Nathan1992 wrote on Jan 3
rd, 2011 at 6:24pm:
I have only just registered for this particular site and the first thread that caught my eye was indeed this one, I'm not entirely aware of anyone here's economic background and I can assure you that mine isn't founded on 20 years of experience in the field. However I happen to live with a person whose experience does come from over 30 years in the field and I have had conversations with other highly qualified and revered business people, politicians and economists. These conversations at no point indicated a "Global Economic Downturn". At least not an ongoing one, yes we were all hit very hard by the American economic fiasco and yes the European Union probably won't recover but the real crisis wasn't a global downturn. That is to say that countries such as ours and most specifically China's economies didn't experience negative growth, merely a slowing of record growth back down to more sustainable levels. America won't ever be the economic superpower it once was, nor will the UK or anywhere else in Europe, Australia needs to diversify its' industry to encourage production over academic labor forces, and to relive the economic reliance on exports to China, should this happen, a global downturn could go on for 20 years and we would be fine, as it stands we have the materials and access to skills that are required of an independent nation, the only reason we continue to export is because it is more finacially appealing in the short term to invest in other nation's booms. What happens when China turns around and says "Sorry guys, we've built all the buildings we need, no more demand for steel", what do we do? All we can do is shave 10 or more percent off our GDP directly, not factoring in the circular flow of investment from the mining companies that are put out...
I'm sorry, Nathan, but I don't usually provide due reverence to many
Politicians, Economists or Business Leaders!
As you rightly point out, very few of them pointed to the downturn that started in 2007 and is still far from finished.
It is the very fact that they did not see the relevant factors and their ramafications, that allowed this event to start and they still haven't started to take the appropriate actions to fix the Global Economy, either in the short, medium or long term!
For background, you could look thru this thread, but there is also a lot of information in the Finance and Economics boards -http://www.ozpolitic.com/forum/YaBB.pl?board=economicsThat said, the following are the major Economic factors influencing the Global Economy -
1)
Demographicsa) Aging Now (Baby Boomers)
b) Slowing Population Growth Rate
c) Eventual Decline in Total Global Population (around 2040-2050)
2)
Peak EnergyOil now, but closely followed by other Fossil Fuels, such as Coal & Gas.
Peak Energy has already impacted the Global Economy in many ways, including higher Agricultural & Energy Costs and it is rising again, NOW!
3)
Climate ChangeWe are already seeing the effects of Climate Change impacting the Global Economy, via events such as the Queensland Floods, on issues such as Agriculture & Coal for example. Also last year, the Russian Heatwave, had a large impact on agriculture, particularly Wheat.
Have fun & welcome!Btw, sometimes it is better not to know that some things can not happen, as things have a habit of doing what people say is impossible!