RE: virus: Re:Minimum wage

From: Blunderov (squooker@mweb.co.za)
Date: Thu Oct 30 2003 - 10:41:12 MST

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    [Blunderov]
    Bad omen for the minimum wage? See also

    http://auto.howstuffworks.com/hydrogen-economy.htm

    Best Regards

    http://www.mips1.net/mgp03.nsf/0/80256CE100291EEB42256CE6006F2609?OpenDo
    cument
    <q>
    TORONTO - Canada's most successful stock promoter and present chairman
    of Ivanhoe Mines, Robert Friedland, is investing heavily in China,
    Australia and South Africa on a hunch that those countries will benefit
    most from a "deflation boom".
    A deflation boom, says Friedland, is akin to previous periods of unusual
    prosperity underwritten by tremendous productivity gains - real wealth
    growth despite punishing price declines. Such events were seen in
    Australia from 1860-90; the United States from 1870-1913 and Japan from
    1950-73.

    China is Friedland's next candidate for a deflation boom, already at the
    right staging point with sustained, strong GDP growth and a stable, but
    proportionately more massive population than in countries that
    previously experienced deflationary booms.

    "The combined population of the US and Britain is less than China's
    under-eighteens, none of whom remember Chairman Mao," said an enthused
    Friedland, who also noted that English is now a universal subject at
    Chinese schools.

    "The West's production capacity is moving to China and there is nothing
    it can do about it. Germany is prolapsing; the Europeans haven't got the
    foggiest idea. The average German worker wants a 4-day week, a 9-week
    holiday and still make 40 bucks an hour; but Volkswagen makes the bulk
    of its money in Shanghai."

    Friedland is running his macro view on a double entry commodity ledger.
    On the "left hand side" are things China does not need like lead,
    magnesium, molybdenum, tin, zinc and steam coal. On the "right-hand
    side" are sea borne iron ore, platinum, alumina, copper, nickel,
    metallurgical coal, and gold.

    Guess which commodities Friedland is up to his eyeballs in? Ever the
    promoter.

    That said, Friedland is hardly alone in pushing China to the top of the
    miners' totem pole. Chicago investment manager Donald Coxe says: "China
    is becoming a price setter on a huge range of finished goods. At the
    same time it is a price taker for a wide range of commodities." There's
    that double entry reference again.

    Friedland is looking forward to a "majestic, long-term rollover for the
    US dollar."

    "The US dollar is toast because China is going to export awesome
    deflation. It is going to depress real wage rates in the West in a very
    serious way; will hurt unions and take down urban real estate in the
    United States and there's nothing that can be done about it." As an
    example, he cited the cost of structural steel which is ten times more
    expensive in the West - something has to give and he thinks it's the
    minimum union wage.

    In contrast, Canada's magnate thinks gold as a proxy for Chinese
    liquidity is a good investment along with Chinese urban real estate if
    you have a speculative bent. He also believes agriculture plays are
    important since China imports vast quantities of foodstuffs such as
    sugar, vegetable oils and coffee, whilst it is also a net consumer of
    natural resources like natural gas, lumber and pulp.

    "We are now in a period where we can divide the world into winners and
    losers. Commodities are the only rational haven," asserts Friedland.
    "Australia, South Africa, Canada, Mongolia and China are the winners.
    The challenged countries are the labour movements and US real estate."

    "Clearly Australia is a winner - the seaborne iron-ore trade is an
    incredible proxy on Chinese economic growth; they're using about 350
    pounds of steel per person per year, whereas South Korea is about 900
    pounds per person. If you adjust for South Korea then the delta is about
    600 million tonnes," said Friedland who calls Rio Tinto, Anglo American
    and BHP Billiton big beneficiaries of the projected boom.

    Unsurprisingly, Friedland is especially fond of Mongolia - where his big
    copper-gold bet is located - which he patronizes as "China's Canada."
    He's also particularly boosterish on South Africa because of its
    precious metals, especially the concentration of platinum group metals
    that will feature so prominently in the hydrogen economy.

    Before Friedland can reap his full reward from South Africa he must
    first address several problems with his bushveld property, including a
    somewhat rancorous dispute with Australian headquartered Pan Palladium.

    Even so, for most investors those are minor issues relative to
    Friedland's successes. There is a legion content to take his lead; how
    else could one interpret the constant references to the man's private
    jet.
    </q>

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