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Asian Chemical Connections

Policymakers Have Failed The World

By John Richardson WHEN the economic, social and political history of 2008-2014 ends up being written, there are two groups of people who are going to end up bearing a lot  of the blame for  the new global financial crisis. It is the people who run the Fed and those who ran China’s government until […]

US Petrochemicals Will Suffer From “The Blame Game”

  By John Richardson THE chat below provides some very instructive reading as it shows that: Since 2000, overall real consumption in US polyethylene (PE) has fallen from around 12.5m tonnes to 12.3m tonnes (real consumption is domestic production plus imports, and then minus exports, with end-year adjustments made for any inventory distortions). Low-density PE […]

September 2008: How History Is Repeating Itself

By John Richardson WE know that weak growth in China, Europe and the US will have a major negative impact on the global economy in 2015. But does this really mean a new global financial crisis? Won’t the world’s economy instead just splutter along as it has done, pretty much, since the last crisis in […]

Another Failed US “Wealth Effect”

By John Richardson HERE are some alarming facts about the US economy: The wealth of the average American tops $301,000 per adult, which left  the US in fourth place in the latest Credit Suisse Global Wealth report. But median wealth was a mere $44,900 per adult. That was only good enough for 19th place in […]

Fed Policies Increase Emerging Market Poverty

By John Richardson THERE are 2.8bn people – 40% of the world’s population – who live on $2-10 a day. These people are “the fragile middle”, according to the Financial Times, as they are constantly in danger of falling back into poverty. And those risks have been greatly escalated by the policies of the US Federal Reserve. Here […]

China Pulls Back From Funding Other Emerging Markets

By John Richardson IT important to be relentlessly realistic about the risks no confronting emerging markets in general, now that China is focusing much more on its own internal problems and needs. One of these risks – reduced funding of infrastructure and other projects in the emerging world by Chinese banks – was highlighted in this […]

What Yuan Depreciation Means

By John Richardson THE truth is that nobody has ever entirely understood the nature of China’s chemicals and polymers demand. During the good times, at the height of China’s credit Ponzi scheme, if you were a sales manager, why ask too many questions? Sales were sales and if mono-ethylene glycol (MEG) ended up stuck in […]

Central Banks Chase The Inflation Illusion

By John Richardson IT was Milton Friedman who famously said “inflation is always and everywhere a monetary problem”. This widely accepted economic wisdom is based on the following premise: Excessive expansion of the money supply is inherently inflationary. And so one can still argue that all that central banks have to do is to keep […]

China: Do The Maths On 2014 GDP Growth

By John Richardson DO the maths and you should be able to assess what could happen to China’s GDP growth in 2014: The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences wrote last week in the China Daily: If the PBOC loosens monetary policy to push down borrowing rates, it will have to achieve total social financing – a broad […]

The US Patient Needs An Operation

By John Richardson THE Fed’s quantitative easing (QE) programme hasn’t worked because, to use an analogy, it has been equivalent to pumping drugs into a patient that needs major surgery in order to fully recover. A steady flow of drugs creates the illusion that the patient is fine, but once the drug supply is reduced […]

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