Archive for the ‘Multipolar world’ Category
The New World Order is not turning out as planned. Instead of all power emanating from London and Washington, new power centres are emerging to the South and East: a new global equilibrium raises the possibility of a new post-imperial age of peace and equality between nations.
‘Bolivia will defeat imperialism soon’
Posted by seumasach on October 27, 2010
Posted in Multipolar world | Tagged: End of empire | Leave a Comment »
What is meant by re-apportioning China’s IMF voting rights to 3rd
Posted by smeddum on October 26, 2010
October 26, 2010
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Bolivian president arrives in Tehran
Posted by seumasach on October 25, 2010
25th October, 2010
Bolivian President Evo Morales has arrived in Tehran for a three-day state visit, with the goal of strengthening bilateral ties and seeking more Iranian investment in the South American country.
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Sympathy for Iran spawns new world order
Posted by seumasach on October 25, 2010
Kaveh Afrasiabi
26th October, 2010
Iran and Venezuela stand continents apart. Yet as two leading members of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries cartel with mixed economies and shared foreign policy orientations, and as leading betes noires of American hegemony, their growing interdependence reflects a strategic alliance that goes well beyond their bilateral relations and, in fact, is connected to their aspirations for a “new world order”.
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The spectre of multipolar Europe
Posted by smeddum on October 23, 2010
Given the shameful role of the EU in the bombing of Serbia they are not in a great position to sort out the mess they helped to create in the Balkans: Russia and Turkey, however, are. Turkey and their foreign minister Davutoglu are new stars of the international community.
Mark Leonard
European Council on Foreign Relations
On Monday, Sarkozy, Merkel and Medvedev will sit down to discuss a new European conception of global security. With the current order dysfunctional and inadequate, it is not before time that Russia is included in the discussion, writes Mark Leonard.
The French seaside resort of Deauville came to prominence in the late 19th century – a time of grand hotels and swanky casinos. It was also a time when Europe was divided up between great powers who each jealously guarded their own little patch of Europe, with individual spheres of influence scratching up against each other. It is therefore a fitting location for a summit meeting involving three of the continents’ perennial great powers – Germany, Russia and France (Monday 18th October) – at a time when Europe is once again becoming a multipolar continent. Read the rest of this entry »
Posted in Battle for Europe, Multipolar world | 2 Comments »
Tarpley & Escobar: China to blame or to admire?
Posted by seumasach on October 22, 2010
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G20: US pushes forex pact; talks trade wars
Posted by seumasach on October 22, 2010
This is cheeky by Geitner- apparently he wants the IMF to enforce this: if anyone is corralled you’d think it was the Americans. Either they’re mad or they’ve got something hidden up their sleeve. I reckon it’s the former though.
22nd October, 2010
The United States sought to corral reluctant finance leaders into a deal that would commit emerging markets to cut their current account surpluses and allow their currencies to rise at a meeting on Friday. G20 finance officials started their formal meetings on Friday with nations from the developing world and Japan dismissing the US proposals which it says are aimed at defusing tensions that economists fear could trigger trade wars.
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Chavez, Ahamadinejad say US is headed for ‘the graveyard’
Posted by seumasach on October 21, 2010
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Keep right on to the end of the road!
Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010
No change as imperium launches policy of economic aggression
The answer to the question of where the bank bailout funds went has been made clear by the imposition of capital controls by those countries which find their economies threatened by hot money flows out of London and Wall Street. The empire is going down in a volcanic eruption of worthless paper, or, rather, electronic money.
Cailean Bochanan
20th October, 2010
As the schoolboy coalition presses ahead with its plans to gut what’s left of Britain the real news is on the international front: a whole load of countries including Brazil, Thailand and South Korea are beginning to impose restrictions on capital flows, a direct challenge to our right to flood the world with near worthless pounds. This is the kind of impertinence which would once have been met with the dispatch of a gunboat and a short while ago was met with the complete destruction of an entire nation. So what will our response be this time?
The essence of imperial power, or, indeed, the exercise of mob power in general depends on a precise calibration of the actual balance of forces: you don’t make threats if you can’t act on them, and you don’t launch provocations if you can’t handle the consequences. We, along with our American allies, have launched a provocation, through our policy of quantitative easing( currency debasement) and low interest rates, which has been characterised as an economic world war: are we in a position to deal with the consequences or is our policy an indication of a complete exhaustion of the intelligence, judgement, even the sanity of our elites?
I would suggest, very much the latter. If we think we have the military might to browbeat the world into allowing us a permanent free ride on the back of our devalued currency, then we have failed to learn the lessons of our recent military misadventures. If we think that we can somehow trick the rest of the world into doing our will we only deceive ourselves. They know our game now, it is quite transparent and there are no benefits for them in going along with it: the dollar/pound reserve currency racket is finished and nations everywhere are taking steps to protect themselves. They are entering into bilateral agreements to trade without dollars, they are using exchange controls and they are curbing the speculators. In other words, the Washington Consensus, globalisation Anglo-American style, premised on the free movement of capital, is over.
Unfortunately we are unable to see the writing on the wall. The imperial elite, throughout their history, have been nothing if not audacious. The mentality of such an elite is itself a form of madness: they go where others fear to tread. their lies , their deceptions, their entire modus operandi defies the imagination of normal beings. Their fall must therefore be as dramatic as their rise. Some of us had hoped for a moment of realisation, of a self-awareness which might have spared us from the full playing out of our lunacy. It is not to be: we are to keep right on to the end of the road. It’s not even hubris, it’s more like a kind of pathetic doggedness. Our strategy now is like a scorched earth policy rebounding against ourselves: our homes , our communities, our industry, our institutions are to be put to the torch. Our only hope is that, in extremis, the folly of our thinking, the vacuity of our ideologies, the hollowness of our culture becomes the focus of our attention: that it becomes a bonfire of the vanities.
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Korea preparing more steps against capital inflows sparked by `low’ rates
Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010
19th October, 2010
South Korea is preparing further measures to counter capital inflows triggered by low interest rates overseas as emerging market nations intensify the fight to restrain their currencies.
Posted in Financial crisis, Multipolar world | Tagged: capital controls | Leave a Comment »
Capital controls, currency wars and the new global financial architecture
Posted by seumasach on October 20, 2010
Ilene Grabel
19th October, 2010
For those of us advocating change in the global financial architecture, the last few months have been fairly exhilarating. Let’s recap…
Capital controls, as I’ve written previously, have become the ‘new normal’ in the developing world. It’s hard to keep up with developments in countries that have introduced or tightened existing controls since I last wrote about them here (see below). IMF staff now write about capital controls with a taken-for-granted attitude (see even the institution’s October 2010Global Financial Stability Report, which contains the by now customary bland language on the role and efficacy of capital controls, e.g. p. 28).
Posted in Multipolar world | Tagged: capital controls | Leave a Comment »