``The only effective way to address corruption is to change the system itself, by radically down sizing the power of the federal government in the first place. Take away the politicians' power and you take away the very currency of corruption.”-Congressman Ron Paul
What was previously pronounced as the hottest emerging trend easily became an orphan overnight following the synchronous Jan 21st global equity markets meltdown. Even some of the most revered advocates of the so-called Asian “century” went on air to debunk the so-called “Decoupling theory” as a myth or as the emperor with no clothes.
Ironically, it seems like logical fuzziness to claim that
In a positively correlated economic and financial sphere, does it imply that
Maybe, the difference lies in the definition from timeframe dimensions (not today but tomorrow or sometime in the future perhaps?). Maybe also, too much emphasis has been devoted to a singular event or analysis based on the rear view mirror or recency bias or past performance as guide to future events.
Again as a reminder, we do not deny that under globalization trends which means more heightened interconnectedness, linkages (trade, financial, labor) have been tightening and is likely to get tighter. And such dynamics are likely to be reflected on the markets as had been the case since 2000. But again the caveat is that there is no pure globalization or integration.
We argued the case of positive interrelationships since 2003, and in fact took on the prisms of a bear (last week) to show that under selective dimensions; particularly the induction premised from exports and remittances, a severe US slowdown will negatively impact the Philippine economy.
But unlike then, our idea today is that markets and economies could possibly be rediscovering its individualities due the different dimensions of exposures to what has weighed in on some economies or markets. Besides, under diverse conditions people, societies or even nations react divergently to changing conditions.
To quote Jörg Guido Hülsmann in his article “The Epistemological Case for Capitalism” published at the mises.org (highlight mine), ``The causal analysis of individual human behavior must take account of the fact that any human action has certain invariant consequences — that is, consequences that result from like action at any place and any time. For example, an increase of the quantity of money tends to entail an increase of the price level above the level it would otherwise have reached, irrespective of when and where the money supply is increased. The study of such consequences is the task of praxeology and economic science.
``But human action also has contingent causes and consequences. The very same action — increasing the quantity of money — can be inspired by very different ideas and value judgments. And the objective consequences resulting from any action can provoke very different individual reactions at different times and places. In other words, the causal chains through which ideas and value judgments are connected with human action are contingent. The elucidation of these contingent causal chains is the task of historical research.”
Recent examples, in the recent G7 finance ministers meeting, media asked if global central banks would concertedly lower interest rates to help stave off a world recession, here is the reply of Finance Minister Fukushiro Nukaga, ``Each country needs to take a step, and it is important to push that move based on its own economic and fiscal situation”. (highlight mine)
The interview best described by Japan Times, ``…the G7 had dashed any hopes of concerted international action, such as coordinated interest rate cuts and fiscal stimulus packages, because economic and fiscal conditions differ from country to country.” (emphasis mine)
So while global central banks would work to coordinate with each other, policy stimulus would have to be applied distinctly.
Oh, speaking of surprises, just when mainstream experts had been almost unanimously bearish brought upon by the “contagion” effects from the
From Bloomberg (highlight mine), ``
We don’t like to read too much from a single event. Yet this imparts an important message- analysis based on “sterilized” conditions exhibits vulnerability. While some analysts call this a “blip”, one said that
Since a quarter does not imply a reinforced trend, it could be that the mainstream will be proven correct; as the downdraft in the
We read that
``
``We think that liquidity restrictions from cutbacks in consumer credit and loans guaranteed by the CGCs, though for very different reasons than in the
Of course, Mr. Sato like most of the mainstream believes that external conditions combined with internal forces are making
Figure 1 stockcharts.com:
This means that if economic data continues to prove that the contagion impact from the
In other words,
This implies for two scenario, one market is wrong (overshoot) and the Nikkei should start bottoming out 13,000-14,000 before recovering. Or two,
We can’t say if the Nikkei has reached its bottom, time will make the cycle apparent but for the moment it looks like the major Japanese benchmark is poised to test its resistance level.
From the above examples (G7 and
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