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Here comes the Amero and global financial system of the NWO - countries He urge stronger, internationally coordinated regulation, saying the crisis sh

 
yourwaysucks
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09/25/2008 08:49 AM
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Here comes the Amero and global financial system of the NWO - countries He urge stronger, internationally coordinated regulation, saying the crisis sh
Here it comes! Amero and gloal financial system of the NWO

[link to www.cnbc.com]

US to Lose Financial Superpower Status: Germany

25 Sep 2008 | 07:39

Germany blamed the United States on Thursday for spawning the global financial crisis with a blind drive for higher profits and said it would now have to accept greater market regulation and a loss of its financial superpower status.

In some of the toughest language since the crisis threw Wall Street banks into financial disarray earlier this month, German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck told parliament the turmoil would leave "deep marks" on both sides of the Atlantic, but called it primarily an American problem.

"The world will never be as it was before the crisis," Steinbrueck, a deputy leader of the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), told the Bundestag lower house.

"The United States will lose its superpower status in the world financial system. The world financial system will become more multi-polar," he said.

Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose conservatives rule in coalition with the SPD, and Steinbrueck both pushed the Group of Eight (G8) to agree measures to boost financial market transparency during Germany's presidency of the G8 last year.

But their drive collapsed amid opposition from Washington and London.

Merkel criticized their stance at the weekend, saying the days of laissez-faire capitalism were over.

Both Merkel's conservatives and SPD leaders are keen to claim credit for Germany's push for more transparency and show leadership on the crisis ahead of a federal election in 2009.

The German views were echoed by leaders of governments from around the world meeting this week at the United Nations in New York.

Many sharply criticized the George W. Bush administration's financial record and warned that U.S. financial mistakes now threatened the global economy.

The crisis has put the Bush White House, which has long advocated a hands-off approach to markets, on the defensive, forcing it to rethink its financial policy.

At the same time it has emboldened voices in Europe, Latin America and elsewhere, of those who are uncomfortable with American-style capitalism and who want tighter regulation of markets.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, has called for a global summit to overhaul a "crazy" financial system.

Bonuses and Profits

The collapse of U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers and financial woes at other financial institutions like insurer AIG have prompted the U.S. government to propose a $700 billion rescue package for the country's financial sector.

The U.S. Congress appears close to approving the rescue, whose fate has kept international markets on tenterhooks.

Steinbrueck, in one of the harshest attacks on U.S. policies from a G8 ally, denounced what he called an Anglo-Saxon drive for double-digit profits and massive bonuses for bankers and company executives.

"Investment bankers and politicians in New York, Washington and London were not willing to give these up," he said.

He proposed eight steps to prevent a recurrence of the turmoil, including an international ban on "purely speculative" short-selling, new rules to hold individuals accountable for financial missteps and an increase in capital requirements for banks in order to offset credit risks.

While Steinbrueck welcomed U.S. efforts to stem the crisis he said it was neither necessary nor wise for Berlin to launch its own rescue plan for German banks, which are under pressure but face smaller risks than their U.S. counterparts.

The German Bundesbank has said the financial turbulence will hit the earnings of Germany's big commercial lenders, its publicly-owned Landesbanks and its cooperative banks.

Tighter credit in the wake of the crisis could also constrain household consumption and corporate investment, increasing the chance of recession in Europe's largest economy.

But Steinbrueck said banks here would be able to cope with the losses and ensure the safety of private savings, calling the turmoil primarily a U.S. problem.

"The financial crisis is above all an American problem. The other G7 financial ministers in continental Europe share this opinion," he said.

"This system, which is to a large degree insufficiently regulated, is now collapsing -- with far-reaching consequences for the U.S. financial market and considerable contagion effects for the rest of the world," Steinbrueck added.

He urged stronger, internationally coordinated regulation, saying the crisis showed that national action was not enough.
Pit bull
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09/25/2008 09:07 AM
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Re: Here comes the Amero and global financial system of the NWO - countries He urge stronger, internationally coordinated regulation, saying the crisis sh
The amero will only be possible if the dolaar collapses completely but then if this happens it will be the end of civilisation as we know it it would cause a global collapse of epic proportions.

The amero cannot rescue the united states or other parts of the world in time.

Depressions are always followed by horrible wars remeber how ww2 started it was preceded by the great depression.
And back then the dollar was backed by gold now it isn't.

That means hyperinlation like in zimbabwe.
When the us stopped publishing the m3 report it gave a signal to the rest of the world that it needed to hyperinlate it's curency (printing more) to save it's economy.

Europe began to do the same thing it has to hyperinlate it's currency otherwise exports will be too expensive.

A strong euro is not so good for europe's export (only for oil as exeption)

I don't think the world will ever recover financially.

violin





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