Sitting In Pretty Good Shape.

bacha29

Well-Known Member
Today the Russians announced that it currently holds 630 billion in gold and foreign currency reserves. While it views western sanctions to be a bit "unpleasant" it says that it has enough stashed away to pay all it's bills for the next 2 years.
 

TearsInRain

IE boogeyman
The really dangerous possibility of us driving them into their own financial transactions system is if other countries decide to leave our bloc too the dollar is threatened

The day the dollar has a real competitor in its own transaction system is the day it loses reserve status, and the US is totally :censored2:ed
 

DELACROIX

In the Spirit of Honore' Daumier
Today the Russians announced that it currently holds 630 billion in gold and foreign currency reserves. While it views western sanctions to be a bit "unpleasant" it says that it has enough stashed away to pay all it's bills for the next 2 years.

It wasn’t like they saw this coming...🤔
 

rod

Retired 23 years
Today the Russians announced that it currently holds 630 billion in gold and foreign currency reserves. While it views western sanctions to be a bit "unpleasant" it says that it has enough stashed away to pay all it's bills for the next 2 years.
This is age of TRILLIONS----billions are chump change.
 

zubenelgenubi

I'm a star
The really dangerous possibility of us driving them into their own financial transactions system is if other countries decide to leave our bloc too the dollar is threatened

The day the dollar has a real competitor in its own transaction system is the day it loses reserve status, and the US is totally :censored2:ed

I've heard analysis that the dollar being the reserve currency forces us to import more and kills our manufacturing. Losing reserve status could be a good thing in the long run.
 

TearsInRain

IE boogeyman
I've heard analysis that the dollar being the reserve currency forces us to import more and kills our manufacturing. Losing reserve status could be a good thing in the long run.
I believe it, but I think it would spark a depression the likes the world has never seen, and probably a civil war with it
 

vantexan

Well-Known Member
I've heard analysis that the dollar being the reserve currency forces us to import more and kills our manufacturing. Losing reserve status could be a good thing in the long run.
If we lose reserve currency status our Dollar will be worth a lot less. Which means we'll pay a lot more for imports and most of what we consume is imported.
 

quad decade guy

Well-Known Member
Which will make manufacturing in the US more attractive.
Here's the question.....how long will it take to ramp up manufacturing? We were independent until fairly recently(70's).
I'm old enough to know only fireworks and Chinese food was the extent of China. And "Jap Crap". Germany for "HIGH-END" machine tools etc. Everyone had RCA tv's and a Chevy. Snapper lawnmowers were made right down the road.
I believe it, but I think it would spark a depression the likes the world has never seen, and probably a civil war with it
A civil war will be about politics


It can be that way again.
 

vantexan

Well-Known Member
That's happening anyway. Might as well set ourselves up to move back into a stronger position.
We'll set ourselves up for sure. For the record we should've never moved so much manufacturing overseas. Especially anything strategic. Computer chips, pharmaceuticals, etc. We are about 50% have nots now, as opposed to a mostly middle class. And inflation is taking wealth away at a much more rapid pace. Hope not, but it seems the elements of a major war are coming together.
 

zubenelgenubi

I'm a star
We'll set ourselves up for sure. For the record we should've never moved so much manufacturing overseas. Especially anything strategic. Computer chips, pharmaceuticals, etc. We are about 50% have nots now, as opposed to a mostly middle class. And inflation is taking wealth away at a much more rapid pace. Hope not, but it seems the elements of a major war are coming together.

The dollar being the reserve currency required that we import more so that there would be more dollars available internationally. When investors stand to make millions and billions by leveraging cheaper labor, it would have been nearly impossible to keep manufacturing in the US.
 

zubenelgenubi

I'm a star
Here's the question.....how long will it take to ramp up manufacturing?

Depends on how long it will take to build new factories and train up a work force. And doing those will depend on whether investors will be able to make any money to put money into it. It may require a grass roots, sweat equity effort to get things off the ground.
 

Wally

BrownCafe Innovator & King of Puns
Even boosting LNG production will take years.. Europe is Russia's beotch for thr foreseeable future.
 
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