Economic Warfare is though on common people, the oligarchs will continue their luxurious life
They were practically at war during the days of communism when they should have been each others best friends, they seem friendly now but they're still suspicious of each other. They can turn on each other fast. China also exports more to Russia than it imports. At one point, it starts getting a bigger advantage to just take the east of Russia from them for China.China likes gas too, and natural resources,,, and Russia is their closest best friend.
Remember after WW1 when the Deutsche Mark was practically worthless. I'm worried that if people get desperate enough they are more likely to support radical policies.
It's not about punishing the oligarchs but stopping Putin's imperialism. People aren't going to stand for funneling money into international "projects" when the country is collapsing. It's going to continue to be corrupt domestically.
Is this a jack ryan movie? Is the US doing this to Russia? Is the end game more wars?
Russia is not isolated yet, and they are in bed with China for now... they will likely circumvent SWIFT and dollars altogether, and who knows if/when they will decide to peg their currency to something.
These are historic times in finance, and Russia being in trouble is just the start. The one certainty is that war will happen between Ukraine/NATO and Russia. Ukraine has no choice, hence Europe will have no choice.
I consider myself to be a pretty smart guy, but when it comes to economics I have no idea what's going on. Who decides "oh the ruble is worth way less today than it was a month ago"?
Are we talking trade stuff, or real war? Nothing is going to happen. Europe is not going to war, Russia is not going to attack NATO.
What a wonderfully executed CIA operation. The movie writes itselfYeah, US forced Russia to invade neighbouring countries. Then the US forced Saudi Arabia and several other oil producing countries to attempt to destroy America's shale sector as well as Iran. Damn those evil masterminds in Washington.
Exchange rates are basically driven by supply and demand. If nobody wants rubles, the value of the ruble will drop.I consider myself to be a pretty smart guy, but when it comes to economics I have no idea what's going on. Who decides "oh the ruble is worth way less today than it was a month ago"?
Russia and China aren't buddys, more liked a forced opposition to the west powers. And I heard China didn't like at all what Russia did to Crimea. Or for Crimea in that case.
I wonder how this is going to end. As awful as it is I don't see any outcome where Russia will give back Crimea. As much as their invasion was illegal and the referendum was a sham, a majority of Crimeans probably would rather be in Russia.
Putin is going nowhere, his people wil just blame west and jews
What is bringing down oil prices this much btw? I`m surprised everytime I pass the gas station.
American shale oil. Normally if any one nation drastically increases oil production, OPEC (a group of oil producing nations that try to manipulate oil prices, mostly unsuccessfully) decreases production to keep prices artificially high but Saudi Arabia decided to use this as an opportunity to bring the economic pain to Iran and Russia and also try to drive US shale oil out of the market.What is bringing down oil prices this much btw? I`m surprised everytime I pass the gas station.
Increased US production and lower worldwide demand due to slowing economies.
The more they suffer from these sanctions, the more they'll blame the West for everything and the more they'll support Putin.
As if people in Russia will realize thatSaying this recent recession was caused by western sanctions does nothing but strengthen the party line that the west is at fault for everything going wrong in Russia. The truth is Russia's economic troubles are the result of years of questionable economic policy under Putin and were a long time coming.
Russia focused its economy too heavily on oil n gas. Now with gas prices tanking so does their currency.
It's important for these nations to diversify.
Yeah Crimea is a done deal, nothing is gonna change that now.
Ehh, hello there. My mother voted for Putin in 2011 and now loathes both him and the whole Crimea situation with passion. I see many examples of that in my surroundings. We're not that stupidAs if people in Russia will realize that
I consider myself to be a pretty smart guy, but when it comes to economics I have no idea what's going on. Who decides "oh the ruble is worth way less today than it was a month ago"?
Is Iran's oil sector still under sanctions? Because their currency has not seen the immediate collapse of value in the same way that Russia's has.
That said: what the fuck happened in 11-12 September 2013? Iran's currency literally halved in value overnight:
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A point should be made that it is slowing economies abroad. General view lately is the US is unquestionably the best house on a bad block. All indicators are pointing to improving US economic conditions while Europe stagnates, China slows (maybe more than we are being told), Japan gets desperate while entering recession, and Russia implodes.
Sorry I was speaking about majorities. Surely some are going to realize what's happening, but I'm still doubtful about the majority of the population. Manipulation of the media is really strong on the masses no matter how smart people are.Ehh, hello there. My mother voted for Putin in 2011 and now loathes both him and the whole Crimea situation with passion. I see many examples of that in my surroundings. We're not that stupid
That's true, but we also have to keep in mind that if this worldwide situation continues, it'll eventually catch up with the US too. No economy is an island.
This. That also explains why it has been so steady.
Exchange rates are basically driven by supply and demand. If nobody wants rubles, the value of the ruble will drop.
You need a nation's currency to buy its goods. If nobody wants Russian exports, they won't 'buy' rubles, and the value if the ruble will similarly drop.
Sanctions and a weak domestic economy will reduce the demand for Russian goods. This leads to a drop in the rubles value.
This means that Russians have less buying power internationally. However, this also means your dollar will 'buy' more in Russia. People who want a deal on a vacation might be tempted to travel to Russia. This would increase the demand for rubles. So the value of the ruble is pulled up or down by demand.
China is a special case, because their currency is pegged to a certain fraction of the dollar. Your dollars go far in China, so they export a lot. This creates Chinese jobs, but limits China's buying power. This is why currency control is an important part of Chinese policy: it has sustained their economy for years.
Does that make sense?
Just like Weimar Germany!
Sorry I was speaking about majorities. Surely some are going to realize what's happening, but I'm still doubtful about the majority of the population. Manipulation of the media is really strong on the masses no matter how smart people are.
I don't debate that the world is inter-connected. Arguably, we would have off-the-charts growth right now if the rest of the world wasn't in such a shitty state. Our growth projections take into account the rest of the world coming to a crawl (we've been expecting continuing global economic turmoil for many months now). The only truly shocking development has been just how far oil has fallen. Sure, that may impact growth we were expecting in the energy sector, but we should still achieve 2.5% to 3% real GDP growth next year even with a slower energy sector. Cheaper oil should help many other sectors, both domestically and abroad.
What can you buy with 1 rouble though?