Crow posted:
Also, I wonder that due to the radical tradition of the middle classes, this asymptotic shedding of the middle classes from rent alleviation and impositions of new debt conditions will spark the conditions for massive conflagration beyond the reach of the cities (ie. Favelas, exurbs, peripheral villages, slums) due to the fanning out of the former middle class, like disgraced prometheus
Icarus works as well
but what i want is just for all this to be purged of all the effort one would need to understand it all and just for a layman's explanation of what the fuck y'all are talking about over here.
like, you people are experts in this really narrow department, and it would be probably nice to know what in the goddamn fuck you are fucking saying.
shennong posted:
hahaha DAMN *makes explosion noises, imitates fireworks w/ hands*
i got the idea from something much better: http://www.laits.utexas.edu/eur/session_1.html
skip to 1:30 and it ends around 2 minutes. this is why it's the crisis of the crisis. you just can't believe in it anymore. a crisis is supposed to have some sort of decision or judgment, but it is now about deciding not to decide anything
sosie posted:
but what i want is just for all this to be purged of all the effort one would need to understand it all and just for a layman's explanation of what the fuck y'all are talking about over here.
like, you people are experts in this really narrow department, and it would be probably nice to know what in the goddamn fuck you are fucking saying.
if you want to be part of the laity, go listen to the clergy explaining why all of this is necessary. the range of possible discussion and thinking outside of that context is actually quite broad right now
dm posted:
http://www.laits.utexas.edu/eur/session_1.html
there's actually one other thing in this video that will send a chill straight up your spine. same guy at 57:40-61:55 the chill should kick in at 61:20
it's funny because this conference was organized as a sort of nostalgic Keynesian/social democratic thing but you see a lot of Marx popping up. that guy in particular keeps busting it out over and over again
e: is he not also implicitly raising the Idea of communism? talking about a unified diversity through cooperation rather than competition as the potential for a "great social experiment" and everything? we are entering some interesting times.
another part i'd like to point out is the French guy with the neurological thing that starts just before 22 minutes. his whole presentation is interesting, especially going into the stuff about the composition of assets in favor of public debt. i don't know all of the history there too well, but there is some heritage there in terms of the ideas of the saint-simonians that marx apparently picked up on and i think might have a relation to what little we know about how he envisioned the concrete transformation to socialism. the idea was that they were supposed to serve as little planning centers.
if this is correct, it is also reflected in Lenin (via Zizek):
“Capitalism has created an accounting apparatus in the shape of the banks, syndicates, postal service, consumers’ societies, and office employees unions. Without big banks socialism would be impossible. /.../ our task is here merely to lop off what capitalistically mutilates this excellent apparatus, to make it even bigger, even more democratic, even more comprehensive. /.../ This will be country-wide book-keeping, country-wide accounting of the production and distribution of goods, this will be, so to speak, something in the nature of the skeleton of socialist society."
i suppose i rest my case about being ahead of the curve with seizing the means of production above :smug:
anyways, back to the mm. Parguez: he discusses a certain memo at 32:35.
khamsek: you might be interested in watching his whole lecture to get some ideas because he talks about the political economy of the state and the central bank. the stuff he's talking about with the shift towards private debt is crucial to understanding the process of financialization, though i don't know a whole lot of detail there yet.
Edited by dm ()
dm posted:
If Greece were to reintroduce unilaterally its own currency (for convenience I called it in my previous article the New Drachma or ND, as there cannot be a ‘reintroduction’ of the legacy currencies that were subsumed into the euro), the Greek government will set by law the conversion rate between the euro (the then former lawful currency of Greece) and the ND (the new legal tender for Greece). This statutory rate will apply across the board (true for bonds, as well as the rent of an apartment or prices at the supermarket etc.). Greece could impose, if it so wished, a statutory rate of ND 1 = Euros 1,000. The conversion rate does not need to take into account the expected external value of the ND, but definitely needs to provide certainty for all aspects of domestic life (all wish to know what rent they will have to pay at the end of the month and what their salaries will be etc.).
as far as I know an artificial exchange rate doesn't mean anything if you still need to import goods & no one is willing to trade in your currency at that rate, unless greece can either become self-sufficient or has a currency board and a load of spare euros on hand-- is that the case?
sosie posted:
but what i want is just for all this to be purged of all the effort one would need to understand it all and just for a layman's explanation of what the fuck y'all are talking about over here.
like, you people are experts in this really narrow department, and it would be probably nice to know what in the goddamn fuck you are fucking saying.
i'd be happy to try and simplify some stuff, is there anything in particular
crustpunk_trotsky posted:
as far as I know an artificial exchange rate doesn't mean anything if you still need to import goods & no one is willing to trade in your currency at that rate, unless greece can either become self-sufficient or has a currency board and a load of spare euros on hand-- is that the case?
if the invoices on imports and exports get denominated in the new currency, the traders will follow. still not sure if they're going to do that or the transfer union or what though
12The law of motion of real government indebtedness is also known as the government budget constraint.
....
To what question is the object computed in (15) the answer? Frankly, this has us stumped. Object (15) mixes apples and oranges – imputed interest and principal repayments – in peculiar ways. The spirit of the calculation seems to be, “let’s calculate the total funds the government must devote at time t to servicing its debt,” where the devil resides in the details of what one means by servicing. An interesting question, might be “given the structure of debt in place at t − 1, how many dollars of principal plus coupons fall due at t?” But that is not what the government computes either....The government seems to want to exclude repayments of principal and to record only enough interest payments to roll over its outstanding principal.
http://www.frontline.in/stories/20120113282710800.htm
Even now, the behaviour of bond markets appears to be inexplicable in relation to the so-called “fundamentals” of public debts and deficits. For example, as a percentage of GDP Spain's government debt is smaller than that of Germany. Yet Germany is seen as a safe bet, with German bonds trading at very low yields, while Spain has a very high risk premium on its public debt. In general, the eurozone countries that are being punished by the bond markets – and whose sovereign debts currently have very high interest rate spreads over Germany's – are not really characterised by high fiscal deficit to GDP ratios or high public debt. Rather, they are countries with significant current account deficits.
This provides a clue as to the basic source of the crisis: the current account imbalances between eurozone countries, which have now become unsustainable, as private finance reacts by withholding capital flows. This happens to be expressed in the form of low prices and high yields on sovereign bonds, but the truth is that these “peripheral” countries are not in trouble because of fiscal imbalances but because capital inflows in the previous decade were associated with a rapid build-up of current account imbalances generated by the private sector. So, this is essentially a banking crisis brought about by private capital inflows that then led to divergences in real exchange rates and trade balances.
Developing countries (or emerging markets as they are now called) are familiar with this kind of crisis – we have been there, done that and lost our T shirts many times over. The question is what allowed such imbalances in real exchange rates (which is the same as saying, different price levels in different eurozone countries) to persist despite the claims of the European Single Market, which was supposed to equalise goods and factor prices across the region. This failure of the Single Market to deliver is at least one of the deeper roots of the current crisis.
the policy that has been pursued is the same: you cut public spending to deliberately create high unemployment and force down wages. this never actually "works" because it simply can't be done. here is a random person who happens to be doing the very difficult task of sorting out the balance of payments with only a partial understanding of this process (for which the economists use the euphemism "internal devaluation"):
Today we got more evidence that infernal devaluation is progressing. EA unit labor costs (ULC) – average cost of labour per hour workers – increased 0.2% in the third quarter, slowing the annual pace from 3.1% to 2.7%. While the slowdown was to be expected, given the deterioration of domestic demand, the elevated level of growth in ULC suggests that wages in Europe are stickier than what is needed to effectively drive the terms of trade via internal devaluation. Better put: downward pressure in European wages moves more like molasses than water; it will take severe recessions in some of the debtor countries to drive relative prices down sufficient enough to feasibly shift the terms of trade.
...Greece and Ireland (Greek data is truncated at Q2 2011) successfully devalued. But at what cost? Their unemployment rates that are now multiples of what they were before the crisis.
so that's actually the game plan. see the logic of turning to government deficits here? it draws attention away from how the adjustments are actually being made and explains it in terms of what is being used to make them
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/25/us/politics/how-harvard-shaped-mitt-romney.html?_r=3&partner=rss&emc=rss&pagewanted=all
A few years after Mitt Romney graduated from Harvard Business School, he returned to share a simple, timeworn lesson in an unusual way.
Invited to give a presentation on balancing work and family, he began by telling students that they were like multinational corporations, recalled Clayton M. Christensen, who organized the event. “You have the same question as General Electric,” said Mr. Romney, then a young father and a management consultant. “Your resources are your time and talent. How are you going to deploy them?”
He drew a chart called a growth-share matrix with little circles to represent various pursuits: work, family, church. Investing time in work delivered tangible returns like raises and profits.
“Your children don’t pay any evidence of achievement for 20 years,” Mr. Romney said. But if students failed to invest sufficient time and energy in their spouses and children, their families could become “dogs” — consultant-speak for drags on the rest of the company — sucking energy, time and happiness out of the students. The presentation was a hit: Mr. Romney had proved the value of family time based not on emotion but on yield.
That day, Mr. Romney was not only displaying his hallmark brand of almost comically analytical reasoning but also returning to the place where he first absorbed it. From 1971 to 1975, he simultaneously earned business and law degrees from Harvard.
Those years also help illuminate who Mr. Romney is now: a Republican candidate for president accused of having no core convictions, a once-moderate governor suspected of tailoring his views for political expediency. Nearly four decades ago at Harvard, Mr. Romney embraced an analytical, nonideological way of thinking, say former classmates and professors, one that both matched his own instincts and helped him succeed. On a campus rife with political and social ferment, he willfully distanced himself not only from politics, but also from larger ideological frameworks and heated debates.
Eager, driven and tremendously hardworking, he mastered the Harvard Business School method of literally looking at the world on a case-by-case basis, approaching each problem completely on its own terms and making recommendations based on data.
“Mitt never struck me as an ideologue outside matters involving church and family,” said Howard Brownstein, a classmate. “He is a relativist, a pragmatist and a problem solver.”
...
Every day for an hour, the all-male group — there were relatively few women in the program back then — sat at a semicircular table outside the classroom and briefed one another on the reading material. It was an exercise in mutual protection, since any of them could be called on in class and their performance would affect their grades. Mr. Romney served as a kind of team captain, the other members said, pushing and motivating the others.
“Mitt never struck me as an ideologue outside matters involving church and family,” said Howard Brownstein, a classmate.
it's like a fucking strawman
Mr. Romney had proved the value of family time based not on emotion but on yield.
lmao the pua family
dm posted:
i guess it's the trouble of starting a new phase in the analysis of neoliberaslism. the problem has been stated pretty definitively, and there's a tremendous need to disseminate that and build on the details. at the same time, we find ourselves at its end, which is equally the emergence of something new and there's a conflicting imperative with trying to anticipate that. you've gotta know where you came from to know where you're going
at this point it feels like im looking at a swole up sow laboring for breath & hoping its pregnant with a viable piglet & not just fat with tumors. & its been eating toxic beets for as long as ive known it, & i had to invent this RLY shitty speculum to try and diagnose her. nice posting as usual dm.
the future is now
disestablishmentarian posted:
Do you guys ever wonder what if the technofetishists are right and we all merge with machines in the end, reaching the transhuman nirvana? What if capitalism, neoliberalism, all of this has an end and all of theses debates in academic, this cult of intellectual onanism, is irrelevant because the systems of the world will all fade away into a post material, post human society?
no i don't ever wonder that
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-11-17/no-stopping-technocrats-as-europe-crisis-brings-down-governments.html
http://ca.reuters.com/article/topNews/idCATRE7A37D120111104?pageNumber=2&virtualBrandChannel=0
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/05/world/europe/greek-vote-european-debt.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/04/world/europe/greek-leaders-split-on-euro-referendum.html?pagewanted=all
http://www.minfin.gr/portal/en/resource/contentObject/id/28bc6ea7-c7bc-4765-bbe5-b6f9a41037da
This misplaced focus said a lot about our political culture, in particular about how disconnected Congress is from the suffering of ordinary Americans. But it also revealed something else: when people in D.C. talk about deficits and debt, by and large they have no idea what they’re talking about — and the people who talk the most understand the least.
Perhaps most obviously, the economic “experts” on whom much of Congress relies have been repeatedly, utterly wrong about the short-run effects of budget deficits. People who get their economic analysis from the likes of the Heritage Foundation have been waiting ever since President Obama took office for budget deficits to send interest rates soaring. Any day now!
And while they’ve been waiting, those rates have dropped to historical lows. You might think that this would make politicians question their choice of experts — that is, you might think that if you didn’t know anything about our postmodern, fact-free politics.
But Washington isn’t just confused about the short run; it’s also confused about the long run. For while debt can be a problem, the way our politicians and pundits think about debt is all wrong, and exaggerates the problem’s size.
Deficit-worriers portray a future in which we’re impoverished by the need to pay back money we’ve been borrowing. They see America as being like a family that took out too large a mortgage, and will have a hard time making the monthly payments.
This is, however, a really bad analogy in at least two ways.
First, families have to pay back their debt. Governments don’t — all they need to do is ensure that debt grows more slowly than their tax base. The debt from World War II was never repaid; it just became increasingly irrelevant as the U.S. economy grew, and with it the income subject to taxation.
Second — and this is the point almost nobody seems to get — an over-borrowed family owes money to someone else; U.S. debt is, to a large extent, money we owe to ourselves.
This was clearly true of the debt incurred to win World War II. Taxpayers were on the hook for a debt that was significantly bigger, as a percentage of G.D.P., than debt today; but that debt was also owned by taxpayers, such as all the people who bought savings bonds. So the debt didn’t make postwar America poorer. In particular, the debt didn’t prevent the postwar generation from experiencing the biggest rise in incomes and living standards in our nation’s history.
But isn’t this time different? Not as much as you think.
It’s true that foreigners now hold large claims on the United States, including a fair amount of government debt. But every dollar’s worth of foreign claims on America is matched by 89 cents’ worth of U.S. claims on foreigners. And because foreigners tend to put their U.S. investments into safe, low-yield assets, America actually earns more from its assets abroad than it pays to foreign investors. If your image is of a nation that’s already deep in hock to the Chinese, you’ve been misinformed. Nor are we heading rapidly in that direction.
Now, the fact that federal debt isn’t at all like a mortgage on America’s future doesn’t mean that the debt is harmless. Taxes must be levied to pay the interest, and you don’t have to be a right-wing ideologue to concede that taxes impose some cost on the economy, if nothing else by causing a diversion of resources away from productive activities into tax avoidance and evasion. But these costs are a lot less dramatic than the analogy with an overindebted family might suggest.
And that’s why nations with stable, responsible governments — that is, governments that are willing to impose modestly higher taxes when the situation warrants it — have historically been able to live with much higher levels of debt than today’s conventional wisdom would lead you to believe. Britain, in particular, has had debt exceeding 100 percent of G.D.P. for 81 of the last 170 years. When Keynes was writing about the need to spend your way out of a depression, Britain was deeper in debt than any advanced nation today, with the exception of Japan.
Of course, America, with its rabidly antitax conservative movement, may not have a government that is responsible in this sense. But in that case the fault lies not in our debt, but in ourselves.
So yes, debt matters. But right now, other things matter more. We need more, not less, government spending to get us out of our unemployment trap. And the wrongheaded, ill-informed obsession with debt is standing in the way.
disestablishmentarian posted:
Do you guys ever wonder what if the technofetishists are right and we all merge with machines in the end, reaching the transhuman nirvana? What if capitalism, neoliberalism, all of this has an end and all of theses debates in academic, this cult of intellectual onanism, is irrelevant because the systems of the world will all fade away into a post material, post human society?
I don't think so but if it did it would be pretty much awesome.
The world is shitty enough and all of the problems of the planet interconnected enough that the web is literally considered by many to be untangle-able, "it fixed itself" is as good a solution as any.
Hence why it won't happen, or if something similar happens it will have its own set of new problems and inequalities and it is very likely that merging with technology will simply be a way of increasing the gap between the upper and lower class.
Who is gonna buy the african villagers this new machine merging thingy?
Or is this AFTER the world communist takeover?
aerdil posted:
non-ideological NON-IDEOLOGICAL NO IDEOLOGY NONE HERE TO SEE FOLKS NEOLIBERALISM IS THE LACK OF IDEOLOGY, IDEOLOGY BAD.
sorry, but i'm going to have to make your head explode really quick:
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-12-19/monti-wins-approval-for-italian-austerity-plan-in-lower-house.html
Non-Political Government
Monti, who took office a month ago as head of an unelected government of non-politicians, is seeking to show investors he can tame a 1.9 trillion-euro debt, bigger than that of Spain, Greece, Portugal and Ireland combined. With no political base in parliament, Monti relies on support from both Berlusconi’s PDL and the Democratic Party, its chief rival, to remain in power.
“The concern that there is always going to be with having a technocrat in charge is that the other parties might try and gain political capital,” said Peter Chatwell, a fixed-income strategist at Credit Agricole SA in London. “So, as long as the technocrat remains well backed, that’s good for Italy and good for stability.”
“The concern that there is always going to be with having a technocrat in charge is that the other parties might try and gain political capital,” said Peter Chatwell, a fixed-income strategist at Credit Agricole SA in London.
how is that sentence possible? i see it, but how is it possible?
dm posted:
look at this fuckin' sentence
“The concern that there is always going to be with having a technocrat in charge is that the other parties might try and gain political capital,” said Peter Chatwell, a fixed-income strategist at Credit Agricole SA in London.
how is that sentence possible? i see it, but how is it possible?
translated from weirdo libspeak hes saying that hes afraid of europes inevitable populist revolt against the imf
which is like 'no duh' but its the postmodern use of language thats really interesting, the neutral perspective, the passive case, the concept of political capital (invented to handwave anti-democratic practices by governments) being turned over and used to portray an actual democratic process (voicing popular anger) as undesirable.
its also interesting in that this man has gone mad. insane. cuckoo. only in a backwards crazyland would he be rewarded and promoted for coming up with such swivel eyed gibberish
dm posted:
head of an unelected government of non-politicians
ahahaheahaehaeheah
e:
shennong posted:dm posted:
head of an unelected government of non-politiciansahahaheahaehaeheah
yeah, that too. non-political government
All this brought us the financial crisis, when the overinflated bubble inevitably popped, and all those weak affordable housing mortgages left financial institutions particularly vulnerable. This was really a classic boom and bust cycle with primary roots in discretionary monetary policies untethered by stable money linked to something real like gold.
Since then, the true Keynesian believer Bernanke, with the full support of President Obama, has continued his seat of the pants discretionary monetary policies guided by the Bernanke standard, which has prevented real recovery through lack of a stable monetary environment to promote investment. President Obama’s crusades for higher marginal tax rates, already enacted into law for 2013, and a building tsunami of regulatory costs, accompanied by Roosevelt style denunciation of job creators and investors, has only further contributed to what is undeniably the worst economic recovery since the Great Depression.
Overall, since America abandoned the firm link to gold of Bretton Woods, real economic growth (1972-2010) has been a full percentage point lower than during the Bretton Woods era (1948-1971). If economic growth had continued at the Bretton Woods era rates, by 2010 GDP would have been $21 trillion instead of $15 trillion, and the federal budget would have been in surplus.
Since the abandonment of Bretton Woods, the dollar has lost 77% of its value against the GDP deflator and 97% of its value relative to gold. In October 2011, real wages for ordinary workers were 6.7% lower than they had been 39 years before. This is all the cumulative effect of 1% lower growth rates for decades.
How can we reverse course? A modern version of a link to gold for the dollar is known as the “price rule.” That means the Fed is to be guided in its monetary policies by the market prices of a basket of price sensitive commodities, such as gold, oil, silver, copper, and other precious metals and minerals. When those prices start to rise, that signals inflation, and time for the Fed to slow down the money expansion. When those prices start to fall, that signals deflation and recession, and time for the Fed to step up money expansion.
The Fed would then be guided by markets, rather than by progressive bureaucrats who think they know it all and should rule over the rest of us in their wisdom (see, e.g., disastrous inflation/recession cycles of the 1970s). That would have the added advantage of enabling the Fed to dismiss most of its troublemaking staff, which could mostly be replaced by a few interns monitoring market prices.
The result would be a stable dollar without inflation, once again beloved as the international reserve currency, the end of badly destabilizing boom and bust business cycles, booming long term economic growth, millions of new jobs, and soaring real wages and incomes for working people.
Impper posted:
Interesting points, all round. Thanks particularly to DM for drawing out some of those threads of argument that tend to get pretty tangled around these issues. But have you considered - Four Loko?
no, but i might as well
aerdil posted:
these people... still exist...
i'm telling you, the central bank is actually conceived of as no less than a gateway (think Janus) between "the markets" on one side and "the state" on the other. it is not about quantitative changes turning into qualitative ones, it is quantity and quality at the same time. this is why the idea of a strictly "rule-based" system appears as the rational (in the Hegelian sense) solution
discipline posted:
they're tanking iran's currency now. this has been the first thing that has made me seriously concerned about war happening.
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2012/0104/Iran-s-currency-crash-a-blow-to-Ahmadinejad
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2012/0103/Why-Iran-s-currency-dropped-to-worst-low-in-two-decades
A key amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act signed by United States President Barack Obama on the last day of 2011 - when no one was paying attention - imposes sanctions on any countries or companies that buy Iranian oil and pay for it through Iran's central bank. Starting this summer, anybody who does it is prevented from doing business with the US.
This amendment - for all practical purposes a declaration of economic war - was brought to you by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), on direct orders of the Israeli government under Prime Minister Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu.
Torrents of spin have tried to rationalize it as the Obama administration's plan B as opposed to letting the Israeli dogs of war conduct an unilateral attack on Iran over its supposed nuclear weapons program.
Yet the original Israeli strategy was in fact even more hysterical - as in effectively preventing any country or company from paying for imported Iranian oil, with the possible exceptions of China and India. On top of it, American Israel-firsters were trying to convince anyone this would not result in relentless oil price hikes.
[...]
First Washington leaked that sanctions on Iran's central bank were "not on the table". After all, the Obama administration itself knew this would translate into an oil price hike and a certified one-way ticket for more global recession. The Iranian regime, on top of it, would be making more money out if its oil exports.
Still, the Bibi-AIPAC combo had no trouble forcing the amendment through those Israel-firster Meccas, the US Senate and Congress - even with US Secretary of the Treasury Tim Geithner expressly against it.
[...]
So why did Obama sign it? For the Obama administration, everything now is about electoral calculus. Those terminal wackos in the Republican presidential circus - with the honorable exception of Ron Paul - are peddling war on Iran the moment they're elected, and substantial swathes of the American electorate are clueless enough to buy it.
Apart from that self-defeating, terminally in crisis euro/North Atlantic Treaty Organization bunch, everyone and his neighbor will be bypassing this Israeli-American declaration of economic war:
- Russia already said it will circumvent it.
- India is already paying for Iranian oil via Halkbank in Turkey.
- Iran is actively negotiating to sell more oil to China. Iran is China's second-largest supplier, only behind Saudi Arabia. China pays in euros, and soon may be paying in yuan. By March they both will have sealed an agreement about new pricing.
- Venezuela controls a bi-national bank with Iran since 2009; that's how Iran gets paid for business in Latin America.
- Even traditional US allies want out. Turkey - which imports around 30% of its oil from Iran.
- Will seek a waiver exempting Turkish oil importer Tupras from US sanctions.
- And South Korea will also seek a waiver, to buy around 200,000 barrels a day - 10% of its oil - from Iran in 2012.
China, India, South Korea, they all have complex two-way trade ties with Iran (China-Iran trade, for instance, is $30 billion a year, and growing). None of this will be extinguished because the Washington/Tel Aviv axis says so. So one should expect a rash of new private banks set up all across the developing world for the purpose of buying Iranian oil.
Edited by babyfinland ()
discipline posted:
they're tanking iran's currency now. this has been the first thing that has made me seriously concerned about war happening.
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2012/0104/Iran-s-currency-crash-a-blow-to-Ahmadinejad
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2012/0103/Why-Iran-s-currency-dropped-to-worst-low-in-two-decades
there was a dispute with the Saudis on raising OPEC output targets or something prior to the threat about the Straight of Hormuz. whether or not it's actually damaging depends on their foreign exchange reserves and whether or not they hit balance of payments constraints. China might step in to support them and the drain on China's reserves might even be what the US after.
notice how they focus on the symbolic aspects as well. this is where the substance is:
But in the past week Iran's currency – the rial – dropped almost 30 percent after President Obama approved new sanctions targeting Iran's Central Bank. The rial has since rebounded significantly from a low of 17,800 rials to the dollar on Monday. However the Central Bank has tried to introduce a cap on the market rate of 14,000 rials to the dollar, and the government announced that anyone caught selling rials at a higher rate would be arrested.
Washington's new financial legislation against Tehran will sanction foreign firms that purchase Iranian oil – by far the chief source of Iranian government revenue – and penalize banks engaging in financial transactions with Iran. The legislation won't be enacted for another six months, in order for the White House to prepare for any potential fallout on global oil prices, and the rial strengthened today somewhat to 16,200 rials to the dollar.
it does seem pretty desperate on the part of the US though
More shadow play in Persian Gulf
M K Bhadrakumar, Indian Punchline, Jan 8 2012
Turkish Foreign Minister Davutoglu’s visit to Iran doesn’t appear to have gone well. The rhetoric is all Turkey’s, and in a subtle way, Iranian official media have been gently mocking at it. The fact is, Turkey cannot afford such poor relations with almost all its neighbours Iran, Syria, Iraq, Armenia, Cyprus, Israel. With France and EU, too, things are rocky. But Tehran takes a dim view of Turkey’s covert subversion of Syria and its interference in Iraq, as well as its axis with Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Most important, Turkey is allowing the US’s ABM system to be deployed on its soil, whose main purpose is to monitor Iran’s missile capability against Israel. Thus, Davutoglu’s revelation of a Turkish mediatory role in the Iran nuclear issue is, let us say, a lot of hot air. Iranian FM Salehi used his Persian tact to respond with his ‘personal opinion’ that Iran has no problem with Istanbul as a venue of talks.
The negotiations over the nuclear issue are going to be tough, especially under the shadow of the EU’s impending ban on purchase of Iran’s oil. Iran will be wary of the west using the talks for propaganda purposes. Trita Parsi, who knows the subject exceedingly well from the inside track, and advises the US government, has an insightful article in the Independent on the US and western countries’ doublespeak. Similarly, Iran will be hugely wary of the western propaganda about the US Navy rescuing the Iranian sailors from Somali pirates. The Iranian media downplayed the event, while the western media played it up. Iran is far too experienced with the booby traps on the propaganda front. The US-Israeli propaganda will strive to cast Iran as unreasonable in the face of west’s ‘friendly’ acts.
Attention now turns to Pres Ahmedinejad’s 5-nation tour of Latin America in a blaze of publicity. It is a diplomatic scoop for Iran insofar as it displays Iran is far from isolated even in the US’s own backyard. The statements by Ahmedinejad will be closely followed as he wings his way through Venezuela, Nicaragua, Ecuador and Cuba and appears as the guest of honour at the swearing in ceremony of Guatemala’s newly-elected leftist president. It is a loss of face for Obama, who began his presidency with a bang in Latin America. Meanwhile, Tehran is taking precautions over the US-Israeli war plans. What matters most for Tehran will be the actual actions on the ground. The British deployment, for instance, will be taken with utmost seriousness, given London’s track record of identifying with the hawkish Israeli lobby’s opinion in Washington and Britain’s itch to settle scores with Iran at some point following the recent rupture in diplomatic ties.
Iran isn’t lowering its guard. An IRGC exercise began in the eastern region bordering Afghanistan. The message is rather straightforward: ‘over 100000 US troops are deployed like sitting ducks in their Afghan bases who may become victims of any US-Israeli attack on Iran.’ Again, on Saturday, Iran announced its intention to have another big naval exercise in the Strait of Hormuz. Clearly, if the US-Israeli strategy has been to browbeat Iran, it isn’t working. On Saturday, Iran announced that it is dumping US dollars and will have trade in future with Russia in their national currencies. Iran also is warming up to the Russian proposal on the nuclear issue. Clearly, when the unity of the 5+1 gets eroded, advantage goes to Iran.
Russia has created diplomatic space for Iran to negotiate via its flexible proposal, which virtually undercuts the ’sanctions route’ that has been pursued in the UNSC so far. Russia has begun demanding a rollback of the UN sanctions on Iran. This is already reflected in the confident fashion in which Tehran is dealing with the team of IAEA inspectors who are visiting Iran at the moment. Iran suo moto displayed its indigenous capabilities on a front where according to Parsi’s account, it was prepared to compromise with the US within the framework of the Brazil-Turkey-Iran swap formula. Tehran has promised to announce some more “good news” of nuclear capability in the “coming weeks.” Again, the Kremlin’s account of the telephone conversation between Pres Medvedev and Ahmedinejad underscores an appreciable level of understanding on a range of regional issues. The Russian media reports estimate the western pressure on Syria and Iran as inter-related, forming part of a strategy to dominate the Middle East, which would impact on Russian interests. Interestingly, Russia is making further naval deployments in Syria signalling support to Pres Assad.
http://blogs.rediff.com/mkbhadrakumar/2012/01/08/more-shadow-playiin-persian-gulf/