China's Nuclear economic option

I saw no racism - we are all brothers

"this was a question about a dollar collapse, not a devaluation."

Actually it was 4 questions as a subset of "the" question. As far as I'm concerned "devaluation" to an extent that it would essentially be a collapse is included in the question and I like his response, except nobody will take on the specifics. Is that because nobody knows?
 
Quote from copa8:

the OP's use of the word "jap" is racist...no?

"dont china this, arab that, western this, jap that. we are all Humans and are in this together, should we be so racist towards fellow humans?"

How exactly is Jap racist? It's short for Japanese.
 
Quote from copa8:

the OP's use of the word "jap" is racist...no?

"dont china this, arab that, western this, jap that. we are all Humans and are in this together, should we be so racist towards fellow humans?"

The only person who used such words is the guy complaining.

weird.
 
Quote from sphira:

I saw no racism - we are all brothers

"this was a question about a dollar collapse, not a devaluation."

Actually it was 4 questions as a subset of "the" question. As far as I'm concerned "devaluation" to an extent that it would essentially be a collapse is included in the question and I like his response, except nobody will take on the specifics. Is that because nobody knows?

I believe no one is answering you because you phrased the Q as the dollar becoming worthless. No way the rest of World will let that happen as it would put everyone in the poor house. Its a purely hypothetical.

In such a situation you would see massive global mayhem, closed borders, regional wars. It would be like a sci fi flick. Any tangible asset would be horded as we would be in a situation of barter.

Gold is largely an inflation hedge, and a flight to quality hedge. In the situation you mentioned, sure gold would be hoarded, but so would everything else. You always have to be careful with gold; however, because in the situation of declining global consumption to the extent that it became deflationary (as we may now witness unless the US prints enough cash), gold would sell off, as long as the deflationary spiral was orderly.
 
Quote from Pilotboy:

If that happened, a good tangible asset would be guns, big ones!

Remember, guns don't kill people, bullets do! Be sure to stock up on ammo.

;)
 
It would seem a "coordinated" default of G7 sovereign debt would be more likely than an outright collapse in USD.

If the dollar does well and truly collapse, global trade comes to a screeching halt, and you're talking about a couple of billion people literally starving to death. In that case we are so far beyond "predictable" outcomes it's really not worth worrying about.
 
Quote from Jayford:

I believe no one is answering you because you phrased the Q as the dollar becoming worthless. No way the rest of World will let that happen as it would put everyone in the poor house. Its a purely hypothetical.

In such a situation you would see massive global mayhem, closed borders, regional wars. It would be like a sci fi flick. Any tangible asset would be horded as we would be in a situation of barter.

Gold is largely an inflation hedge, and a flight to quality hedge. In the situation you mentioned, sure gold would be hoarded, but so would everything else. You always have to be careful with gold; however, because in the situation of declining global consumption to the extent that it became deflationary (as we may now witness unless the US prints enough cash), gold would sell off, as long as the deflationary spiral was orderly.

Again, I've read the theory that the Chinese will jump all over this, let the dollar devaluate somewhat - not totally as you said - in order to become the biggest economy on planet earth. Some say they can literally make themselves #1 almost overnight and that they would be foolish not to do it.

Btw, you may have read that China can maybe save the world's butt, but here is a nice re-butt-al:

http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/archive/2008/10/09/1522548.aspx
 
World reserve currencies have changed before, and when they have, the results have been disasterous for the nation whose currency is no longer wanted.

Its no longer an if, but a when, IMO.
 
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