19/La-falta-de-Gobierno-y-la-guerra-comercial-frenan-la-venta-de-vivienda.htmlLa falta de gobierno...
Los tigres están tristesen medio del trigal,no son vegetarianosy quieren merendar.Lobos antisistema,una explosión social.Luchan contra el Estadoen estado animal.Nos sabe un poco violento,no os lo tomeis a mal.Sólo venimos aquí a divertirnos.Los enladrilladoresnos han enladrillaoy son esos ladrilloslos que os enterrarán.Nos sabe un poco violento,no os lo tomeis a mal.Sólo venimos aquí a divertirnos....
Hacienda aumenta sus avisos por alquileres en 'negro' y afloran 122.000 en tres años
Los españoles dedican casi el doble de su renta que los europeos a los alquileresEste porcentaje aumentará a medida que el alquiler siga ganando adeptos y que los precios sigan subiendo ante la escasez de oferta
https://www.vozpopuli.com/economia-y-finanzas/alquiler-Espana-destinan-vivienda-UE_0_1271273607.htmlCitarLos españoles dedican casi el doble de su renta que los europeos a los alquileresEste porcentaje aumentará a medida que el alquiler siga ganando adeptos y que los precios sigan subiendo ante la escasez de oferta
Los ejemplos que comparan la economía familiar con los PGE suelen ser falaces y demagógicos
Luke Gromen: Inflation Is the Only Way to ‘Fix’ Sovereign Debt Crisis“When the tech bubble burst (in 2000), those problems were kicked upstairs to the housing bubble and, by extension, to the US banking system. Then in 2008 when the housing bubble burst, we kicked that upstairs to the sovereign level with all the bailouts. So the question then is: ‘Where do you kick a global soveriegn debt bubble when it bursts?’ When you have some $14 trillion sovereign debt at negative nominal yields, I don’t think that many investors would argue that we are not in a global soveriegn debt bubble of some description. But when it burst, where do you kick the problems up to? …The last time the world was moving towards a recession with advanced economy soveriegn debt levels as a percent of GDP as high as they are today was about 100 years ago, and that time around the sovereign debts of the six biggest industrial nations all collapsed on a real basis. So whether it was the UK, the US, or Germany, or Japan, or France, or Russia, the real value of the sovereign debt of those six nations anywhere from 75% to 100% on a real basis over time horizons ranging from just a couple of years, to a decade, to a little over a decade. The academic research on this clearly shows there’s really only a few ways out the situation we find ourselves in… It’s either default or it’s inflation and default is not really an option because the soveriegn debt, and in particular treasuries, underpin the entire financial system structure… A western sovereign debt problem is considered every bit as inconceivable as home prices falling nationally was considered prior to 2005… Where do we kick a sovereign debt bubble up to? And the only possible answer is the currency… or put differently, it gets kicked upstairs to gold…”
Braced for the global downturnYou cannot solve the problems of debt with more debt. And central bankers, well-meaning and desperate as they might be to offset the damage caused by an erratic US president, can’t create real growth; they can only move money around. At some point, the markets and the real economy must converge.