I see you're 10 yrs late. The world is rapidly changing and leaving your US of the yore behind. Isn't that why we Europe is joining China led bank and have open currency swaps. The day when US controlled world economy is over. China has your speak is world biggest economy (PPP) and world biggest consumer and producers of goods and services..therefore you might have to do a lot of updating
You really ought to make an effort to understand some of the things that you read here and there. This stringing-together of random bits, from all over the place, is quite shabby. And you also need to get over obsession with sheer size; it is such mindlessness, without regard to quality, that explains much of Africa's sad story today.
As usual, it looks like I will have to whack you over the head, several times, with facts, before you wake up. You will, as usual, dodge by claiming that it's "nit-picking".
Start here:
"
In the last 10 months, the USA dollar has risen so sharply that it is now approaching 12-year highs. The rest of the world is wailing about their dollar-denominated purchases---sorry, most still don't take your yuan---and everyone is scrambling, frantically, for dollars."
Do you see RMB anywhere in that picture, other the implication that nobody is chasing after yuan? Who are all these people you think are chasing after RMB? For what would they be doing that?
Weka information hapa hapa.
The days of the US controlling the world economy are over, blah, blah, blah, and China is the way to go? Maybe it will be noticed the third time ... Your Great Chinese Friends pointing out that they are helpless when the US Federal Reserve does some things:
"
The other thing is that you shouldn't be so excited about European joining a Chinese-led bank. Do you actually have any understanding about ownership in such banks? Western countries are involved in all sorts of Asian banks. Take, for example the Asian Development Bank: the USA is the 2nd largest shareholder in that and has probably 2.5 times as many shares as China. (Oh, like the new AIIB that has caused you so much unexplained excitement, that one too doesn't have much use for African countries.)
When US started printing their way out of their own wall street induced malaise..China started thinking about plan B....and that meant reducing any more purchase of US tbills and tbonds...
And what is that Plan B? Do you ever make any attempt to understand what you read? (a) China is the biggest holder of all that US paper. Do you think that those "cash reserves" are actually in little green bits, with pictures of dead presidents, in some vault? (b) Did you read Chinese guy in charge of all that telling folks not to worry that there had been some uncontrollable reduction? (c) This one is more subtle, and it might take you a year or so to understand: China hold so much US paper that the last thing it wants (or needs) to see is the US $ go down!
and investing that money in their own companies quest for internationalisation and of course lending more and more to other countries..they also have been working towards making yuan a global currency..
I thought gave you a very simple exercise: go down the road, anywhere in Kenya, and look for who's peddling yuan. Then report back.
When it come to China effect on Africa economy..evidence is there for all to see...
Where is it for us to see? Please help.
China pays a premium for our raw materials
(a) What do you consider "premium? (b) In what currency do they pay?
and their investment in Africa infrastructure has pretty much paid off.
Really? Where and how? Kenya is up to the eyeballs in Chinese debt (interest + shylock-rate insurance). How many kilometres of railway are "paying off"?
WB is a failed institution that nobody should take seriously. Ask their IFC branch what mess they did with RVR concession that gok gave them to oversee!!!!!!!!!!!!
I don't see how the World Bank has suddenly got involved in my main message that only Africans will save Africa. But perhaps you can explain.
As regards RVR, I would look well before that. This is a repeat:
The EAC + friends got some Japanese consultant to advice them. What the guy had to say: "
Your obsession with gauge and new things is misplaced. You need to focus on maintenance. When you manage (at high cost) to replace your old, narrow-gauge lines with new standard-gauge lines, you will be running at lower speeds and hauling less tonnage than we do with older, refurbished narrow-gauge lines."
And the answer? Folks are still waiting.
..the country is so complicated to have your little priorities (starvation, health)...perhaps next time you need to understand how we make our budget as a country...
Don't worry about me; I'll manage. But is there any chance that folks there could turn my "little priorities" into "big priorities"?
Anyways ...
Instead of devoting so much space to jerking-off about China, why don't you, right here, explain to me what I "need to understand" about your "budget as a country". Right here, and right now. Start with:
(a) The health of Kenyan children under five, especially the problems related to nutrition. (The cost of providing proper nutrition at that age is far less than the final costs of failing to do so.)
(b) The lack of something as simple as clean water for a large chunk of the population. (How hard can that be? And does anyone care about the final costs?)
(c) Why folks are literally dying from shit all over the place?
China has been there and done recently ..we can do it if we learn from them.
So, what are you learning from China? One of the first things all those Asians did was to figure out how to feed themselves. In Africa, folks are dying like flies from just about everything while those with any signs of life are wanking over Chinese "saviours". Talk about Mission Impossible!