Monday, March 9, 2009

50 trillion lost in this global downturn! No Depression?



Note: The figure to the left is a man standing next to 1 billion dollars on a few palates. The next illustration is a man standing next to a TRILLION DOLLARS DOUBLE STACKED ON PALLETS! The world lost 50 of these "bunch of palates"!.

Asia capital losses at 9.6 trillion dollars in 2008: ADB
12 hours ago
MANILA (AFP) — Financial assets in Asia lost 9.6 trillion dollars in value in 2008, slightly more than a year's worth of GDP, the Asian Development Bank said on Monday.
It said Asia was hit especially hard as the global downturn led to an estimated 50 trillion dollars in capital losses around the world.
"Asia was hit harder than other parts of the developing world because the region's markets have expanded much more rapidly," the Manila-based bank said in a new study.
It said losses in Asia, not counting Japan, amounted to more than a year's worth of gross domestic product.
"Losses on financial assets in developing Asia in 2008 totalled 9.6 trillion dollars, or just over one year's worth of GDP."
ADB president Haruhiko Kuroda, speaking to delegates at a bank conference where the study was released, said he feared the region's economies would suffer further before they start to bounce back.
"This is by far the most serious crisis to hit the world economy since the Great Depression. While this crisis originated in the US and some European countries, by now no region or country is insulated," Kuroda said.
"I am afraid things may get worse before they get better."
The ADB, in a statement, said it estimated the losses in equity and bond markets, including those backed by mortgages and other assets. It also took into account the depreciation of many currencies against the US dollar.
Financial derivatives such as credit default swaps were not included in the study, it said.
The data, it said, "provides clear proof of the close connection between the markets and the economies around the world" which left "few, if any, countries immune to financial or economic fallouts elsewhere."
Economic recovery in the region may not begin until late 2009 or even early 2010, the study said.
Most emerging markets, including Asia and Latin America, are at a "crossroads," the study said, adding that the next 12 to 18 months "will be very difficult."
Kuroda said that while some countries in South Asia had less exposure to the crisis, they would still remain vulnerable since export earnings and dollar remittances were likely to soften. He did not name specific countries.
"The impact could manifest itself in the form of unemployment and a reduction in GDP," Kuroda said.
He also warned that the outflow of foreign direct investment could depress equity markets and contribute to "conservative" lending strategies.
The ensuing credit crunch would then seriously affect small businesses, he said.

7 comments:

  1. Well, you really can't lay blame here. Current "blame" policy" would involve in the US that either the Democrats or Republicans are to blame. Both are complicit in creating the circumstances for the current problem. Why, you might ask are both parties complicit? The answer is that greed rater than representation played a major role in decision making. We have had campaigns financed by coroprate America for quite some time, if your major contributors have a desired outcome, then they will continue to achieve results if they contribute to the party that represents their interests, in such a way they could easily and effectively buy off both parties, and it seems that that is what they have done.
    Most Americans associate with a political party, not for moral means, but because it advances their own financial position. If you think that you vote morally, take some time to evaluate by yourself your true intentions, most of you with a degree of honesty, will find in your hearts that the moral dilema stands behind the financial dilema in importance. Be honest to yourselves. It's also self reinforcing. I live comfortably on much less than many Americans, because I have decided that I don't need all of the excess. But, a lot of Americans, who have indulged in a lot of excesses, feel that it is their due, even if "their" due was achieved via a HELOC, they were keeping up with and possibly exceeding the Joneses, while the Joneses were trying to one up their neighbor. Botton line is that corporate America saw that competition with the neighbor as being a place that they could make money, and they made a bunch. And, while the whole hyperinflated system is crumbling around middle America, they are too busy trying to find neighbors that they are "doing better than" than to see that they are being taken by both democrats and republicans for not only every taxable dollar that they ever make, but the taxable dollars of their unborn chiildren and grandchildren. While you are attempting to provide you kids and their kids with the best possible future, you are unknowingly depriving of that future, because you have been indoctrinated into believing that as long as you do better, dress better, live better than your neighbors...you are successful. Wake-up America, the neighbor that you once strived to one-up, will be the one who in some way helps you through the times to come, and you will be that to your neighbors. I think soon we will all find that our communities are much more valueable than we once thought, we will literally bridge the gap, and not think of ourselves as better off, or think of our neighbors as better or worse off, we may have the opportuity to develop legitimate and lasting relationships that are not based on prejudgement. Do what you will, but if you jump on this train now, I think you will be much better of than if you jump on this train a year down the line. It's all about honesty and transparency, and a type of morality that each and every one of us knows in our souls.

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  2. right on the money!

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  3. It's all stored safely in my garage. Don't worry, I'll keep it all safe.

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  4. heheh yeah sure you will want to partner up ? hhehe but heck that is alot of money , mor ethen the whole worlds' GDP of 40Trillion so in very reality the whole system is bust , what their solution will be is to print the difference sending the world into an economic black whole of Hypeinflation (just my guess) but alos usher in a Global New World Order like Bron and the like have been saying for quite some while now

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  5. **Brown ** sorry not Bron

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  6. Why doesn't the author learn how to spell pallets?

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