back in my map era, we’re ukrainemaxxing right now
Declarations of the imminent doom of Ukraine are a news megathread specialty, and this is not what I am doing here - mostly because I’m convinced that whenever we do so, the war extends another three months to spite us. Ukraine has been in an essentially apocalyptic crisis for over a year now after the failure of the 2023 counteroffensive, unable to make any substantial progress and resigned to merely being a persistent nuisance (and arms market!) as NATO fights to the last Ukrainian. In this context, predicting a terminal point is difficult, as things seem to always be going so badly that it’s hard to understand how and why they fight on. In every way, Ukraine is a truly shattered country, barely held together by the sheer combined force of Western hegemony. And that hegemony is weakening.
I therefore won’t be giving any predictions of a timeframe for a Ukrainian defeat, but the coming presidency of Trump is a big question mark for the conflict. Trump has talked about how he wishes for the war to end and for a deal to be made with Putin, but Trump also tends to change his mind on an issue at least three or four times before actually making a decision, simply adopting the position of who talked to him last. And, of course, his ability to end the war might be curtailed by a military-industrial complex (and various intelligence agencies) that want to keep the money flowing.
The alignment of the US election with the accelerating rate of Russian gains is pretty interesting, with talk of both escalation and de-escalation coinciding - the former from Biden, and the latter from Trump. Russia very recently performed perhaps the single largest aerial attack of Ukraine of the entire war, striking targets across the whole country with missiles and drones from various platforms. In response, the US is talking about allowing Ukraine to hit long-range targets in Russia (but the strategic value of this, at this point, seems pretty minimal).
Additionally, Russia has made genuine progress in terms of land acquisition. We aren’t talking about endless and meaningless battles over empty fields anymore. Some of the big Ukrainian strongholds that we’ve been spending the last couple years speculating over - Chasiv Yar, Kupiansk, Orikhiv - are now being approached and entered by Russian forces. The map is actually changing now, though it’s hard to tell as Ukraine is so goddamn big.
Attrition has finally paid off for Russia. An entire generation of Ukrainians has been fed into the meat grinder. Recovery will take, at minimum, decades - more realistically, the country might be permanently ruined, until that global communist revolution comes around at least. And they could have just made a fucking deal a month into the war.
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Israel-Palestine Conflict
Sources on the fighting in Palestine against Israel. In general, CW for footage of battles, explosions, dead people, and so on:
UNRWA reports on Israel’s destruction and siege of Gaza and the West Bank.
English-language Palestinian Marxist-Leninist twitter account. Alt here.
English-language twitter account that collates news.
Arab-language twitter account with videos and images of fighting.
English-language (with some Arab retweets) Twitter account based in Lebanon. - Telegram is @IbnRiad.
English-language Palestinian Twitter account which reports on news from the Resistance Axis. - Telegram is @EyesOnSouth.
English-language Twitter account in the same group as the previous two. - Telegram here.
English-language PalestineResist telegram channel.
More telegram channels here for those interested.
Russia-Ukraine Conflict
Examples of Ukrainian Nazis and fascists
Examples of racism/euro-centrism during the Russia-Ukraine conflict
Sources:
Defense Politics Asia’s youtube channel and their map. Their youtube channel has substantially diminished in quality but the map is still useful.
Moon of Alabama, which tends to have interesting analysis. Avoid the comment section.
Understanding War and the Saker: reactionary sources that have occasional insights on the war.
Alexander Mercouris, who does daily videos on the conflict. While he is a reactionary and surrounds himself with likeminded people, his daily update videos are relatively brainworm-free and good if you don’t want to follow Russian telegram channels to get news. He also co-hosts The Duran, which is more explicitly conservative, racist, sexist, transphobic, anti-communist, etc when guests are invited on, but is just about tolerable when it’s just the two of them if you want a little more analysis.
Simplicius, who publishes on Substack. Like others, his political analysis should be soundly ignored, but his knowledge of weaponry and military strategy is generally quite good.
On the ground: Patrick Lancaster, an independent and very good journalist reporting in the warzone on the separatists’ side.
Unedited videos of Russian/Ukrainian press conferences and speeches.
Pro-Russian Telegram Channels:
Again, CW for anti-LGBT and racist, sexist, etc speech, as well as combat footage.
https://t.me/aleksandr_skif ~ DPR’s former Defense Minister and Colonel in the DPR’s forces. Russian language.
https://t.me/Slavyangrad ~ A few different pro-Russian people gather frequent content for this channel (~100 posts per day), some socialist, but all socially reactionary. If you can only tolerate using one Russian telegram channel, I would recommend this one.
https://t.me/s/levigodman ~ Does daily update posts.
https://t.me/patricklancasternewstoday ~ Patrick Lancaster’s telegram channel.
https://t.me/gonzowarr ~ A big Russian commentator.
https://t.me/rybar ~ One of, if not the, biggest Russian telegram channels focussing on the war out there. Actually quite balanced, maybe even pessimistic about Russia. Produces interesting and useful maps.
https://t.me/epoddubny ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/boris_rozhin ~ Russian language.
https://t.me/mod_russia_en ~ Russian Ministry of Defense. Does daily, if rather bland updates on the number of Ukrainians killed, etc. The figures appear to be approximately accurate; if you want, reduce all numbers by 25% as a ‘propaganda tax’, if you don’t believe them. Does not cover everything, for obvious reasons, and virtually never details Russian losses.
https://t.me/UkraineHumanRightsAbuses ~ Pro-Russian, documents abuses that Ukraine commits.
Pro-Ukraine Telegram Channels:
Almost every Western media outlet.
https://discord.gg/projectowl ~ Pro-Ukrainian OSINT Discord.
https://t.me/ice_inii ~ Alleged Ukrainian account with a rather cynical take on the entire thing.
(continued)
What is the role of US treasuries post-1971?
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However, after 1971 the US has abandoned the Bretton Woods (Michael Hudson calls this the superimperialism phase) and the dollar is now a fiat currency with a floating exchange rate. It is no longer pegged to anything, and there is nothing to defend. As such, the government cannot go default from overspending.
So, then, what is the role of US treasury post-1971 where the US dollar is now a fiat currency?
While technically the US government no longer need to issue bonds (debts) to “finance its spending” (more accurately, now that we have learned, to take money out of circulation), the US treasury as an institutional mechanism is still useful when serving as a drain for interbank reserves (to maintain the interest rate set by the federal government) and for the excess dollars spent overseas (Hudson’s superimperialism). In other words, the US treasury is simply serving as a drain or a “sponge” to soak up all the surplus dollars/reserves.
We will now look into each of these roles, because it is very important to get this into your head that the US treasury does NOT finance US government spending.
First, let’s look at how the US treasury helps maintain the target interest rate set by the central bank aka Federal Reserve in the US.
Have you ever taken a check to a bank and deposit it into your account? How does this “transfer of money” work, especially if the payer has an account from a different bank? Does the payer bank ships its money to the recipient bank?
The answer is no, they simply run up and down the numbers in their reserve accounts held at the central bank (Federal Reserve in the US). All commercial banks have special reserve accounts at the central bank and this is a very important part of the banking system to ensure that millions and millions of transactions taking place every day can be rapidly validated and cleared. Without such a system in place, there is no way for the government to monitor and validate billions of dollars worth of transactions that occur every single minute across the entire world, and without which some banks will very quickly run out of money when large transactions take place! Imagine what chaos that would be.
Every commercial bank is required by law to maintain a minimum (and positive) daily reserve (although technically they are only checked over the weeks or through averages over time, not every single day). This means that at the end of every day, some banks will have a surplus (more) of the minimum required reserve in their account (maybe because more checks transferred more money to their banks) and some banks will have a deficit (less) of the minimum reserve required (maybe because a lot of withdrawals took place in their banks).
In any case, the banks that do not meet the minimum reserve requirement will have to fill up that reserve account, and banks that have a surplus of reserve will be looking to lend them out (because every single excess dollar is dead money and banks really do not want to carry any dead money that does not bring any profit!)
Of course, because the central bank (Federal Reserve) will never run out of money, the commercial banks running low on reserves can always borrow from the central bank to fill them up. However, to discourage such persistent behavior of commercial banks keep running out of reserves, the central bank typically charges a penalty rate every time a commercial bank asks to draw from this discount lending (this is known as the “discount window” in technical terms).
As such, commercial banks would typically avoid borrowing directly from the central bank, and instead borrow from the interbank market that occurs within the central bank (the Fed fund market). This is where the banks with surplus reserves will be looking to lend out their extra reserves to the banks that need them. However, because of competition, and every bank really really does not want to hold even a single extra dollar above their minimum requirement for reserve balance because it doesn’t bring any profit, this competition to lend out their reserves will very quickly drive the interest rate down to 0%, and this is a problem for the central bank whose mission is to target a particular interest rate.
Let’s say the central bank (Federal Reserve) wants to target a 2% interest rate, and they want to prevent the interest rate being driven down to 0% in the Fed fund market, so here the Federal Reserve can sell government-backed securities (US treasuries) at a specific rate (say 2%) to set the minimum price of borrowing, and thus stopping the competition from driving the market interest rate down to 0%. Commercial banks with surplus reserves will now prefer to lend to the government (2% interest) than to compete in the interbank market which is being driven down to 0%. Thus, simply by selling US treasuries at a certain price, the Federal Reserve can maintain its interest rate target and ensures that no bank will lend below 2% among each other.
In other words, the US treasuries act as a drain that soaks up the excess reserves that are flowing in the Fed fund market while allowing it to target a particular interest rate.
Now, there is another role for the US treasuries that Michael Hudson described in Super-imperialism, which is to act as a vehicle/drain to soak up excess dollars that the US empire has spent overseas. Because the US federal regulations prohibit foreign governments and entities from purchasing critical assets, most net exporter economies who sold their goods and services will end up with surplus dollars (after spending their trade revenues to import whatever they need in dollars). Where else could all these dollars go? Nowhere except US treasuries because that’s where you can at least earn some interests.
This is also the reason why China has largely stopped buying US treasuries since 2013 and started to lend out their dollar revenues in the Belt and Road Initiative, because they have realized that they were simply accumulating junk papers after selling actual goods and services made using Chinese labor and resources to America. At least with BRI, you are gaining some diplomacy benefits by helping the developing countries build their infrastructures.
But the fundamental problem remains the same: this simply kicks the can down the road and the BRI countries now have to earn dollars to pay back their Chinese creditors. And this is part of the reason why all these talks about China accumulating more dollars make no sense at all.
To conclude, the US treasuries (government debt) do NOT finance US government spending, and it doesn’t matter even if nobody buys US treasuries since it only functions as a drain for the surplus dollars.
The misconceptions about it persist because many people are still thinking in gold standard/Bretton Woods terms. This works neatly into the neoliberal narrative that the US has run into too much deficits and that austerity is needed to make sure that “our country will not be owned by China and our children won’t have to pay back the debt we are accumulating.”
The US government (or any government with monetary sovereignty) is thus not constrained by such spending rules. The power of fiat currency backed by the state has been discovered many times (e.g. greenbacks during the US Civil War, Beihai currency issued by the CPC Beihai Bank in Shandong during the war against Japanese and KMT invented by the legendary Marxist economist Xue Muqiao), but the first known case of this usage in peacetime was Stalin’s war communism, 40 years before the US independently discovered it!
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What can a $100 billion dollar-denominated bond issued by China do?
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We now answer the question based on the wild extrapolation that somehow, this $2 billion dollar-denominated bond, if being scaled up to $100 billion dollar, will somehow wreck the US financial system.
Let’s have some perspective: the $780 billion US treasuries currently owned by China comprise about 2.7% of the total treasuries, or ~9% of all treasuries held by foreign owners, amidst a gigantic $27 trillion US treasury.
Even if China sells off its entire reserve, it would barely make a dent to the US treasury market, let alone a $100 billion bond. This is pure scaremongering tactics used especially by the Republicans to make the American people fear about a foreign threat coming to take away their life savings.
What China can do, however, is to strategically use those dollar reserves to pay back Africa’s $700 billion dollar debt, and quickly flush the region with yuan (the institutions need to be well prepared in advance, of course), and that would be a real challenge to the US hegemony in the region and tip the balance of US monetary imperialism by allowing African nations to escape the US debt trap.
However, if China had wanted to do that, they can simply do it directly. All the fantastical imagination about how China issues more dollar bonds (which effective dollarizes the world) and accumulate more dollar surplus (which would require someone or some countries to sell more shit to America in order to earn the dollars to buy the China-issued bonds) so that China can somehow use those money to help the BRI countries pay back their dollar debt (which are mostly owed to private creditors including many Chinese creditors) is quite preposterous if you think about it.
Remember that the US can pump out dollars like opening a tap, while China and the rest of the world have to earn those dollars with real labor and resources. You are already at a huge disadvantage if you try to play the dollar game. China cannot control the dollar in the same way that the US cannot control the yuan. Monetary sovereignty confers the currency-issuing government with a lot of power to perform their tasks.
It’s my understanding that treasury rates are set at auction, so these rates can be driven by demand (and not just internally as bidding is done by outside governments). The easier way to affect interbank lending is through interest on excess reserves - https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/reserve-balances.htm
This very transparently sets a floor while discount window rates sets the cap on interbank lending, and of course feeds back in to the treasury auction results as banks will allocate excess reserves to treasuries if they are paying substantially more than the interbank/fed IOER rates
IORB is a relatively recent tool (since 2008 because the Fed bought so much of the treasury securities since the financial crisis) but for a long time since the US abandoned the Bretton Woods, the interest rate was set mostly by the Federal Reserve selling treasuries in the interbank market.
What this means is that US treasuries are even more useless these days (in terms of having an actual function on the banking operations). At this point, the US government selling treasuries is a choice (they enrich the rich people, let’s put it bluntly).
As a general note, there are plenty of instruments that the government and the central bank use to manipulate the flow of currencies, but getting into each one of those only adds confusion to the lay audience wanting to understand how the system works on a fundamental level (which remains unchanged in its principles).
yep agreed, I really appreciate your posts and write ups. I’m like 5% through superimperialism
(continued pt.3)
What is the intent behind China issuing dollar-denominated bond in Saudi Arabia? Can it really help Belt and Road countries pay back their dollar debt?
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The answer is so ridiculously simple that I don’t even know why there are so many mental gymnastics involved: the Saudis don’t want to buy the bonds in yuan, they want to pay in dollars (because they have a shit ton of those), and so China obliged because they want to build a closer business relationship with Saudi Arabia who supplies them with oil.
Of course, any investor can buy those bonds, but the sentiment remains the same: the Middle East is not going to be yuanized for sure.
The goal of Saudi Arabia is to dollarize the BRICS countries (in this case, the Middle East), not to help them de-dollarize. There is simply no incentive for Saudi Arabia to do so, and China also benefits from a dollarized world since they have committed to a net exporter status for the longer term, and so they would prefer others not to save in yuan (rather, they want people to use yuan to import stuff from China, not as a saving instrument like the dollar).
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I hope this very long post has been educational to those who are interested in learning. There are so many misinformation around the internet these days, and it is easy to fall into their narratives (especially since I am seeing more “multipolar grifters” taking advantage of the anti-imperialist sentiment to promote gold and crypto by scaring people into thinking that their dollar savings will be worthless because the US dollar is going to collapse anytime soon).
Learning about how the system works from a materialist and Marxist perspective can at least shield us from these propaganda that only serve to strengthen right wing neoliberal ideology, and the unfortunate fact that many on the left has subscribed to and continue to believe in such nonsense that only harms our cause.
Entirely on agreement and on your last point I’d like to add a bit more about China and Saudi Arabia from my other take here
KSA is moving away from oil.
SA is serious about their “Vision 2030” project and Chinese investment seems key to that. Saudi wealth fund signs $50 bln of deals with Chinese financial firms
Better yet, it is working for them.
Saudi Arabia’s non-oil activities hit a historic 50% share of the country’s real GDP in 2023, the highest level on record, according to an analysis of the General Authority for Statistics data by the Ministry of Economy and Planning.
China ready to work closely with Saudi Arabia, advancing together on path of development: Premier Li
I mentioned earlier my first reaction was its no surprise China is making moves to help Saudi become a financial hub, Goldman Sachs literaly last month as the first Wall St firm to open offices in Rydiah.
I speculate this will be where CN vs US battle takes place for the future of the ME. For KSA this is already working for them.
Here is why I think China-KSA relations is probably the underlying reason for this move and not some grand dollar plan.
-China wants to secure good relations with SA in case Iran-Israel happens and in case someone starts targeting Chinese vessels with oil going from Saudi. Turn your head away now: Chinese envoy reiterates call for Houthis to respect rights of navigation in Red Sea
-KSA is serious about peak-oil and they want a path out if it. KSA understands the petrodollar is dead due to climate change anyway or the inevitable wars. KSA is securing investments from both sides and this is probably where CN wants to compete for influence.Remember it was the US that pushed CN away from Israel as CN influence grew threw BRI investments last decade e.g Haifa port, Israel IT etc. It could well be just China doing the same thing again in KSA.
-KSA got a massive advantage over Russia or Iran when competing over Chinese demand: US sanctions against RU/Iran. It means KSA can get, as they are already, billions worth of tech and industrial dials not available to either Ru/Iran. This benefits China as well as KSA becomes even more dependent on Chinese investments.
GOOD POST!
I appreciate the effort post. There are a few things that I would like to question.
RE 1,2 The purpose of China’s bond issuance is to attack the ability of the US to spend dollars by decreasing the supply dollars available to the US government.
As you said correctly this is nonsense, the purpose of an American Bond is to remove excess dollars from circulation and to prop up the value of the of the US dollar.
This however is not the purpose of a Chinese issued dollar denominated bond. For the Chinese there is no incentive for them to maintain the value of the US dollar by not spending it. For them a bond is a short against the American dollar. The less valuable the dollar is the less valuable the interest they have to pay on the bond is.
Thus the avenue of attack is on the US is an attack on their currency like the 1997 Asian Financial crisis. The Chinese bonds would deprive the US an avenue to soak up dollars in circulation and cause their currency to devalue. Addressing point 2, how much of an effect can they have. The extent they are able to do this depends not on their dollar reserve but other dollar holders willingness to buy their bond.
While dedollarization is necessary to weaken US hegemony, it is not something that China can achieve unilaterally. While paying off the debts of other nations may allow them the material conditions to dedollarize, China would have to bet that they have the productive/ideological forces to do so, which they might not. If they were to lose this bet, this would mean they have lost their dollar reserve and their ability to do this at a more ripe time, which had taken them decades to build.
Chinese policy making has historically been risk adverse. Expectations that they take drastic actions as opposed to laying foundations are unrealistic. For China laying foundations means weakening the US Dollar, increasing the productive forces in prospective nations and building a shared community for a multipolar world.
You are correct that those were not China’s intentions.
It should be noted that the US literally printed $2 trillion during Covid as stimulus as if nothing happened.
There has been a lot of narrative about how the Covid stimulus was causing the inflation, but this is a right wing propaganda aimed to disparage government spending on social programs. As Michael Hudson and others had pointed out, it was a supply-side inflation caused by energy price inflation (due to sanctions against Russia), supply chain disruption (caused by Covid lockdowns the exacerbated by the Russia-Ukraine war) and monopolists price gouging. Consumer-side inflation can happen only when the economy has full employment and people have so much money to spend that they drive the prices up.
So, no, it doesn’t matter whether China issues a $2 billion or $200 billion bonds. In fact, the US is already on its course to reverse the flow of dollar after sucking in so much international capital from the past two years of 5% rate hike. It’s time to flood the world with dollars again if they want the countries to regain the dependence of those countries again.
What the world needs is to use the opportunity to de-dollarize while the dollars fled their countries, not entrenching further into the system where one side controls the tap that can pump out countless bottles of water while the rest trades the water bottles among themselves.
Thanks for the quick response.
I don’t disagree that dedollarization is a necessity, I do disagree that this does nothing towards that end.
I tried to be precise in the language I used to make a distinction between inflation and the value of currency. While the two are correlated, that correlation is not exact, if they were purchasing power parity would not be a thing and we could be able to directly compare economies using nominal gdp.
While the forces that drive inflation are relevant for Americans, the forces that drive currency exchange are what is relevant for the rest of the world. I brought up the Asian Financial Crisis, because I felt that was the closest analogy to the effect of these actions would be. While the US would may have mechanisms to contain the fallout it would not be without consequence.
Dedollarization is difficult. There is groundwork that needs to be laid and it will not be in a single step nor in a single agreement. For those of us who look at this action and see promise; it is because this moves ultimately signals that the Chinese are committed to a long term devaluation of the US dollar. Short term yes there are more dollars floating around, but the move long term makes the move away from the dollar more palatable to countries beyond those who are already committed.
I really appreciate you taking the time to write this out. I was especially pleased with your explanations of treasuries/taxes in regards to floating exchange currencies. This concept is one that a lot of my learners struggle with, because we are so deeply engrained with ideas that tax dollars pay for services. I’ve made it a point to include simple economics in my curriculum, but this particular topic is one that I find learners need to continually relearn; they seem to have gotten it but then a few weeks later whatever articles they’ve read in the interim seems to have reset their understanding.
nice posting. thank you.
Thank you for your patience and wisdom
Read all these posts in Michael Hudson’s voice jsyk