Democracy is an illusion! It’s become a political system fostered by the élite, for the élite, in order to fool the people that they have a stake in the system. In actual fact, they have virtually none. The whole political system in the modern era, despite having noble beginnings, is now used to benefit the few at the expense of the many. – Mark Alexander, June 29, 2018
Wednesday, 24 November 2021
Turkish Lira Plunges, Loses Nearly 40% of Its Value This Year | DW News
Labels:
Turkey,
Turkish economy,
Turkish lira
Tuesday, 16 November 2021
Historian Alfred McCoy Predicts the US Empire Is Collapsing as China’s Power Grows
Labels:
China,
Democracy Now!,
USA
Monday, 15 November 2021
Auch Shell verlässt die Niederlande
FRANKFURTER ALLGEMEINE ZEITUNG: Der Konzern zieht nun ganz nach London um. Die Politik zeigt sich „unangenehm überrascht“. Dass die steuerliche Behandlung eine Rolle spielt, erscheint offensichtlich. Inzwischen ist auch das Meinungsklima zunehmend giftig.
Die Niederlande verlieren auch ihren zweiten binationalen Industrieriesen. Der niederländisch-britische Ölkonzern Shell will – ganz ähnlich wie vor einem Jahr Unilever – seine Doppelstruktur aufgeben und ganz nach London ziehen. Dorthin soll der Steuersitz wandern, dort sollen der Vorstandsvorsitzende Ben van Beurden und Finanzchefin Jessica Uhl angesiedelt sein. Der Sitz in Den Haag hat das Nachsehen. Die Politik zeigt sich überrumpelt: „Unangenehm überrascht“ sei das Kabinett, sagte der geschäftsführende Wirtschaftsminister Stef Blok von der rechtsliberalen Partei VVD des Ministerpräsidenten Mark Rutte.
Somit verlässt innerhalb kurzer Zeit ein international bekanntes Konzernduo das Land, das viele Jahre die Liste der schwersten Mitglieder im 25 Werte umfassenden niederländischen Leitindex AEX angeführt hatte. Shell argumentierte, eine einheitliche Aktienstruktur erleichtere dem Unternehmen Rückkäufe und seine Rolle in der Energiewende. Die Anteilseigner sollen am 10. Dezember über den Plan abstimmen. Aus dem offiziellen Namen „Royal Dutch Shell“ fallen sowohl das „Königliche“ als auch das „Niederländische“ weg: als „Shell“ firmiert das Unternehmen dann. » | Von Klaus Max Smolka | Montag, 15. November 2021
Labels:
London,
Niederlande,
Shell
Friday, 12 November 2021
Ask Prof Wolff: Taxing Billionaires
Wednesday, 10 November 2021
Supply Chain Disruptions Continued to Fuel Price Increases in October
THE NEW YORK TIMES: Prices of clothes, lawn mowers and car parts surged in October, data released Wednesday showed, as supply chain disruptions continued to fuel shortages and raise transportation costs.
The increases drove the Consumer Price Index up 6.2 percent last month from the prior year, the fastest pace since 1990.
Factory shutdowns, clogged ports, a shortage of truckers and a surge in demand for imported products have combined to drive up shipping costs for food, furniture, automobiles and other products, which are being passed on in part to consumers. Major shipping companies like FedEx and UPS have announced rate increases. » | Ana Swanson | Wednesday, November 10, 2021
The increases drove the Consumer Price Index up 6.2 percent last month from the prior year, the fastest pace since 1990.
Factory shutdowns, clogged ports, a shortage of truckers and a surge in demand for imported products have combined to drive up shipping costs for food, furniture, automobiles and other products, which are being passed on in part to consumers. Major shipping companies like FedEx and UPS have announced rate increases. » | Ana Swanson | Wednesday, November 10, 2021
Labels:
inflation,
US economy
Tuesday, 9 November 2021
Bitcoin Price Surges to Record High of More Than $68,000
THE GUARDIAN: Other cryptocurrencies such as ethereum also reach records as investors hedge against inflation
Bitcoin’s price is predicted to rise further in the coming weeks. Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/Rex/Shutterstock
The bitcoin price has reached a new record high, breaking through $68,000 (£50,000), and analysts predict that the world’s best-known cryptocurrency will rise further in the coming weeks.
This beats the previous record high set in late October, when bitcoin reached nearly $67,700 before falling back again when investors discovered a new cryptocurrency, shiba inu. Other cryptocurrencies have also risen to record highs, such as ethereum, which soared to $4,837.
Bitcoin has always been volatile but remains the world’s largest digital currency, with a market value of more than $1.1tn. Five years ago, a single bitcoin was worth about $700. Investors are buying it because they are worried about rising inflation – as an alternative to gold, a traditional inflation hedge – and as bond yields are falling. » | Julia Kollewe | Tuesday, November 9, 2021
The bitcoin price has reached a new record high, breaking through $68,000 (£50,000), and analysts predict that the world’s best-known cryptocurrency will rise further in the coming weeks.
This beats the previous record high set in late October, when bitcoin reached nearly $67,700 before falling back again when investors discovered a new cryptocurrency, shiba inu. Other cryptocurrencies have also risen to record highs, such as ethereum, which soared to $4,837.
Bitcoin has always been volatile but remains the world’s largest digital currency, with a market value of more than $1.1tn. Five years ago, a single bitcoin was worth about $700. Investors are buying it because they are worried about rising inflation – as an alternative to gold, a traditional inflation hedge – and as bond yields are falling. » | Julia Kollewe | Tuesday, November 9, 2021
Labels:
Bitcoin
Monday, 8 November 2021
Crypto Rally Lifts Ether to New Record, Bitcoin at Near 3-week High
THE GUARDIAN: Meanwhile in the cryptocurrency world, bitcoin rallied toward its all-time high on Monday and ether has climbed to a fresh record.
Bitcoin is over 6% overnight to reach $66,357, approaching the previous record around $67,000 set on October 20.
Ether - which underpins the ethereum network - has risen to a fresh record at a record top of $4,767.55 on Coindesk.
Reuters says that “momentum, flows, favourable news and inflation fears” are all lifting crypto assets: » | Graeme Wearden | Monday, November 8, 2021
Bitcoin is over 6% overnight to reach $66,357, approaching the previous record around $67,000 set on October 20.
Ether - which underpins the ethereum network - has risen to a fresh record at a record top of $4,767.55 on Coindesk.
Reuters says that “momentum, flows, favourable news and inflation fears” are all lifting crypto assets: » | Graeme Wearden | Monday, November 8, 2021
Labels:
Bitcoin,
cryptocurrencies
Saturday, 6 November 2021
«Bitcoin hat keinen Wert und keine Zukunft. Knappheit allein ist kein Argument»
NEUE ZÜRCHER ZEITUNG: Bitcoin und weitere Kryptowährungen sorgen für Schlagzeilen. Aber die meisten hätten keinen inneren Wert und keine Zukunft, so Eswar Prasad. Der Cornell-Professor ist stattdessen begeistert von den innovativen Möglichkeiten der Blockchain, und er fordert eine Diskussion über den Umgang mit der Privatsphäre.
Ein Kryptowährungs-Wechselbüro in Istanbul – doch Bitcoin ist laut Eswar Prasad nur ein spekulatives Phänomen. | Chris McGrath / Getty
INTERVIEW
Herr Prasad, Bitcoin und andere Kryptowährungen – die einen halten sie für das Geld der Zukunft, andere sehen pyramidenartige Spekulationsblasen. Und Sie?
Herr Prasad, Bitcoin und andere Kryptowährungen – die einen halten sie für das Geld der Zukunft, andere sehen pyramidenartige Spekulationsblasen. Und Sie?
Libertäre Idealisten wollten mit Bitcoin ein Zahlungsmittel schaffen, das ohne Zentralbanken und vertrauenswürdige Finanzinstitute funktioniert. Das ist nicht gelungen. Denn die Kursentwicklung ist sehr volatil, es sind keine grossen Transaktionsvolumina möglich, und das System ist sowohl langsam als auch teuer.Gilt das auch für die Technologie im Hintergrund?
Die Blockchain-Technologie wird sehr wahrscheinlich nachhaltige Spuren hinterlassen. Immerhin lässt sie sich im Finanzbereich vielfältig verwenden.Sie geben dem Bitcoin also keine Zukunft? Weiter lesen » | Christof Leisinger, New York | Freitag, 5. November 2021
Labels:
Bitcoin
Please Help End This Scandal and Help Our Pensioners Resident Abroad: 'Frozen Pensions Day 2021'
Nov 3, 2021 • The unfair frozen pensions policy is the result of historical reciprocal arrangements agreed between a select handful of countries and the UK to allow for state pension uprating.
Uprating means that pensions are adjusted every year to align with inflation - with the cost of living rising, pensions are indexed so pensioners can continue to get by. If a state pension is not increased, it is 'frozen' and therefore falls in value year on year.
500,000 UK pensioners, just under half of those living overseas, now live in countries where their state pensions are frozen. This includes British pensioners living in Overseas Territories such as the Falkland Islands. This arbitrary post-code lottery means that UK citizens in the USA, the European Union, Israel or Jamaica rightfully receive a full state pension. But those in other countries, such as Canada and Australia, do not.
Over 90% of affected pensioners live in Commonwealth nations with close cultural ties to the UK. Many moved overseas for employment opportunities, or to live near friends and family. Others are members of the Windrush generation, who were invited to live and work in Britain at the call of the UK Government and have now been punished for returning to their country of birth.
Half of frozen pensioners receive a state pension of just £65 per week, or less. Almost all were unaware that their state pensions would be frozen before they left the UK.
Now, they are victims of geography. The End Frozen Pensions campaign believes that all pensioners, no matter where they happen to live, should be paid equally. Find out more at endfrozenpensions.org
Please sign the petition End Frozen Pensions
And email Your MP or the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions to help these people here
Uprating means that pensions are adjusted every year to align with inflation - with the cost of living rising, pensions are indexed so pensioners can continue to get by. If a state pension is not increased, it is 'frozen' and therefore falls in value year on year.
500,000 UK pensioners, just under half of those living overseas, now live in countries where their state pensions are frozen. This includes British pensioners living in Overseas Territories such as the Falkland Islands. This arbitrary post-code lottery means that UK citizens in the USA, the European Union, Israel or Jamaica rightfully receive a full state pension. But those in other countries, such as Canada and Australia, do not.
Over 90% of affected pensioners live in Commonwealth nations with close cultural ties to the UK. Many moved overseas for employment opportunities, or to live near friends and family. Others are members of the Windrush generation, who were invited to live and work in Britain at the call of the UK Government and have now been punished for returning to their country of birth.
Half of frozen pensioners receive a state pension of just £65 per week, or less. Almost all were unaware that their state pensions would be frozen before they left the UK.
Now, they are victims of geography. The End Frozen Pensions campaign believes that all pensioners, no matter where they happen to live, should be paid equally. Find out more at endfrozenpensions.org
Please sign the petition End Frozen Pensions
And email Your MP or the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions to help these people here
Labels:
frozen state pensions
Friday, 5 November 2021
Bank of England’s Rate Decision Leaves Many Economists Gasping for Air
THE GUARDIAN: Analysis: decision to keep rates on hold is not unpopular but governor’s signalling is roundly criticised
The Bank expects the base rate to be 1% by the end of 2022. Photograph: Leon Neal/Getty
It is “compulsory for the Bank of England governor to be an unreliable boyfriend”, Andrew Bailey joked during a press conference to explain why the central bank he runs kept interest rates on hold when action of some kind was expected.
As quips go, it fell flat in financial markets, where currency traders sold the pound, knocking more than 1% from sterling’s value against the US dollar.
It also left many economists gasping for air as the full implications of Bailey’s refusal to turn up to his own party began to sink in. He had stressed last month that monetary policy “will have to act” if there is a risk of inflation. Those words were not followed by action on Thursday, despite the rising wages and prices.
Gerard Lyons, a former candidate for governor and a former adviser to Boris Johnson, described the governor’s signalling as “appalling”, adding that by not correcting how the market or the media interpreted his comments he encouraged “hawkish expectations ahead of this meeting that was not merited by the recent data”.
Lyons went on to say the bank needed to learn from the US Federal Reserve, “to be on top of the data” and “guide” the market. » | Phillip Inman | Thursday, November 4, 2021
It is “compulsory for the Bank of England governor to be an unreliable boyfriend”, Andrew Bailey joked during a press conference to explain why the central bank he runs kept interest rates on hold when action of some kind was expected.
As quips go, it fell flat in financial markets, where currency traders sold the pound, knocking more than 1% from sterling’s value against the US dollar.
It also left many economists gasping for air as the full implications of Bailey’s refusal to turn up to his own party began to sink in. He had stressed last month that monetary policy “will have to act” if there is a risk of inflation. Those words were not followed by action on Thursday, despite the rising wages and prices.
Gerard Lyons, a former candidate for governor and a former adviser to Boris Johnson, described the governor’s signalling as “appalling”, adding that by not correcting how the market or the media interpreted his comments he encouraged “hawkish expectations ahead of this meeting that was not merited by the recent data”.
Lyons went on to say the bank needed to learn from the US Federal Reserve, “to be on top of the data” and “guide” the market. » | Phillip Inman | Thursday, November 4, 2021
Labels:
Bank of England,
inflation,
interest rates
Wednesday, 3 November 2021
How Wealth Inequality Spiraled Out of Control | Robert Reich
Labels:
Robert Reich,
USA,
wealth inequality
La Bourse de Paris bat à nouveau son record
LE FIGARO : Le CAC 40 a battu son record de la veille qui dépassait déjà le record de clôture établi en septembre 2000.
La Bourse de Paris a fini en hausse de 0,34% mercredi et battu de nouveaux records avant la décision de la Réserve fédérale américaine sur la mise en œuvre d'une réduction de ses achats d'actifs attendue par le marché.
L'indice parisien a fini à 6.950,65 points, dépassant son record absolu en séance qui remontait au 4 septembre 2000 et battant son record de clôture établi la veille. La place parisienne a notamment profité ces dernières semaines d'une saison de résultats d'entreprises de bonne facture au troisième trimestre, notamment ceux du secteur du luxe qui représente environ un quart de la cote. Pour la suite, «le rythme de progression ne va peut-être pas être aussi effréné dans la mesure où l'économie est en transition», note toutefois Benoît Peloille, stratégiste chez Vega IM. » | Par Le Figaro avec AFP | mercredi 3 novembre 2021
À LIRE AUSSI : Comment le CAC 40 se transforme »
Inflation Bonds Are Getting a Big Rate Bump »
Fed Announces Plan to Slow Its Bond Buying Program: The Federal Reserve is dealing with high inflation at a time when millions of workers remain on the job market’s sidelines. »
Wirtschaftswissenschaftler sieht Welt im Endspiel des Kapitalismus | DW Nachrichten
Labels:
inflation,
Kapitalismus
Tuesday, 2 November 2021
Renten steigen 2022 voraussichtlich um mehr als fünf Prozent
ZEIT ONLINE: Nach einer Nullrunde sollen die Renten im kommenden Jahr offenbar deutlich steigen: im Osten so stark wie seit sechs, im Westen wie seit fast 40 Jahren nicht mehr.
Die etwa 21 Millionen Rentnerinnen und Rentner in Deutschland können sich nach dpa-Informationen auf eine deutliche Erhöhung ihrer Bezüge im kommenden Jahr einstellen. Nach offizieller Schätzung sollen die Renten demnach im Juli 2022 in Westdeutschland um 5,2 Prozent und im Osten um 5,9 Prozent steigen. Das geht laut dpa aus dem Entwurf des Rentenversicherungsberichts 2021 hervor. Die Deutsche Rentenversicherung will die Öffentlichkeit am Mittwoch über die erwartete Rentenanpassung und ihre Finanzlage informieren. Im Osten ist der Wert wie üblich höher, um das dort niedrige Rentenniveau an das im Westen anzugleichen. » | Quelle: ZEIT ONLINE, dpa, ale | Dienstag, 2. November 2021
Die etwa 21 Millionen Rentnerinnen und Rentner in Deutschland können sich nach dpa-Informationen auf eine deutliche Erhöhung ihrer Bezüge im kommenden Jahr einstellen. Nach offizieller Schätzung sollen die Renten demnach im Juli 2022 in Westdeutschland um 5,2 Prozent und im Osten um 5,9 Prozent steigen. Das geht laut dpa aus dem Entwurf des Rentenversicherungsberichts 2021 hervor. Die Deutsche Rentenversicherung will die Öffentlichkeit am Mittwoch über die erwartete Rentenanpassung und ihre Finanzlage informieren. Im Osten ist der Wert wie üblich höher, um das dort niedrige Rentenniveau an das im Westen anzugleichen. » | Quelle: ZEIT ONLINE, dpa, ale | Dienstag, 2. November 2021
Labels:
Deutschland,
Renten
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