20 fun economic topics for discussion :
Some trivial topics that I could review with you . Take your pick .
1. US Dollar hegemony , how it works .
2... " It seems no nation state is even trying to break these shackles ( of US Dollar unfair privilege )".
3.... " USA does not spend (- well almost-) any money when it fights wars overseas "
4.... " It does not cost USA any money (-well almost- ) , when it imports any goods or services from overseas ".
5...." Indian ineffective judicial system is the main impediment to competing with power of the West ."
6... Similarities between , " Wall Street exploiting China ,India and Japan to work at slave labor rates " , and Indian Financial institutions enabling exploitation of Indian farmers at slave labor rates .
7... By breaking free of self imagined chains , how Indian Finance can produce more goods and services than China ,Taiwan , etc. within a few years .
8.... Gentle comparison between the tens of thousands of economists (financial policy makers in India , university teachers , foreign trained or not , ) and snake oil salesmen.
9...Some elementary well documented methods used through finance to win wars and rule the " other " countries .
10... Possible similarities between drug peddlers and RBI .
11...Proof that the CB Central Bank in every developing country is preventing implementation of a free market economy , including in India , Russia .
12...Issues about winning a war or a game against the , the Cabal = WB-World Bankers = WSR Wall Street Regime =PCMS-People who Control Money Supply. .
13... Can I enable West Bengal to achieve full employment , - without any funds from Delhi ? , and other proven practical ideas that MMS/MSA may be shy of debating .
14...Simple and powerful arguments why India must not - need not borrow even a Dollar more from WallStreet et al for projects in India , and why India must/ India can finance and earn interest by competing with WB World Bank , Citibank etc.
worldwide .
15... The implications of opening our market to Walmart , instead of creating a competitor to them worldwide .
16... How would a World Banker / a German Banker / a London Banker can destroy Say Pakistan or Say China or Say India without firing a bullet ?
17... If our CB RBI chairman s life depended on rolling back inflation , what could he do , and what would be the negatives of such effort .
18...The perils of inflation-immune pensions for senior bureaucrats .
19...How to control world price of any commodity , including gold .
20... How to finance India s production of high tech products like next generation drones , satelites , radars .
Ravi Garg 28/12/2015
You have to ask yourself what Hitler’s economy was “efficient” at. The obvious answer is quickly mobilizing a nation and building a war machine. It did do that well.
JJ
This is true but until the war started they were also doing a lot better at supplying the material needs of the people than either England or the United States did. Imagine how much better he would have done if he was like us and did not concentrate on a war machine.
LWK
You also mentioned Lincoln’s use of a fiat currency to help win the Civil War. One might say that fiat currency, enforced with a gun and the force of the state, is “efficient” for wars.
JJ
There have always been wars during all types of currency whether it be private or public, whether it be fiat, partially backed or fully backed.
The currency of the Allies, which competed with Hitler was also enforced by the point of a gun and still is today. Try to pay your taxes with some alternative currency and see what happens.
LWK
I don’t think however you can take either example and legitimately infer that this is the best way to run a peacetime economy. Some aspects might work, but you don’t know – and you cannot legitimately claim in my view – that Hitler’s economy would have kept expanding and being efficient, etc. if he had not gone to war. Most analysts that I have read seem to think that Hitler’s economy had to go to war, or go broke. I find their analysis more convincing.
JJ
I know a lot of analysts think that but a lot of their reasoning seems to be that Hitler was a bad guy and nothing good could come from him. When you look at his system and compare it to our Federal Reserve system I see no reason why it wouldn’t work better, though Hitler’s money was created with interest attached just as is the Feds. It appears to me more flexible with more usable money going to production. It would be interesting to see what would have happened if that production was all for the people rather than conquest.
LWK
It seems to me that what the world really needs is a means of exchange that is NOT under the control of any particular government or politician.
JJ
That’s what we had during the last part of the hyperinflation in Germany and that didn’t work out so well.
LWK
If there is one principle that should be obvious from human history it is that no man, or group of men can be trusted to control the monetary system for the good of all. They all either succumb to greed, lust for power, or the delusion that they can do good by taking from some and giving to others.
JJ
The trouble is that when it is private hands we have to trust those with power to create the money and when it is in public hands we still have to trust.
I’ll be writing about what we can do about this shortly and will be interested in your comments.
So you believe that National Socialism produced a “superior economic system”? It certainly did produce short term results that inevitably led to war. I am not sure exactly what was “superior” about that? Why do you believe that such a system was viable in the long term? For evidence to the contrary I would only point to the utlimate failure of the Soviet Union, largely due to economic factors when a totalitarian state could compete with a semi-free capitalistic state.
lwk
I think most of us would rather put up with our ineffective Federal Reserve system than a more efficient economy like Hitlers that has a political system that allows for less freedom.
I don’t think however you can take either example and legitimately infer that this is the best way to run a peacetime economy. Some aspects might work, but you don’t know – and you cannot legitimately claim in my view – that Hitler’s economy would have kept expanding and being efficient, etc. if he had not gone to war. Most analysts that I have read seem to think that Hitler’s economy had to go to war, or go broke. I find their analysis more convincing.
It seems to me that what the world really needs is a means of exchange that is NOT under the control of any particular government or politician. Instead such a currency would need to be governed purely by market forces out of the hands of any politician, or any group of men. If there is one principle that should be obvious from human history it is that no man, or group of men can be trusted to control the monetary system for the good of all. They all either succumb to greed, lust for power, or the delusion that they can do good by taking from some and giving to others.
lwk
There is a typo in this sentence:
The Weimar money was issued by a private banks – led by *yhe* Reichsbank.