The Debtors Rule

From Bloomberg….

Japan’s exports plunged 45.7 percent in January from a year earlier, resulting in a record trade deficit, as recessions in the U.S. and Europe smothered demand for the country’s cars and electronics.

The shortfall widened to 952.6 billion yen ($9.9 billion), the biggest since 1980, the earliest year for which there is comparable data, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo. The drop in shipments abroad eclipsed a record 35 percent decline set the previous month.

A nation that used to finance the US is now having to sell assets to finance itself.

From the Telegraph….

The cost of bankruptcy protection on German debt has reached an all-time high on spill-over from the financial crisis in Eastern Europe and mounting concerns about the stability of Germany’s banking system.

People are becoming more wary about lending to the German government. Used to be that the thought of Germany defaulting was unthinkable.

It use to be said that the Debtor was the slave to the Lender. But nowadays it is reversed. As Gregor says….

Collectively, the debtors are in control. Not the creditors. This is why the the Creditors, not the Debtors, will be making most of the concessions in the years ahead. Whether the US public debt is inflated away, rescheduled, or repudiated–or some combination of all three–it doesn’t matter much. The process is already underway.

He is speaking of the domestic US market, but it is just as true world wide.

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