Monday, April 12, 2010

Oil, oil, oil....

We only have to watch oil. Goes up everything costs more. Everything costs more less money for Chinese trinkets, I pads, taxes, house payments......

You get the idea. 2008 at $140 a barrel should tell us something.... like broke dick city at my house, hmm?


Oil, Not China, Is The Real Destroyer Of America's Trade Balance
UBS's head of Asia-Pacific economics argues that the real global trade imbalance isn't U.S.-China, it is U.S.-oil. As shown below, current account surpluses from fuel exporting-nations have been a far larger driver of total global trade imbalances coming from emerging markets.

China's current account surplus (in blue) has been large in recent years, as a percentage of the global economy, but it has been dwarfed by fuel exporters (in green):

Chart



Jonathan Anderson of UBS, via Caixin:

Looking at the movements from the late 1990s through 2006, when the overall U.S. deficit worsened from 2 percent of GDP to nearly 7 percent of GDP at the trough, a full three percentage points of that adjustment came from other advanced economies and from fuel imports; only two percentage points came from China and other non-fuel emerging markets. And the recent drop in the U.S. deficit had almost nothing to do with China; again, it was oil prices and developed trade that explains the entire swing over the past 18 months.


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