IDC indochine mining limited

YurtRE POGWe are currentlty witnessing yet another flow of...

  1. 683 Posts.
    Yurt

    RE POG

    We are currentlty witnessing yet another flow of capital to the US from the EU
    This creats the


    The Artificially-Strong U.S. Dollar is Hurting Our Economy
    MAY 25, 2012 JOHN OLEN


    A strong U.S. dollar is generally seen as a good thing for the economy, but there are exceptions.
    The U.S. dollar may look strong right now, but the underlying fundamentals of its economy indicate that it should not be.
    The US is deeply in debt, running a huge balance of trade deficit and are seeing anemic economic growth.
    These are not the markers of a country that should have a strong currency. Most experts agree that an artificially strong U.S. dollar is actually worse than a weak dollar, exacerbating the already dire economic situation un te US.

    A naturally strong U.S. dollar would be a sign of economic health, something which the United States does not have at this time.
    As it stands, the dollar is only relatively strong because other currencies such as the Euro are unstable.
    This is a temporary situation, and once it is resolved the underlying fundamentals of the U.S. economy will bring the dollar back down, and the inflationary pressures created by government actions such as quantitative easing will be felt once again.
    John Williams’ Shadow Government Statistics report echoes this idea.

    Fundamentals impacting a currency (U.S. dollar here) are viewed in terms of conditions relative to major trading partners.
    The circumstances will be examined item-by-item in the upcoming Special Report:

    Underlying Fundamentals Relative Condition Impact on USD
    Trade Balance Severe Deficit Negative
    Interest Rates Extreme Low Negative
    Economic Growth No Recovery/Low Negative *
    Inflation High Negative *
    Political Stability Low Negative **
    Fiscal Condition Worst of Developed World Negative
    * Not fully recognized in the markets
    ** Euro area concerns temporally taking global attention

    “I still expect the euro weakness versus the U.S. currency to be relatively short-lived, eventually reversing as dollar selling kicks in,” Williams said. “The timing remains open, but the underlying fundamentals remain in place against the dollar—they do not get much worse—AND STRONGLY FAVOR THE PRECIOUS METALS and the healthier Western currencies.”

    This artificially strong dollar may be making economic recovery in the US even harder; it makes imported goods relatively cheaper, but makes exports harder to sell to foreign purchasers.

    The US trade deficit is already a drag on its economy, thanks to the US's free trade policies, and this is only exacerbating the situation.
    American consumers can purchase foreign goods more cheaply, but the money they spend is going overseas rather than staying in the United States. This also hurts U.S. businesses that cannot compete with cheap imports and cannot export either thanks to the artificially strong dollar.

    Ultimately the dollar will weaken because the fundamentals of the US economy are not strong.
    This weakening may help the US trade deficit somewhat, but it will never be a substitute for a responsible trade policy that focuses on helping American businesses succeed.
    A truly strong U.S. dollar also makes imports cheaper and exports more expensive.
    The difference is that a naturally strong dollar is reflective of economic health, and the US will not have that unless it has a trade policy that can protect it from a flood of imports that the US could be producing.
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