Al Baqarah 2:11-12


Dan bila dikatakan kepada mereka: Janganlah kamu membuat kerusakan di muka
bumi, mereka menjawab: "Sesungguhnya kami orang-orang yang mengadakan
perbaikan."

Ingatlah, sesungguhnya *mereka itulah orang-orang yang membuat kerusakan*,
tetapi *mereka tidak sadar.*




Al Anfaal 8:73



Adapun orang-orang yang kafir, sebagian mereka menjadi pelindung bagi
sebagian yang lain. *Jika kamu* (hai para muslimin) *tidak melaksanakan apa
yang telah diperintahkan Allah* itu, niscaya *akan terjadi kekacauan di muka
bumi dan kerusakan yang besar.*


http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/aug/14/larry-elliott-global-financial-system?commentpage=all#start-of-comments

We've been warned: the system is ready to blow

Only a new way of managing the global economy can prevent more mayhem in the
markets and on the streets

   - Comments 
(140)<http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/aug/14/larry-elliott-global-financial-system#start-of-comments>


   -  [image: Larry Elliott]
   <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/larryelliott>
   -
      -  Larry Elliott <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/larryelliott>
      - guardian.co.uk <http://www.guardian.co.uk/>, Sunday 14 August 2011
      19.55 BST
      - Article
history<http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/aug/14/larry-elliott-global-financial-system?commentpage=all#history-link-box>
    [image: New York stock exchange]
   Traders work at the New York Stock Exchange on 9 August. Photograph: Stan
   Honda/AFP/Getty Images

   For the past two centuries and more, life in Britain has been governed by
   a simple concept: tomorrow will be better than today. Black August has given
   us a glimpse of a dystopia, one in which the financial markets buckle and
   the cities burn. Like Scrooge, we have been shown what might be to come
   unless we change our ways.

   There were glimmers of hope amid last week's despair. Neighbourhoods
   rallied round in the face of the looting. The Muslim community in Birmingham
   showed incredible dignity after three young men were mown down by a car and
   killed during the riots. It was chastening to see consumerism laid bare.
   *We have seen the future and we know it sucks.* All of which is cause for
   cautious optimism – provided the right lessons are drawn.

   Lesson number one is that the *financial and social causes are linked*.
   Lesson number two is that what links the *City banker and the looter is
   the lack of restraint, the absence of boundaries to bad
behaviour*.Lesson number three is that we ignore this at our peril.

   To understand *the mess we are in*, it's important to know how we got
   here. Today marks the 40th anniversary of Richard Nixon's announcement that
   America was suspending the convertibility of the
dollar<http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/dollar>into gold at $35 an
ounce. Speculative attacks on the dollar had begun in
   the late 1960s as concerns mounted over America's rising trade deficit and
   the cost of the Vietnam war. Other countries were increasingly reluctant to
   take dollars in payment and demanded gold instead. Nixon called time on the
   Bretton Woods system of fixed but adjustable exchange rates, under which
   countries could use capital controls in order to stimulate their economies
   without fear of a run on their currency. It was also an era in which
   protectionist measures were used quite liberally: Nixon announced on 15
   August 1971 that he was imposing a 10% tax on all imports into the US.

   Four decades on, it is hard not to feel nostalgia for the Bretton Woods
   system. Imperfect though it was, it acted as an anchor for the global
   economy <http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/global-economy> for more than
   a quarter of a century, and allowed individual countries to pursue full
   employment policies. It was a period devoid of systemic financial crises.

   *Utter mess*

   There have been big structural changes in the way the global economy has
   been managed since 1971, *none of them especially beneficial*. The fixed
   exchange rate system has been replaced by a hybrid system in which some
   currencies <http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/currencies> are pegged and
   others float. The currencies in the eurozone, for example, are fixed against
   each other, but the euro <http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/euro> floats
   against the dollar, the pound and the Swiss franc. The Hong Kong dollar is
   tied to the US dollar, while Beijing has operated a system under which the
   yuan is allowed to appreciate against the greenback but at a rate much
   slower than economic fundamentals would suggest.

   *The system is an utter mess*, particularly since *almost every country
   in the world is now seeking to manipulate its currency downwards* in
   order to make exports cheaper and imports dearer. This is clearly not
   possible. Sir Mervyn King noted last week that the solution to the crisis
   involved China and Germany reflating their economies so that debtor nations
   like the US and Britain could export more. Progress on that front has been
   painfully slow, and will remain so while the global currency system remains
   so dysfunctional. The solution is either a fully floating system under which
   countries stop manipulating their currencies or an attempt to recreate a new
   fixed exchange rate system using a basket of world currencies as its anchor.

   The break-up of the Bretton Woods system paved the way for the
   liberalisation of financial markets. This began in the 1970s and picked up
   speed in the 1980s. Exchange controls were lifted and formal restrictions on
   credit abandoned. Policymakers were left with only one blunt instrument to
   control the availability of credit: interest rates.

   For a while in the late 1980s, the easy availability of money provided
   the illusion of wealth but there was a shift from a debt-averse world where
   financial crises were virtually unknown to a debt-sodden world constantly
   teetering on the brink of banking armageddon.

   Currency markets lost their anchor in 1971 when the US suspended dollar
   convertibility. Over the years, financial markets have lost their moral
   anchor, engaging not just in reckless but fraudulent behaviour. According to
   the US economist James Galbraith, increased complexity was the cover for
   blatant and widespread wrongdoing.

   Looking back at the sub-prime mortgage scandal, in which millions of
   Americans were mis-sold home loans, Galbraith says there has been a complete
   breakdown in trust that is impairing the hopes of economic recovery.

   "There was a private vocabulary, well-known in the industry, covering
   these loans and related financial products: liars' loans, Ninja loans (the
   borrowers had no income, no job or assets), *neutron loans (loans that
   would explode, destroying the people but leaving the buildings intact)*,
   toxic waste (the residue of the securitisation process). I suggest that this
   tells you that *those who sold these products knew or suspected that
   their line of work was not 100% honest*. Think of the restaurant where
   the staff refers to the food as scum, sludge and sewage."

   Finally, there has been a big change in the way that the spoils of
   economic success have been divvied up. Back when Nixon was berating the
   speculators attacking the dollar peg, there was an implicit social contract
   under which the individual was guaranteed a job and a decent wage that rose
   as the economy grew. The fruits of growth were shared with employers, and
   taxes were recycled into schools, health care and pensions. In return,
   individuals obeyed the law and encouraged their children to do the same. The
   assumption was that each generation would have a better life than the last.

   *This implicit social contract has broken down*. Growth is less rapid
   than it was 40 years ago, and *the gains have disproportionately gone to
   companies and the very rich*. In the UK, *the professional middle
   classes, particularly in the southeast, are doing fine, but below them in
   the income scale are people who have become more dependent on debt as their
   real incomes have stagnated*. Next are the people on minimum wage jobs,
   which have to be topped up by tax credits so they can make ends meet. At the
   very bottom of the pile are those who are without work, many of them second
   and third generation unemployed.

   *Deep trouble*

   A crisis that has been four decades in the making will not be solved
   overnight. It will be difficult to recast the global monetary system to
   ensure that the next few years see gradual recovery rather than depression.
   Wall Street and the City will resist all attempts at clipping their wings.
   There is strong ideological resistance to the policies that make decent
   wages in a full employment economy feasible: capital controls, allowing
   strong trade unions, wage subsidies, and protectionism.

   But this is a fork in the road. History suggests there is no iron law of
   progress and there have been periods when things have got worse not better.
   Together, the global imbalances, the manic-depressive behaviour of stock
   markets <http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/stock-markets>, the venality
   of the financial sector, the growing gulf between rich and poor, the high
   levels of unemployment, the naked consumerism and the riots are telling us
   something.

   *This is a system in deep trouble and it is waiting to blow.*

   *[email protected]*

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