Very interesting, Keith, but I'm not in agreement on a few points.  One is one 
the status of Obama.  I doubt very much that he doesn't know what's going on.  
It's just that, given the composition of Congress, there's not much he can do 
about it, so thank God that he has Geithner and Bernanke to at least try to do 
something.  I'm also rather doubtful that transnational corporations would step 
in and become, essentially, a global government and distribution system when 
the crash comes, if indeed it will be as severe as you suggest.  I just don't 
see them doing it and I don't see governments and international agencies 
sinking to that level of incapacity.  And, as well, I disagree on the emergence 
of a global currency.  It would require the establishment of a global fiscal 
system and I don't see it happening, not after the experience we've had with 
the Euro.

Ed
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Keith Hudson 
  To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, ,EDUCATION 
  Sent: Wednesday, September 28, 2011 4:03 AM
  Subject: [Futurework] How might the Crash be managed?


  At a time when the Western world is poised at the edge of disaster and should 
be trying to heal its broken currency system, we wake up this morning to find 
that the stress of it all is causing at least four bitter quarrels within and 
between the major nations (and maybe a fifth one that's still being kept under 
wraps):

  1. German Finance Minister Schauble is telling US Treasury Secretary Geithner 
to mend America's own economic problems before interfering with Eurozone's.

  2. Chancellor Merkel's Coalition government in Germany faces defeat. Several 
of her own party are threatening to resign over the matter of the proposed Euro 
backstop fund.

  3. President Sarkozy has lost his majority in the French Senate and thus his 
hitherto credibility in speaking for France or the Eurozone.

  4. In Italy, Prime Minister Berlusconi and his Finance Minister Tremonti are 
at dagger-point as to what austerity measures should be adopted -- and, indeed, 
which of them should keep his job.

  And what is the fifth one?

  5. It is being rumoured in blogland that, in America, President Obama has so 
little grasp of America's economic situation that the country is really being 
led by Treasury Secretary Geithner and the Fed Chairman Bernanke (both, of 
course, unelected).

  So what will happen if and when the Crash comes?  My guess is that, 
initially, the politicians will make themselves scarce. The only example that 
comes to my mind is the chaos that occurred in 1972 when the oil monopoly 
countries (OPEC) suddenly reduced supplies and simultaneously raised the price 
four times. In England there was an immediate need for drastic petrol and 
diesel rationing. This was when our civil service should have moved smoothly 
into action. But it didn't. It didn't have the knowledge of how our fuel system 
actually operated. What happened was that the top people at British Petroleum 
invited the top people from the other three or four major oil corporations to 
their penthouse offices, together with top government officials as note-takers. 
Between them, the majors organized an emergency system and the civil servants 
then hurried away to carry out their end of it. 

  If the present dollar-euro predicament turns into a major Crash  -- as many 
knowledgeable spokespeople (including big investors) are forecasting -- which 
would inevitably involve China and much of the rest of the world, it will be 
devastating to billions of people within days or weeks as supply lines start to 
seize up.  What will happen in my view is that the major transnational 
corporations, ranging from food production and supply through to energy through 
to communications will hasten to assume command of an emergency procedure. 
Maybe a score or so of the very largest would be involved in a first phase 
whereby they'd divide into crucial economic sectors and then other smaller 
corporations would be invited in as infills, and then supplier businesses and 
so on. By this time I'm assuming that the existing national currency systems 
within and between governments would be in great danger of breaking down. To 
keep at least a rudimentary economic system going initially and prevent their 
customers actually starving, the corporations would have to devise a brand new 
rationing system -- namely money -- for use between themselves. Otherwise, 
national currencies would be so haywire that they couldn't operate. And then, 
of course, the corporation would have to extend it to their billions of vital 
customers. (And, of course, some of them own the biggest printing presses in 
the world, so this would be no problem.)

  By this time, the various national civil services (with politicians trailing 
behind them when it become safe) would start to integrate with the 
corporations' procedures just as mentioned above during the '72 Oil Crisis. 
Some might think that the corporations would want to exclude them in order to 
increase their economic power as normality returned. But that's paranoiac. Why 
should they? This would entail an entirely different ball game of infinitely 
greater stress and complexity than their own operations. Besides they, quite as 
much as the least individual in any civilization, still need an objective 
system of laws and justice and they need secular governments for this. 

  But if, in fact, transnational corporations had managed to devise an 
emergency money system, then they are going to leave one residue behind them.  
The emergency system is going to have to persist for a long time to come for at 
least months, if not years, even if, for reasons of amour propre, civil 
servants and politicians begin reviving their own currencies in parallel in 
order to get their own systems into gear again and to raise taxes.  A rate of 
exchange would arise between each of the 200-odd national currencies and the 
emergency world currency.  America, presumably still viable (after all, it has 
numerous shale gas basins!), would have to give up its pretensions of the 
dollar remaining as the predominant world reserve currency. It (and the newly 
split-up European countries) would have to agree with what China, Russia, 
India, Brazil and other emergent countries have been calling for for years. The 
corporations' emergency world currency could at least be symbolic, if not 
exactly a prototype, of what is needed.

  There's hope for us yet. But, as always in human affairs, it takes a crisis 
to bring about major change. Thus it might need a world-wide economic crash to 
bring about a world-wide currency that can serve as the stable reference for 
any other currencies that different cultures would still like to retain.

  Keith Hudson, Saltford, England http://allisstatus.wordpress.com/2011/09/
    



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