lunes, 14 de marzo de 2022

 


QUE PIENSAN LOS BILLONARIOS FUNCIONALISTAS D LA GUERRA EN UKRAINE?

BILLIONAIRE RAY DALIO s TWO LOOMING CONCERNS ABOUT UKRAINE

https://www.marketwatch.com › ... › Key Words

 

Key search: Ray Dalio on war in Ukraine

Key answer: Dalio The world is going to change ‘in shocking ways’ in the next five years

NOTE: This article was written 1 day after RU send troops to stop NATO crimes against Donetsk & Lugansk citizens. As usual in the West nothing is said on NATO atrocities. If we adopt Dahrendorf frame on Sociology of Regulation (functionalism) vs Sociology of Radical Change the difference is clear:

Functionalism                vs                    Radical Change

Defend Status quo                                Defend radical change

Social order                                              Structural Conflict

Consensus                                                Modes of domination

Integration & cohesion                       Contradiction

Solidarity                                                  Emancipation

Person satisfaction: greet                  Public satisfaction; Public need

Actuality (today matters)                   Potentiality (future matters)

Capitalism is defended                       Labor, coops & socialism defended

=================                         ===============

According to this frame Ray Dalio Is a functional pro=capitalism, though accept contrad

….

Mar 5, 2022 — Ray Dalio said he believes that Russia's invasion of Ukraine is a serious

 threat to the established postwar world order .

By  

Jonathan Burton

Will the Russia-Ukraine war draw in NATO, and how will China respond?

Ray Dalio said he believes that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is a serious threat to the established postwar world order and leaves him with two worrisome concerns: Will this war spread beyond Ukraine to involve NATO, and how will China respond?

Dalio is the founder, co-chief investment officer and chairman of Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest hedge-fund firm, and author of “ The Changing World Order: Why Nations Succeed and Fail,” which addresses the often-extreme shifts that reshape global politics and financial markets time and again throughout history.

In a commentary posted on LinkedIn late Tuesday, Dalio wrote that the economic sanctions Europe and the U.S. have imposed on Russia and its financial system will take a heavy toll on the Russian economy, at minimal cost to NATO countries. The sanctions could even bring political change at the top to Russia, he added.

[ FACT: oppression & explosive inequality bring REV and Social REV bring radical change ]

[ FACT 2: Sun Tzu ‘If you can’t defeat your enemy better run. Don’t clame compassi/hate ]

 

“The economic pain that Russians will feel will be so bad that it would be surprising if there wasn’t big internal opposition to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s policies that could threaten or topple his regime.”

[ IF RU-CH win war in Ukraine, then hit Poland’ nuke silo by-by Nato, then bomb EU Banks]

[ Econ sanctions exist if don’t affect the creator: Inflation is destroying EU & Gvt legitimac]

 

Russia’s response to the economic sanctions is uncertain and unpredictable, but could be consequential, Dalio observed. “These circumstances highlight the obvious questions of

a) whether Putin will respond by upping the ante by giving NATO countries something big to lose, what that will be, and how it will be handled, or

b) whether he can successfully backpedal to have some sort of compromise (unlikely). Putin giving NATO countries something big to lose (e.g., in a nuclear confrontation) would be worrisome.”

CHINA’S ROLE  

A second major unknown is the level of support China gives for Russia to weather the sanctions. Wrote Dalio: “It would not have been logical for Putin to have taken the path he took alone, and it is well known that China and Russia are very aligned in many ways and that can be very helpful in minimizing the effects of the sanctions.”

Dalio noted that China’s yuan-based payments system could be a pathway for Russia to conduct international trade now that major Russian banks have been shut out of the global Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) system. But he said he believes it’s more likely that China would not help Russia in this way. “In any case,” Dalio wrote, “I’m waiting to see what China will do because that will have a big effect on what the rapidly changing world order will soon look like.”

Dalio went on in his commentary to address the possibility that the Russia-Ukraine conflict and the economic sanctions could ignite a “hot” war involving NATO countries. He observes that military wars are typically preceded by economic wars that include asset freezes, blocks to capital markets access, and embargoes — as Western powers have inflicted on Russia since its invasion of neighboring Ukraine began last week.

Said Dalio: “The magnitudes of increases and levels of these are a classic red flag that we should worry about a hot war between the major powers. At this moment we haven’t yet seen a retaliation by Russia, though we are hearing nuclear and other threats. So it appears that we are in the ‘at the brink’ part of the cycle that is just after the big intensification of the economic war attacks and just before the military hot war.”

‘Odds favor not getting into a hot war between Russia and NATO countries for the foreseeable future. At the same time I believe that they aren’t low enough for me to not consider and protect myself against the possibility.’

Dalio emphasized that he was not stating the inevitable: “Odds favor not getting into a hot war between Russia and NATO countries for the foreseeable future,” he wrote. “At the same time I believe that they aren’t low enough for me to not consider and protect myself against the possibility.”

GOLD AND OTHER SAFE HAVENS

The possibility of a broader war in Europe casts a shadow on traditionally safe investments and assets, Dalio wrote. “When hot wars happen,” he explained, “classically it pays to sell out of debt and buy gold because wars are financed by borrowing and printing money, which devalues debt and money, and because there is a justifiable reluctance to accept credit.” He reiterated a key point made in “Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order,” which explores the rise and fall of great empires, ancient and modern: “Gold — or, in some cases, silver or barter — was the coin of the realm” during wartime.

More: Ray Dalio warns Fed’s hands are tied and higher U.S. inflation is sticking around. Democracy, maybe not.

Also read: Billionaire investor Ray Dalio on capitalism’s crisis: The world is going to change ‘in shocking ways’ in the next five years

Source:  https://www.marketwatch.com/story/billionaire-investor-ray-dalio-has-two-big-concerns-about-russia-ukraine-and-nato-that-affects-investors-and-the-world-11646187048

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