Global Financial Assets Lost $50 Trillion Last Year, ADB Says 

 

why ?

what are the causes ?

WHEN THERE ARE THIEVES,ROBBERS, IN THE HIGHER PLACES, IN EACH COUNTRY

AMONG THE LEADERS OF THE FINANCIALS INSTITUTIONS IN NEW YORK,AT WALL 
STREET,LONDON, BERLIN,PARIS,SWITZERLAND,TOKYO, ETC.....

 

 

 

BOOK " GIAI PHONG " by T Terzani. 
It describes a Vietnamese as THIEF, A LIAR, A KILLER, A DECEIVER , a sleeper 
.....

 




Radio Free Asia 
By San Suwit
5th March, 2009
Reported in English by Khmerization

Mr. Cheam Yeap(vietnamese ) (pictured), MP from the ruling Cambodian People's 
Party (CPP), 
  

WHAT RIGHTS DO THESE VIETNAMESE INVADERS HAVE TO RUN CAMBODIA IN VIOLATION OF 
THE 10 UN RESOLUTION?

IT WAS CONDEMNED AT THE UNITED NATIONS. 
10 UN RESOLUTIONS CALLING VIETNAM TO CEASE HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA ARE NOT 
RESPECTED FROM 1979-2009.
 
116 UN MEMBER COUNTRIES  calling for a withdrawal of Vietnamese forces from 
Cambodia.

All these Vietnamese invaders have no rights to settle in Cambodia, they must 
return home to Vietnam.
 
Bury
READING MATERIAL
By Shamim Adam

March 9 (Bloomberg) -- The value of global financial assets including stocks, 
bonds and currencies probably fell by more than $50 trillion in 2008, 
equivalent to a year of world gross domestic product, according to an Asian 
Development Bank report. 

Asia excluding Japan probably lost about $9.6 trillion, while the Latin 
American region saw the value of financial assets drop by about $2.1 trillion, 
said Claudio Loser, a former International Monetary Fund director and the 
author of the report that was commissioned by the ADB. The report didn’t give a 
breakdown of asset declines in other regions. 

“The loss of financial wealth is enormous, and the consequences for the 
economies of the world will unfortunately commensurate,” said Loser, now the 
Latin American president of strategic advisory firm Centennial Group Inc.. 
“There are serious economic and political stumbling blocks that may well cause 
the recovery to be costly and slow to consolidate.” 

Some of the world’s biggest financial companies including Lehman Brothers 
Holdings Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co. have collapsed as banks and other 
financial institutions reported almost $1.2 trillion of losses and writedowns 
since the start of 2007. Global stock markets lost about $28.7 trillion in 
2008, and another $6.6 trillion has been wiped from the value of world equities 
in 2009. 

“Poor macroeconomic and regulatory policies allowed the global economy to 
exceed its capacity to grow and contributed to a buildup in imbalances across 
asset and commodity markets,” Loser said. “The previous sense of strength and 
invulnerability is now gone.” 

Global Recession 

The global economy is likely to shrink for the first time since World War II, 
and trade will decline by the most in 80 years, the World Bank said yesterday. 
Its assessment is more pessimistic than an IMF report in January predicting 0.5 
percent global growth this year. 

Developing nations will bear the brunt of the contraction and they will face a 
shortfall of between $270 billion and $700 billion to pay for imports and 
service debts, the Washington- based World Bank said. 

“This crisis is the first truly universal one in the history of humanity,” 
former IMF Managing Director Michel Camdessus said at an ADB forum in Manila 
today. “No country escapes from it. It has not yet bottomed out.” 

Growth in 2009 may drop by half in developing and emerging countries, and a 
recovery in the global economy may only begin late this year or in early 2010, 
Loser said. Developing nations, which mostly escaped the earlier effects of the 
credit crisis, are facing more problems as the downturn worsens, the report 
said. 

‘Mounting Difficulties’ 

“Emerging economies were initially able to absorb the initial impact of the 
crisis on account of the considerable progress in recent years in consolidating 
economic performance,” Loser said. “This group of countries is experiencing 
mounting difficulties. Policy makers will thus need to find a balance between 
economic stimulus and financial stability.” 

Asia is likely to recover with “vibrant” growth once the crisis recedes in 
2010, Manu Bhaskaran, the Singapore-based head of economic research at 
Centennial Group, said in a separate report for the ADB released today. South 
Asia’s growth prospects “remain good,” he said. 

“Asia is mainly suffering a cyclical slowdown because of problems in the 
developed economies, it is not suffering a structural economic breakdown,” 
Bhasakaran said. “There is no reason to think that the growth engines that have 
been unleashed in many parts of Asia are likely to weaken.” 

Capital Flows 

Net capital flows to emerging markets may fall to $165 billion this year, from 
$470 billion in 2008 and a record $930 billion in 2007, Loser said, citing 
estimates from the Institute for International Finance. Net flows to emerging 
Asian economies may drop by 80 percent from the peak in 2007, he said. 

Protectionist measures by countries to prevent a deeper fallout from the global 
downturn won’t work, Loser said. 

“There is no room for denial or populist policies,” Loser said. “Otherwise the 
crisis will become even deeper and harder to reverse.” 

To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at 
[email protected] 

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