Let’s say the visuals are rather unfortunate.
Let’s say the visuals are rather unfortunate.
That coat is just pure Andor.
I've written an overview of the deindustrialisation discourse in Germany: the elite has been sleepwalking into crisis. The title exaggerates but what I do get at is that two decades of terrible macro policy set up German industry for China trade shock.
jacobin.com/2026/03/germ...
This asks for a more complete treatment and I will get a stack post next with more charts etc.
I've written an overview of the deindustrialisation discourse in Germany: the elite has been sleepwalking into crisis. The title exaggerates but what I do get at is that two decades of terrible macro policy set up German industry for China trade shock.
jacobin.com/2026/03/germ...
✍🏼
The tube’s flooring looks like it has ggplot’s viridis colour palette and I need to get a life
Made a chart (Re: EU-Mercosur-India trade deals).
Was struck by how small the share of exports with Japan is, but digging deeper, since the 2018 EU-JP Trade Agreement, bilateral total (goods and services) trade soared by 20%, albeit from low baseline. Lends credence to the 'much potential' take?
Made a chart (Re: EU-Mercosur-India trade deals).
Was struck by how small the share of exports with Japan is, but digging deeper, since the 2018 EU-JP Trade Agreement, bilateral total (goods and services) trade soared by 20%, albeit from low baseline. Lends credence to the 'much potential' take?
Cross posted:
Agree with Karthik that weaponising centrality in that domain is self-terminating.
*sigh*
dollar_smile.jpeg
The miserable thing about the dollar system is that developing countries get screwed on the way up (refinancing-, debt servicing- and import costs rise) and on the way down (lower value of their dollar-denominated sovereign debt means higher yields).
Any reason to repost “hurry, carry” <-> Hara Kiri
These USDJPY days must be field days for @rajakorman.bsky.social
I will tag gladly tag along wondering why I’m there!
And do you see your dependence on the fin sector as geopolitically liability. Obvs they feel they can’t actually pull these threads.
So this is famously opaque no? afaik know there isn’t a country-level breakdown or private vs public holding, and even less for entities by region. But my impression is that it’s mostly custodianship. But that wouldn’t change the legal case no? It’s just: are you willing to tank London as a haven
whole heartedly agree about this though. an absolutely necessary first step.
Nice dip into the rise of loneliness in China by @newlefteviews.bsky.social
jacobin.com/2026/01/chin...
For non-UK, what's more crucial for sovereignty and geopolitical leverage, especially regarding the holdings of US assets, is the creation of a deep market for joint liabilities for a global euro.
A great recent piece by the mighty @shahinvallee.bsky.social:
www.phenomenalworld.org/analysis/a-g...
I don't know but I think what's preventing them is quite clear: London's status as a safe haven for finance is key to the UK economies in their view (and true in the short-term).
A lot of this is custody for US assets owned by non-UK entities under UK jurisdiction. It doesn’t mean they cant be leveraged, but the UK would have diminish London’s status as safe haven for this sort of activity. (hahaha_yes_sickos.jpeg).
I’m just curious why they’ve risen so sharply—any ideas?
Great thread on central bank independence by DL. Worth your 2 minutes
Starmer is wrong to opt for suppliance on the basis that the UK has no leverage over the US. British holdings of Treasuries have ballooned and surpassed China's. European holdings overall are major.
The highest of praise, thanks M
Is China exceptional or just another case of industrial development?
A striking recent data point implies the answer might be: both. I argue that solo households are both a sign of great success and that China can't escape global 'dual economy' dynamics.
jacobin.com/2026/01/chin...