www.armstrongeconomics.com
The world is in a complete midlife crisis or some may say an end of
life crisis. I am overseas as the world is simply going nuts. At times, I
feel more like a shrink having to reassure people that it will all be
OK. Both Europe and Asia are having a very bad string of days.
Asia is concerned that China will intervene in Hong Kong. Protesters
in Hong Kong seem undeterred by China’s thinly veiled threat of sending
in the armed forces. But Beijing would pay a steep price if it were to
send in troops politically. Trump has stated that he regards it as an
internal matter for China, while even Mitch McConnell said sanctions
would be appropriate. Footage has surfaced on the Chinese internet
showing columns of armored vehicles heading south and converging on the
city of Shenzhen. The videos seem to suggest that the Chinese People’s
Armed Police Force, a heavily armed paramilitary unit, is gathering on
the Hong Kong border.
Meanwhile, back in the old world, the EU seems more intent on
preserving their power than any rational review of economics. They seem
to be doing whatever they can to bury the European economy under this
crazy idea of federalizing Europe in a half-ass way that still leaves
the individual states in an impossible position to ever reach a unified
agreement about anything.
Meanwhile, the former Chancellor Philip Hammond has accused the PM of
trying to wreck the chance of a new Brexit deal, by making demands the
EU could never accept. He seems to be more on Brussel’s side than his
own country. Mr. Hammond said a no-deal Brexit would be “a betrayal” of
the 2016 referendum result and that he vowed that Parliament would “make
its voice heard,” adding that a no-deal “must not happen.” There is no
question that Germany will be the biggest loser and then there is
Ireland who does not want an EU version of the Berlin Wall. More than
50% of trade for Britain lies outside of the EU, but a no-deal is far
better for it will be able to negotiate trade with the rest of the world
not subject to French supervision.
Additionally, with the chaos in Asia and in Europe, the US is still
the safe-haven. This could push the dollar into record highs by creating
a panic of vertigo that may force the world to sit back down and
renegotiate how the world monetary system will survive. Alternatively,
we all just all shoot it out and build walls to retain domestic absolute
control.
The problem with the collapse of socialism is that the promises made
to retain power cannot be supported. The Pension Crisis will explode and
at the currency projection, by 2032, we will be looking at a $400
trillion unfunded catastrophic liability. There is no way we could even
make it that far. We will be looking at this during the WEC in October (tickets are still available).
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