Author Topic: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World  (Read 18487 times)

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #225 on: January 23, 2011, 12:27:06 PM »

won't happen..china will get  there before you ....and after us


MARS-500

Mars-500 is a multi-part ground-based experiment simulating a manned flight to Mars. The experiment's facility is located at the Russian Academy of Sciences' Institute of Biomedical Problems (IBMP) in Moscow, Russia. A total of 640 experiment days have been scheduled, divided into three stages.

Purposes of the experiment

The main purpose of stays in the experimental facility (105-day and 520 day mission) is:[7]
Organization of the activity of the crew and its communication with the ground-based control center regarding peculiarities typical for the Martian flight
Verification of the methods and means of control and monitoring of the habitat during lengthy crew stays in confined and pressurized conditions
Simulation of the activity of the crew on the surface of Mars and operations during the flight
Verification of the methods and means of control, diagnostics and forecast of the state of health and working capacity, improvement of means of providing of medical help and prophylaxis
Creation of reference-information system, providing activity of the crew, keeping and transfer of electronic information
Approbation of methods and autonomous means of psychological support, using fx. the Sociomapping method

 Nothing of this has ever even started somewhere else. Russia is step in front!

headhuntersix

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #226 on: January 23, 2011, 01:40:13 PM »
Russian army forgot to ask your valuable opinion!!!

I've driven the T-72...u idiots have this problem where the auto-loader loads a crew member at times....awsome!
L

Soul Crusher

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #227 on: January 23, 2011, 01:41:41 PM »
I've driven the T-72...u idiots have this problem where the auto-loader loads a crew member at times....awsome!

llnnnaaaooo

headhuntersix

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #228 on: January 23, 2011, 01:43:14 PM »
There was a time in the mid 90's through about 2002 where we flew the Mi-24's more the Russian military did. We bought tons of them after they collapsed.
L

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #229 on: January 23, 2011, 01:45:16 PM »
There was a time in the mid 90's through about 2002 where we flew the Mi-24's more the Russian military did. We bought tons of them after they collapsed.

For shits and giggles?

andreisdaman

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #230 on: January 23, 2011, 02:49:37 PM »
Russia will fall apart before the U.S.

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #231 on: January 24, 2011, 01:42:37 AM »
Russia will fall apart before the U.S.

 I love that video, Russia has always come back stronger!

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #232 on: January 25, 2011, 09:04:57 PM »
US President Barack Obama is giving his State of the Union Address, but what positive notes could he possibly make? Many US states lost more jobs this past month, unemployment is high and the US economy in shambles.

Joblessness rose in 20 of the States as more works were laid off. In only a mere 15 states did the unemployed population shrink, the remaining 15 states continue to stagnate, reported the US Department of Labor.

Many economists expect hiring to pick-up in 2011, but the overall unemployment rate is unlikely to change significantly. The report confirmed what many already knew, the US job market is in a dire condition.

Throughout the US there are over 1.4 million Americans who have been out of work for more than 99 weeks, according to the US Congressional Research Service. After 99 weeks, these people lose their government funded assistance, making a bad situation even worse.

The US economy may be recovering for the rich, but it appears to only be getting worse of the middle and poorer classes.

Karl Denninger, the editor of The Market Ticker, explained Obama needs to stop spending and encourage savings; however he is likely to call for greater spending through investment, infrastructure development and special projects.

“I don’t know how he thinks he’s going to fund that,” he commented. “The answer thus far, during the downturn has been, we’ll barrow money. That’s a great idea right up until someone asks, how are you going to pay that back?”

Unemployment is feeding the problem of government overspending. With less people working, there is les government tax revenue. Without incomes to tax, the government’s coffers suffer.

The US needs to focus on creating jobs, companies need to base factories, innovation and opportunities in the US. However, for them to do so the government needs to create the right incentives and business environments for companies to return.

There are no easy answers on the economy, explained Denninger. He explained America needs to rebalance its economy.

“We need to incentive companies to come to the United States. The easiest way to do that is to change the tax system in radical ways, but that is politically very difficult to do because the tax system is used as a political tool to entice people to do various things,” he explained.

Obama is expected to call for a five year freeze on non-discretionary spending, however such a freeze will not impact overall government spending. Denninger said to cut costs one must cut entitlement spending, such as unemployment and other social programs. However, it is politically unpopular to do so.

In addition, the US needs to move away from a short-term focus on the economy and look to the long term.

Denninger explained, “Short term political considerations always way large, and that’s one of the problems we have. The structural issues we have in this country are not short term.”

George Whorewell

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #233 on: January 25, 2011, 09:09:26 PM »
Hey moron- how is your invincible country doing protecting its citizens at the airport these days? Was the entire Russian intelligence service (an oxymoron in itself) too hung over to fight terrorism yesterday?

I see that your still obsessed with US economic policy but haven't mentioned once how your Communist thug government is too weak to protect its own people from filthy Chechen rebels armed with pitchforks and TNT.

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #234 on: January 26, 2011, 03:08:05 AM »
I love that video, Russia has always come back stronger!


Russia loves fucking over their citizens.
Remember the sub where the entire crew died because Putin was to proud to take the help from the West when offered?
Corruption that makes our own politicians look like saints.
Human rights in Russia is a city in Russia(excuse the pun)
 


theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #235 on: January 26, 2011, 05:52:16 AM »
Hey moron- how is your invincible country doing protecting its citizens at the airport these days? Was the entire Russian intelligence service (an oxymoron in itself) too hung over to fight terrorism yesterday?

I see that your still obsessed with US economic policy but haven't mentioned once how your Communist thug government is too weak to protect its own people from filthy Chechen rebels armed with pitchforks and TNT.

 Chechnya is a subject of Russian federation. Chechen president Ramzan Kadirov said -

 “US creates problems for Russia in the North Caucasus” – Kadyrov 

 he President of Russia's Chechen Republic, Ramzan Kadyrov, has accused the United States of working to destroy Russia.

Kadirov says the US is trying to undermine the country by creating conflict and tension in Russia's southern republics in the North Caucasus.

In recent weeks the number of attacks in Ingushetia and Dagestan has increased sharply.

These events are just part of the violence that has flared up in various parts of the Caucasus during the last two weeks.


The President of the Chechen Republic, whose father was killed in a terrorist attack, is pointing the finger not at Islamists in the Middle East or Afghanistan but at the USA.

“I like to call things by their proper names. The center is in America. And it is America that is working to undermine the sovereign Russian state. It's not the terrorists, not the Islamic radicals. It has nothing to do with Islam. They [the US] have invented this system. They are creating problems for Russia; they want to undermine Russia,” Kadyrov said in an interview posted on the official website of the Chechen President and Cabinet on Wednesday.

Kadyrov had identified Washington’s tools in this process as public bodies or NGOs (non-governmental organizations).

Kadyrov says they use professional subversives in their mission to destabilize the region.

The Chechen President has added that the US failed to undermine Russia through Chechnya and is now trying to do it through Dagestan and Ingushetia.

“They have such a system: all kinds of public organizations that were set up to spread rumors and gossip, to stir people, as they know that it is possible to create problems for Russia in the Caucasus only on religious grounds. They are training and using top experts. Take the Arabs that are moving here – Yaser, Makhdan – they have been here for 14 years already. They speak Russian better than I do but do not know a single word in Chechen. They were perfectly trained. They don't take part in combat. They are intelligence officers. They are being provided for, they are guarded and financed. They have been sent to Russia to take part in subversive operations,” Kadyrov said.

Some analysts agree the recent wave of violence shows signs of being centrally controlled.

“The attacks in the Caucasus obviously seem organized and planned and have the aim of showing that neither the federal center nor the regional authorities can control the situation in these republics”, independent analyst in Moscow Dmitry Evstafyev said.

Even though many experts agree that the recent wave of violence in the Caucasus was organized from outside, Ramzan Kadyrov remains in a minority in laying the blame on the United States.

While there may be disagreement about who is behind the violence, it is believed the attacks are unlikely to stop while the militants continue to be financed.
The situation in the North Caucasus remains volatile. Hundreds of terrorist-related crimes have already been committed in 2009.

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #236 on: January 26, 2011, 05:54:13 AM »
Russia loves fucking over their citizens.
Remember the sub where the entire crew died because Putin was to proud to take the help from the West when offered?
Corruption that makes our own politicians look like saints.
Human rights in Russia is a city in Russia(excuse the pun)
 



 Russia is unbeatable!

Soul Crusher

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #237 on: January 26, 2011, 05:59:23 AM »
Russia is unbeatable!

Except by terrorists at the airport.   

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #238 on: January 26, 2011, 06:06:24 AM »
Except by terrorists at the airport.   

 I'll surely remember your words when something wrong goes in US ;D

Soul Crusher

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #239 on: January 26, 2011, 06:07:14 AM »
I'll surely remember your words when something wrong goes in US ;D

I never claimed we were unbeatable.   

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #240 on: January 26, 2011, 08:05:41 AM »
I never claimed we were unbeatable.   

 Only the time will tell. What is America???

 America is a mistake, a giant mistake.
 Sigmund Freud

 America is the most grandiose experiment the world has seen, but, I am afraid, it is not going to be a success.
 Sigmund Freud

andreisdaman

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #241 on: January 26, 2011, 08:50:06 PM »
Only the time will tell. What is America???

 America is a mistake, a giant mistake.
 Sigmund Freud

 America is the most grandiose experiment the world has seen, but, I am afraid, it is not going to be a success.
 Sigmund Freud

do u call Russia a success??? you are really delusional

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #242 on: January 26, 2011, 10:36:41 PM »
do u call Russia a success??? you are really delusional

 OF course yes, there is a great Russian culture, language, history and America has got none of this. No culture (Hollywood and pop music is not culture, you are delusional), no language (They speak English in England), history (My town has been settled long before the US formed) etc etc etc :o

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #243 on: January 27, 2011, 08:11:58 AM »
Foreclosing of America: The crisis continues

Struggling Americans are going to great lengths to save their homes in the face of a worsening economic crisis.

As Wall Street boasts record profits and Washington insists we are firmly on the road to economic recovery, millions of Americans still have that sinking feeling, worried they’ll soon lose the roof over their head.

“It’s hard to sleep, I can’t eat, I can’t make plans because you don’t know if the next week you’re going to get a letter that says you have to go,” said homeowner Jose Rodriguez.

He is one of thousands of people who camped out in front of the Los Angeles Sports Arena to line up for a mortgage help clinic, a last ditch effort for simply trying to keep their homes.

Rodriguez fell behind on his mortgage after his wife became sick and medical bills flooded in.

“Maybe 500 people made bad decisions or maybe a thousand people. But when you see 5 thousand people out here, you know it’s not just people making bad decisions,” said Bruce Marks, founder of Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America. “It was a racketeering scheme that really put people in a position to fail.”

And fail they did. A record 2.9 million homes went into foreclosure in 2010.Yet Realty Trac, an online market for foreclosures, warns that figure may jump by 20 percent this year.

Many lost homes are due to lost jobs, as high unemployment persists in California and across the nation.

“These banks and government look at people as numbers,” said Marks.“They should come out here in the early morning hours to see people freezing in tents just to save their homes,” Marks added.

Desperate homeowners are fighting back.In December, hundreds of protesters tried to move into the lobby of a Chase Bank branch in downtown Los Angeles, as a way to shed light on the foreclosure crisis.22 people were arrested, including an 85 year old woman.

They may have sent a message, but many see it as a lost cause, a view reinforced by the recent appointment of William Daley as the president’s Chief of Staff.Daley is a former executive at JP Morgan Chase, a major mortgage lender.

“Big companies are taking over our country.That’s my feeling and I don’t know much about the economy,” said Rodriguez as he stood in line waiting for help in modifying his home loan.

You don’t have to be Albert Einstein to figure out that with big business playing a bigger role in the White House; it is unlikely the help to stop the foreclosing of America will come anytime soon.

Nomi Prins, a senior fellow at Demos and the author of "It Takes a Pillage" said the term “foreclosure” is disappearing from US politics, it was even absent for the State of The Union address because many are afraid to address the reality of the housing market.

“Foreclosures are sort of the ugliness that really is at the core of how a lot of the institutions made their money,” she explained. “The people that are facing foreclosure, that have faced foreclosure, we’re talking about 8 million families, not even people, but families that have already gone through the process, others in the process. An expectation of 4 million more families to face foreclosure over the next 2 years of this administration and all of that is something that Obama doesn’t want to address and Washington has largely stopped addressing.”

She explained America is still in crisis, not the banks or the firms, but the American people and middle class.

“Nothing has been fixed,” Prins said.

The banking industry was saved by the government and their crisis has passed. The government on the other hand has not helped the people, has not bailed out American citizens.

“There is this dislocation,” she remarked. “The reality is that jobs are not being created in the country, the student loan debt for example is higher than it has ever been, foreclosures are continuing to increase, defaults are increasing, credit card fees on top of credit card debt continue to increase and there is no operation, there is no legislation, there is no reform being put forth to address this.”

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #244 on: January 27, 2011, 08:15:17 AM »
State of the Union: Real Americans weigh in

Dumfries, VA may just be 30 miles outside of Washington DC, but in many aspects, it is worlds away. Residents here call themselves “ordinary citizens”.

You can find Waffle House restaurants at the crossroads and truck stops of most small cities in America.The one, in Dumfries, VA ,draws in truck drivers and teachers and even high school students like Fernando Huerta, who at just 18-years-old criticizes the government for focusing so many of its resources outside of the country.

“I don’t think we should be too worried about other nations right now. It shouldn’t even be on our top 20 list of concerns,” Huerta said.

The concerns of the country were highlighted in President Barack Obama's State of the Union address, where he also highlighted progress.

“Two years after the worst recession most of us have ever known, the stock market has come roaring back. Corporate profits are up. The economy is growing again,” Obama said.

It’s a claim Waffle House patron Julie Wollner doesn’t totally agree with.

“We need to get jobs back.The economy has not been stimulated as it should have,” Wollner said.

For the average person the suffering goes on.

“I have several college degreed family members with no jobs,” said Reggie Smith, over eggs and grits.“One had their house foreclosed.”

Just down the street from the Dumfries Waffle House is the Grayson Village mobile home park, where Robert Allen liveswith his wife Barbara, and father-in-law, Irvine Watkins. He says many people at his own company lost their jobs, their health insurance and their hope. He said members of Congress should stop propping up banks and stop spending money on wars.

“They oughta look after their own people first. The tax money is made in America,” Allen said. “It’s not made in other countries so it should be spent here first.Take care of home before you take care of somebody else.”

At the State of the Union address, in light of the deadly shootings in Tuscon, AZ, many Republicans and Democrats opted to sit together instead of in different sections.

“What comes of this moment is up to us,” Obama said. “What comes of this moment will be determined not by whether we can sit together tonight, but whether we can work together tomorrow.”

So, what’s the likelihood of that happening?

“Like anything when something happens everyone comes together, and we do a little kumbaya moment.We love each other but then next week they’ll fight over healthcare,” said Smith.

Allen agreed.

“That’s just like taking a kid and putting him in a candy shop,” he said. “Now you be good and I’ll give you some candy. That’s what it looks like to me. You put em together tonight and tomorrow they’ll be kicking at each other again.”

For Americans like this, the words are a start but the action still seems a long way off.

Chrystopher Smith, a former congressional candidate from California said Obama’s address was full of rhetoric, and little reality.

Political Analyst Brian Debose disagreed, arguing the speech was a good one, based on brining both sides together and emphasizing the economy.

“The economy is growing,” said Debose. “The problem is the job market is not coming back.”

“This is all frosting and no cake,” argued Smith. “There was no substance to anything that came out of the man’s mouth yesterday. There was very very coded rhetoric that came out of his mouth regarding the economy, regarding the next step.

Smith said Obama was talking to his supporters, not all Americans, to lay out his 2012 game plan for the next US presidential election. While Debose contended the speech addressed various issues many Americans value as important, and want to see actions on.

“When you’re talking about lowering the corporate tax rate you’re not talking to a liberal constituency of Barack Obama. When you’re talking about clean coal, clean coal is something the environmentalist groups in this country have been fighting against Obama since he got into office and continue to,” Debose commented.

dario73

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #245 on: January 27, 2011, 08:56:52 AM »
2011: hollow growth or major overhaul for Russia's economy?
Ben Aris, Business New Europe 4:59PM GMT 02 Jan 2011

Russia’s economy may be on the rebound but, without major revamping, finance chiefs say the long-term prognosis remains bleak.

Western Europe is staring into the abyss of sovereign default again, but Russia is “not under pressure” and will go back to strong growth in 2011. So claimed top Russian finance officials this month, with the sombre addendum that the country is still doomed to an endless boom-and-bust cycle unless the make-up of the economy is fundamentally changed.

It seems serious public discussion of Russia’s woes always happens in London. Deputy economics minister Andrey Klepach, deputy finance minister Dmitry Pankin and Alexei Ulyukaev, first deputy chairman of the Russian Central Bank (the troika that shapes much of Russia’s economic and financial policy), spoke at the Adam Smith annual Russian Banking Forum, painting a mixed picture of where Russia will go next year.

While large parts of the developed world face massive sovereign debts that can’t be paid off due to huge budget deficits, Russia sports the lowest debt-to-GDP ratio of any large country in the world. A report by Goldman Sachs says its deficit could disappear as soon as next year, and economic growth will run at a healthy 4pc or more in the next few years.

“Russia enjoys a low debt-to-GDP ratio of about 10pc, so we can borrow and remain reluctant to cut spending,” said Mr Pankin. “The deficit is projected to be 4.8pc this year, 3.6pc next year, falling to zero in 2015. We are not under a lot of pressure and can continue fiscal stimulation as there is no danger of solvency problems.”

Heavy state spending is keeping the wheels of commerce turning, but, according to Mr Klepach, unless the nature of the economy is fundamentally changed, Russia will be caught in a periodic devaluation trap.

So far the state hasn’t come up with anything better than pumping investment into the economy through huge state-owned enterprises. The government concedes that the race is on: either make qualitative changes in the nature of the economy while it is growing, or consign Russia to the boom-and-bust cycles of a commodity dependent economy.



dario73

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #246 on: January 27, 2011, 09:01:49 AM »
Crime and punishment in modern Russia
by Andy Potts at 24/01/2011 12:59
 

Russia’s murder rate could be as high as 46,200 for 2009 – despite official statistics saying just 18,200 people were killed.

A study from the expert institute of the Academy of the Prosecutor General’s office claimed that the real figures are alarmingly higher than official numbers.

The findings back up a claim from President Medvedev that statistics were often “rubbish”, as he said in a meeting with security officials in Nov. 2010 in Yessentuki.

 

Missing murders

According to a team of experts led by Professor Sergei Inshakov, many fatal attacks are not classed as murders because the victim is not found dead at the scene of the crime.

A person beaten to the point of death who is taken to hospital and dies some hours later is not classed as a murder victim.

Meanwhile the crime listed in the Russian Criminal Code as “grievous bodily harm resulting in the death of the victim” also obscures the true figures, the BBC Russian service reported on gzt.ru.

 

 

]b]Rising crime[/b]

Based on Inshakov’s efforts, researchers can see a clear trend in rising murder rates. In 2001 there were 34,200 murders according to official figures – but while the same official figures point to a drop in killings, the study shows a year-on-year increase of 2.4 per cent each year.

And it highlights why Russia is the world’s third most violent country, with 14.2 murders per 100,000 people putting it behind South Africa and Brazil.

Curiously South Africa, Brazil and Russia have been selected as football World Cup hosts for consecutive tournaments from 2010 to 2018.

Russia is the only European nation to feature on the 20 most murderous countries, nestling between Namibia and Surinam.

And the 46,000 murders in 2009 represent three times the USSR’s death toll in 10 years of war in Afghanistan.

They also dwarf the 16,000 annual murders in the US, with twice the population and fewer restrictions on firearms.

 

Under-reported

Officially Russia saw 3 million crimes in 2009 – but according to Inshakov and his colleagues the true figure was closer to 26 million.

Most petty crime goes unreported, due in part to a lack of trust in the police.

And the Prosecutor General’s study team highlighted a direct link between police figures and political pressures to show that things are getting better.

The findings talk of a “fight against the concealment of crime”, likening the process to the bad habits of Soviet industry where producing the right numbers was often more important than producing useful products.


theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #247 on: January 27, 2011, 09:03:00 AM »
2011: hollow growth or major overhaul for Russia's economy?
Ben Aris, Business New Europe 4:59PM GMT 02 Jan 2011

Russia’s economy may be on the rebound but, without major revamping, finance chiefs say the long-term prognosis remains bleak.

Western Europe is staring into the abyss of sovereign default again, but Russia is “not under pressure” and will go back to strong growth in 2011. So claimed top Russian finance officials this month, with the sombre addendum that the country is still doomed to an endless boom-and-bust cycle unless the make-up of the economy is fundamentally changed.

It seems serious public discussion of Russia’s woes always happens in London. Deputy economics minister Andrey Klepach, deputy finance minister Dmitry Pankin and Alexei Ulyukaev, first deputy chairman of the Russian Central Bank (the troika that shapes much of Russia’s economic and financial policy), spoke at the Adam Smith annual Russian Banking Forum, painting a mixed picture of where Russia will go next year.

While large parts of the developed world face massive sovereign debts that can’t be paid off due to huge budget deficits, Russia sports the lowest debt-to-GDP ratio of any large country in the world. A report by Goldman Sachs says its deficit could disappear as soon as next year, and economic growth will run at a healthy 4pc or more in the next few years.

“Russia enjoys a low debt-to-GDP ratio of about 10pc, so we can borrow and remain reluctant to cut spending,” said Mr Pankin. “The deficit is projected to be 4.8pc this year, 3.6pc next year, falling to zero in 2015. We are not under a lot of pressure and can continue fiscal stimulation as there is no danger of solvency problems.”

Heavy state spending is keeping the wheels of commerce turning, but, according to Mr Klepach, unless the nature of the economy is fundamentally changed, Russia will be caught in a periodic devaluation trap.

So far the state hasn’t come up with anything better than pumping investment into the economy through huge state-owned enterprises. The government concedes that the race is on: either make qualitative changes in the nature of the economy while it is growing, or consign Russia to the boom-and-bust cycles of a commodity dependent economy.




 


 I think that's story is false! I see the other picture!  :P

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #248 on: January 27, 2011, 09:04:15 AM »
Crime and punishment in modern Russia
by Andy Potts at 24/01/2011 12:59
 

Russia’s murder rate could be as high as 46,200 for 2009 – despite official statistics saying just 18,200 people were killed.

A study from the expert institute of the Academy of the Prosecutor General’s office claimed that the real figures are alarmingly higher than official numbers.

The findings back up a claim from President Medvedev that statistics were often “rubbish”, as he said in a meeting with security officials in Nov. 2010 in Yessentuki.

 

Missing murders

According to a team of experts led by Professor Sergei Inshakov, many fatal attacks are not classed as murders because the victim is not found dead at the scene of the crime.

A person beaten to the point of death who is taken to hospital and dies some hours later is not classed as a murder victim.

Meanwhile the crime listed in the Russian Criminal Code as “grievous bodily harm resulting in the death of the victim” also obscures the true figures, the BBC Russian service reported on gzt.ru.

 

 

]b]Rising crime[/b]

Based on Inshakov’s efforts, researchers can see a clear trend in rising murder rates. In 2001 there were 34,200 murders according to official figures – but while the same official figures point to a drop in killings, the study shows a year-on-year increase of 2.4 per cent each year.

And it highlights why Russia is the world’s third most violent country, with 14.2 murders per 100,000 people putting it behind South Africa and Brazil.

Curiously South Africa, Brazil and Russia have been selected as football World Cup hosts for consecutive tournaments from 2010 to 2018.

Russia is the only European nation to feature on the 20 most murderous countries, nestling between Namibia and Surinam.

And the 46,000 murders in 2009 represent three times the USSR’s death toll in 10 years of war in Afghanistan.

They also dwarf the 16,000 annual murders in the US, with twice the population and fewer restrictions on firearms.

 

Under-reported

Officially Russia saw 3 million crimes in 2009 – but according to Inshakov and his colleagues the true figure was closer to 26 million.

Most petty crime goes unreported, due in part to a lack of trust in the police.

And the Prosecutor General’s study team highlighted a direct link between police figures and political pressures to show that things are getting better.

The findings talk of a “fight against the concealment of crime”, likening the process to the bad habits of Soviet industry where producing the right numbers was often more important than producing useful products.



 Russia is for alpha males!!! Don't like it??? Go to US!

theonlyone

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Re: The Collapse Of The American Empire And The Rebalancing Of The World
« Reply #249 on: January 27, 2011, 09:15:38 AM »
 Crime and Punishment!!!! I love Dostoevsky!