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America and the New Financial World

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The following is an excerpt from a recent opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal. For links to this and other writings, visit River Twice Research.

Soon
enough, America's financial crisis will wind down -- maybe in a month,
maybe in a year. Yet regardless of when, this crisis marks the
beginning of a new era for the U.S. For more than six decades, from the
end of World War II in 1945 until now, the U.S. was the hub of global
capital and capitalism. In the years to come, it will remain a vital
center, but not the center.

In 1945, after an exhausting three
decades of exertion against Germany, the United Kingdom emerged
militarily victorious only to see itself economically exhausted. A year
later, it was bankrupt, unable to find capital and on the verge of
collapse. It had nowhere to turn but the U.S., which then dictated
terms that amounted to a withdrawal of Great Britain from the world
stage. The U.S. is not yet in the position of Great Britain, and our
creditors in China are not yet as we were then. But absent a more
humble and realistic attitude toward capital in Washington, that is the
path we're headed down.

Zachary Karabell is an economist, author and President of River Twice Research.


Comments (4)

Kevin Phillips writes very eloquently on these issues and couples them, as they must be, to energy.

See:

AMERICAN THEOCRACY

and

BAD MONEY

both available on Amazon.

Our path is nearly akin to Great Britain's...and the Dutch before that. The only reason why China won't have the same opportunities is that the 3 previous financial giants' fortunes were built on cheap forms of energy that they had in abundance and mastered -- which built their economy (Dutch - wind/water, British - coal, US - oil).

China - people

True, but that would be going back to an Egyptian style society, no?

Also, sort of flies in the face of the idea that cheap energy begets progressive government. It's what's been driving us so far...

I'm thinking of the Sharon Astyk assertion that, "the majority of farmers, builders and factory workers use some machinery, but the primary engine of production is human work." She's talking about production in today's third world.

http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/09/finances-workers-food-oil.php

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