Re: Is it really over for the USA? Maybe...
- From: "Crusader" <white@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2005 23:16:00 -0500
Los Países Más Corruptos del Mundo
De los 159 países investigados por Transparencia Internacional (TI), la
organización no gubernamental coloca a Venezuela en el lugar número 130 y le
da una calificación de 2.3, en una escala del uno al diez, donde el diez es
el grado de menos corrupción.
Esta calificación es la más baja que ha obtenido el país sudamericano,
cuestión que se esperaba luego de la constante caída que ha mantenido desde
2001, cuando fue calificado con 2.8 puntos. En los años siguientes, la caída
continuó a razón de una décima: en 2002 tuvo 2.5; en 2003, 2.4 y en 2004,
2.3 puntos.
El gobierno de Hugo Chávez se sitúa así entre los más corruptos del
continente, levemente por encima de la República Democrática del Congo,
Kenia, Pakistán, Somalia, Sudán y Tayikistán, que obtienen 2.1 de
calificación.
Acompañando a Venezuela en la cola del tren de la transparencia se
encuentran Paraguay, en el lugar 144 con 2.1,y Haití, que con 1.8 ostenta
una de las peores puntuaciones del mundo en el lugar 155.
Dentro de Latinoamérica, Chile fue el país mejor calificado con el puesto
21, mientras que Costa Rica figura en el puesto 51 junto con El Salvador. Le
siguen Cuba (59) y Brasil (62), mientras que México, Panamá y Perú empatan
en el puesto 65.
La mejor clasificación de América, una vez más, correspondió a Canadá (8.4)
en el lugar 14, aunque Transparencia advirtió de algunos escándalos de
corrupción ocurridos en ese país.
Estados Unidos ocupa el apartado 17 con 7.6 puntos.
Los países más transparentes del mundo son Islandia en el primer puesto con
9.7; Finlandia y Nueva Zelanda en segundo lugar con 9.6; Dinamarca en cuatro
lugar con 9.5; Singapur en el quinto lugar con 9.4; Suecia en el sexto con
9.2; Suiza en el séptimo con 9.1; Noruega en el octavo con 8.9; Australia en
el noveno con 8.8; Austria en el décimo con 8.7 y Holanda y el Reino Unido
en el onceavo con 8.6.
España está en el apartado 23 con 7.0, mientras que Hong Kong está en el
décimoquinto con 8.3 y Alemania en el décimosexto con 8.2. Francia aparece
en el lugar 18 con 7.5.
Israel comparte el lugar 28 junto con Omán con 6.3, mientras que China, que
ha emergido como una gran economía aun dentro de su sistema comunista, ocupa
el apartado 78 con una puntuación de 3.2.
© CONTACTO Magazine
Publicado en CONTACTO Magazine el 18 de octubre de 2005
<bromselick@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1135902175.918534.137010@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> We read yesterday that mortgage applications hit a three-year low.
> This
> is bad news for the credit industry - which depends on borrowers like
> spiders depend on flies. If people resist being lured into their webs
> of
> debt...the whole thing is over. Not just the bubble in real estate
> prices...but the whole puffed up, pretentious, conceited, arriviste
> U.S.
> economy...
>
> The economy is growing, say the economists. The debt doesn't
> matter...the
> deficit is no worry...we don't need manufacturing...don't need no
> stinkin'
> savings... - everything's gonna be all right. Everything's gonna
> be all
> right. Everything's gonna be all right...no woman no cry...
>
> But the 'miracle' of the miracle economy 2000-2005 was not that it
> hit
> upon a brand new model...with high debt levels, a persistent trade
> deficit,
> no savings, and highly profitable 'platform' companies that do no
> manufacturing. Behind the miracle was a booming property market that
> pumped trillions of dollars into the economy and created millions of
> new
> jobs.
>
> Housing is essentially a consumer item, not a productive one. People
> live
> in bigger houses that cost more money to buy...and to maintain. A
> major
> part of the 'growth' of the last five years came just from this new
> consumption. People became real estate
> speculators...investors...developers
> or sales agents. Others made their livings putting in granite
> countertops
> and new bathrooms. Still others sold household furnishings and home
> entertainment centers.
>
> When this boom in real estate property ends, then...what will happen to
> the
> miracle? What will keep the U.S. economy going?
>
> The top-performing sector this year was our favorite metal - gold, up
> 26.8%. The next was health care, plus 21.4%. Then, there is the
> insurance industry that registered a 16.9% gain.
>
> Gold is a special case. Buying gold ads nothing to the economy. It is
> just a way of protecting your money. So is the insurance industry.
> And
> health care? Is it not just another form of domestic consumption?
> But
> where does the money come from? Whence cometh the purchasing power to
> consume? Ah...there's the rub...there's the fly in the
> ointment...there's the
> weasel in the woodpile...
>
> The rich are getting richer. But the middle and lower classes have
> less
> money to consume this year than they did the last. If we're right,
> there
> will soon come a time when Americans will no longer be able to say that
> they are the richest people on the planet. Instead, there will still
> be
> plenty of rich people in the U.S. The rest of the population will be
> no
> richer than people in other countries. The advantage from being born
> in
> America will have disappeared in the globalized labor market.
>
> Here in Nicaragua, we are looking at both the past and the future. The
> past is all around us. People cut fields by hand and drive ox carts to
> market. But the future is here too...because rich people in Nicaragua
> can
> live as well or better than anywhere on the planet. There are fine
> restaurants...beautiful beaches...the latest technology and
> entertainment.
> Plus, you don't have to be Bill Gates to afford a staff of domestics.
>
> Lumpen rich people have drivers...maids... gardeners...secretaries.
>
> Will it be so different in the U.S....when labor competition lowers the
> cost
> of household help? Will the rich be able to live like rich people
> again...even while the country as a whole loses ground?
>
> Or will the lower classes despair and revolt? Will they stop envying
> the
> rich and, instead, begin to eat them?
>
> By Bill Bonner
> For The Daily Reckoning
>
.
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