My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

The Ideological Contagion of dummy capitalism

posted Tuesday, 9 January 2007

A contagion most contagious


I could not help but snigger when an analyst from Goldman Sachs appeared on CNN and depicted the possibility of some Chavez socialist ideas being taken on by other Andean states as Ideological Contagion.


Now, that is something he definitely thought of earlier, however, that is beside the point. The threat to nationalise a number of previously privatised utilities lead to the suspension of trading in the shares of a number of companies which lost between 20% to 30% of their value as investors took fright.


Evidently, many political socialists are oblivious of market economics and how capitalism works, in fact, the only Nobel Prize winner in Economics from a socialist background won on the topical issue of the theory of optimum allocation of resources – the fixation on redistribution of resources and wealth without assessing merit creates an island of states that really cannot insulate themselves from the march of globalisation. [This comment is not an exegesis on the economics of allocation of resources or the socialist contexts of Karl Marx]


Chaos borne from Communism


Many would say the fall of Communism created a more peaceful world as we relaxed from the Cold War and settled into a more destabilising war between civilisations.


The states that gave up Communism and adopted shades of democracy have also ensconced capitalism, however, none have matured in appreciating the voice of their people now have they really accepted the force and good of market economics.


Nowhere is this more evident than in Moscow through the unconscionable way they instituted an asset raid on Yukos by claiming back-taxes that bankrupted the company because the chief executive of the company chose to pitch his tent in political opposition to the president.


Force of government abuse


All those assets are now in the hands of the Russian government, but two wrongs do not make a right. The sell-off of the national chattels to influential ex-Communists and opportunistic smart cads – oligarchs - in the Yeltsin years was wrong, however, rather than seek redress through the Rule of Law (A sign of matured democracies) and due process (another sign of matured democracies), the state apparatus terrorised and appropriated with untrammelled lien every means to redress that Yukos to access to dig themselves of out the rut.


So also, we see the kind of muscle that Gazprom exerts on all foreign investment with the force of government to invalidate contracts and threat major loss of investment that investors are literally stampeded into accepting minority stakes in their major investments to remain in business in Russia.


The first gas war


Last January, we saw the distorted face of capitalism when Gazprom decided subsidies to Ukraine were no more economical and rather than present a graduated withdrawal of subsidies, we were seeing price hikes of up to 50% for economies that would literally collapse if they were to be exacted.


A resolution was reached, but not without Europe realising that their energy security was being threatened by a newcomer to capitalism who had goods to sell but no marketplace decorum.


We were introduced to a large nation that was getting drunk on being the largest exporter of gas and oil, these was now being used a tool of political leverage to emasculate the near-abroad that was adopting a more Western outlook.


Europe with more money than sense


Historically, the USSR was somewhat energy self-sufficient, when the Soviet Union broke up; the states came to an arrangement which involved subsidised exports to these former Soviet republics.


The issue of subsidy arises because another part of energy economics does not necessary relate the cost of production to the selling price, but it is more related to the affordability of the demand-led sector.


It explains why Europe is probably paying over the odds for Russian oil and this is being used as a standard of measure of non-European countries which have hardly 20% of the average GDP of EU-15, probably more in relation to EU-25 or EU-27. Gazprom had 3rd Quarter profits increase 68% in 2005.


The second oil and gas war


This energy bullying stance came to a head in December when Gazprom decided to double the price of Belarusian fuel supplies, they came to an agreement but Russia is now being taught a lesson in understanding their means of production when trying to reach their market.


In the case of Ukraine, the pipeline was a branch off from the main European supply route, Belarus however is the trunk of the European pipeline network, and everything goes through Belarus and they are not looking to make any friends and do not care.


Gazprom in its gullibility thought they could squeeze Belarus and then expect their oil to traverse the land of Belarus without sanction, retribution or reaction, well, a tit-for-tat in which Belarus imposed crippling taxes on traversal, extracted payment with oil and Russia ended up closing the pipeline as Europe looks on helpless against the tyranny of capitalism in the hands of cretins.


Learning capitalism the hard way


If Russia cannot get its oil to its customers, it would either have to back down with egg on its face or invade Belarus and institute regime change. No matter how reviled the Belarusian president Lukashenka is, standing up to Russia would fuel the embers of nationalism and support for their president.


This would lead to a very interesting conclusion.


Then we move on to Thailand where after a military coup, the government decided to tinker with the markets by imposing currency controls to prevent the flight of capital, that day, the market fell 15%, the first time the Thai market fell so much in its 31-year history.


The ideological contagion of stupid economics


The Ideological Contagion is very much like boys trying to play the games of real men, capitalism and market economics are not levers one can push and pull in isolation, these ideas sit in a globalised setting where everyone is in a train at the top of a steep incline, one wrong pull and the thing goes hurtling down unstoppably to a demise too gruesome to record.


Russia was never ready for capitalism and they are not in school learning to do it right, it would now take an unruly dictatorship to teach the lesson that without your means of good transportation, you would be making no capital; if your goods traverse fields you do not own, you should remain good friends with that field owner.


Venezuela probably wants to get those privatised organisations on the cheap and that is best done by threatening to create the flight of capital – however, does a nationalised entity end up getting better managed for the government or do company taxes paid by a privatised entity create more revenue?


As for Thailand, the military government would find no legitimacy, they must have forgotten that the economy is no Army battalion that you can order around like some recruit in a boot camp, I am sure they have duly learnt a lesson they would not forget.


References


Gazprom’s Strategy


The Folly of Renationalisation


The Kinks In Russia's Oil Pipeline


 

tags:                      

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Tag Related Posts

Nigeria: A dereliction dressed as an amnesty

Friday, 3 April 2009
President Yar'Adua of Nigeria offers Niger Delta militants amnesty, I do not think he has that bargaining chip at all.

The Nero of Siam

Monday, 1 December 2008
The events in Siam give great cause for concern not so much for democracy but for the monarchy that migh well begin to make itself irrelevant to its subjects.

Cancelling Tech-Ed, a considered cut-back

Monday, 6 October 2008
Even in the smallest way, I am beginning to see the effects of the financial crises with street lights going off early, banks acquired, conferences cancelled and bins not emptied. There is hope but there would be changes too.

Nigeria: A very welcome reprieve

Monday, 4 August 2008
Finally, one can see the work of compassionate diplomacy as 29 Nigerians are reprieved in Thailand and Afghanistan.

Spotting the English from afar

Friday, 2 May 2008
What reputations the English have, in public, at dinner and in sport.

Drugs: Chavez is NOT the problem

Monday, 21 January 2008
A US Illicit Drugs control official accuses Hugo Chavez of Venezuela of colluding in allowing drugs to be trafficked through Venezuela to the United States.

I contend that Venezuela has other priorities than trying to solve the US drug problem.

Nigeria: Another two oil cremations

Sunday, 13 January 2008
News of Nigerians caught in the flames of oil burning amongst them hits the wires - two days in a row.

Nigeria: 34 burnt to death siphoning oil

Wednesday, 26 December 2007
People get burnt to death siphoning off a breached pipeline in Lagos - again!

Putin and Chavez - Great Leader or Dear Leader?

Monday, 3 December 2007
Elections in oil-rich states belie the use of democratic process to entrench a benign authoritarianism or a virulent socialism.

America: Maniac with razor blades

Friday, 26 October 2007
Sanctions complicate issues and makes negotiations very difficult. America's position is now seen as one of a maniac with razor blades threatening a nuclear crisis which parallels the Cuba Nuclear Crisis of the 1960s.

Fair-trade oil quest for Nigeria

Wednesday, 24 October 2007
We look to President Yar'adua to appear to be doing something, but as the oil company deals are coming under review for a better deal, maybe this would be the advent of fair-trade oil and resolution of many Nigerian problems.

This gas flare marks the North Pole

Friday, 3 August 2007
The Russians plant a flag at the bottom of the sea beneath the North Pole and lay claim to the resources therein. I really hope not, this is not the 15th Century.

Reasoning out the girl's kidnap

Friday, 6 July 2007
Some think there is some justifiable reason for kidnapping the 3-year old girl in Port Harcourt - I completely disagree and I cannot be persuaded of why anyone would do such an evil deed.

Child in Niger Delta Kidnapping and Death Threat

Friday, 6 July 2007
The Niger Delta region is really now in lawless flux, a 3-year old girl was captured by criminals and had her life threatened. It is unforgivable, unacceptable and intolerable, the girl must be rescued, what should be done to the men is unprintable.

Insult laws an insult to democracy

Tuesday, 26 June 2007
The President of Mali really does have a mistress, a concubine, a harlot, a harem, a dominatrix in his palace - a homorous essay.

Is Goodluck suffering a run of bad luck?

Thursday, 17 May 2007
The vice-president select's property has been attacked twice - does he have enemies?

Becoming persona non grata in Thailand

Thursday, 12 April 2007
The King of Thailand has pardoned a Swiss man who defaced pictures of the king. Well, what laws were broken?

Nigeria: They were burnt like tinder to cinder

Wednesday, 28 March 2007
Another petroleum death which happened on Monday and got reported on Wednesday - a lament of many wrongs in Nigeria.

CNN Exclusive: The creaks (sic) of Niger Delta

Sunday, 11 February 2007
A CNN Exclusive files last week appears to be a directorial debut of the correspondent rather than facts as they really are, this does a disservice to the people affected in the Niger Delta and it is a shame.

The Ideological Contagion of dummy capitalism

Tuesday, 9 January 2007
Russia, Belarus, Thailand and Venezuela might well be the school of hard-knocks about the truth of how capitalism works and why many countries have no inkling as to how the markets in a globalised setting cannot be tinkered with.

Bush finally takes the draft - Vietnam

Friday, 17 November 2006
The President is in Vietnam cavorting with faraway Communists, maybe it is time to visit Havana too.

6th of July - 1942, 1946 & 2006

Thursday, 6 July 2006
On this day, Anne Frank's family sought refuge from the Nazi's in the Secret Annex and 4 years later this day George W. Bush arrived in the first tranche of baby-boomers - Does history have much to teach us?

Unnamed, unknown, unsung and undone in Nigeria

Sunday, 14 May 2006
The disastrous pipeline explosion in Lagos on Friday leaves us with the same questions and the wrong answers. Another probe should address the real issues - desperate poverty, mass illiteracy, poor health-care, corruption and the lack of opportunity.

Eureka! is Farsi for Enrichment

Wednesday, 12 April 2006
Iran is enriched with the ability to enrich uranium, have we forgotten they just tested a supercavitation missile last week? Oil, gold, war, markets - what else is being knocked out of stability?

All before noon and not after

Saturday, 1 April 2006
The strangest events in our world occured before noon. By the time we found out, the reality had been lost in April the first when those amazing things happen just before noon.

Fossils long before their time

Friday, 3 March 2006
Three coal mining disasters in less than 60 days - Given the importance of coal why are the human lives not given equal and prominent importance to help in their surviving these disasters?

Hitler on a spit-roast

Sunday, 5 February 2006
Certain characteristics of Adolf Hitler have been called to play in the name-calling that should sometimes be beneath contempt, however, the comparisons do make interesting reading.

Setting democracy ablaze with gas

Tuesday, 3 January 2006
This little Ukraine problem of gas supplies has more far-reaching consequences that could affect the whole basis of our democracy