here's a snip from suddendebt, posted in another thread:
http://itulip.com/forums/showthread....9015#post19015
in another post, grg55 noted the high energy input into industrial agirculture, and the suddendebt post includes data positing a price cascade about to drive food prices still sharply higher. meanwhile, food is about 40% of the chinese cost of living. simultaneously, blue ear disease [i am not making this up] has decimated chinese swine herds, and pushed up the price of pork, a substantial component of the chinese diet.
so i'd like to open a discussion about what people think is going to happen in china over the next 2 years. i choose that time frame because it's long enough for big things to happen, and close enough that we might be able to make out some shapes in the fog.
so, chinese recession? will energy prices stay up because of a weakened dollar, or drop because of reduced global demand? and what will food prices do, and how might chinese recession or slowdown interact with food prices and produce political effects? just domestic political effects or international? will the supposed shakiness of the chinese banking system factor into this process?
i'm full of questions but have no answers. however, i think a discussion here might reveal some collective wisdom, or at least a glimmer of illumination.
Originally posted by suddendebt
in another post, grg55 noted the high energy input into industrial agirculture, and the suddendebt post includes data positing a price cascade about to drive food prices still sharply higher. meanwhile, food is about 40% of the chinese cost of living. simultaneously, blue ear disease [i am not making this up] has decimated chinese swine herds, and pushed up the price of pork, a substantial component of the chinese diet.
so i'd like to open a discussion about what people think is going to happen in china over the next 2 years. i choose that time frame because it's long enough for big things to happen, and close enough that we might be able to make out some shapes in the fog.
so, chinese recession? will energy prices stay up because of a weakened dollar, or drop because of reduced global demand? and what will food prices do, and how might chinese recession or slowdown interact with food prices and produce political effects? just domestic political effects or international? will the supposed shakiness of the chinese banking system factor into this process?
i'm full of questions but have no answers. however, i think a discussion here might reveal some collective wisdom, or at least a glimmer of illumination.
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