The Banking CrisisReflected in the Financial Order of the Real World
The article reflects the present banking and financial crisis on basis of latest research results about the existence of superior economic and financial order acting within the real world (equal natural world). Within this order (equal natural order) observably all creatures use different types of energy like different currencies of money as means of payment in order to finance, produce, and use their own life (equal own living biomass able to provide services); exemplary proof is given. Decisive message reflected in and substantiated by this order is: Issuing human money being only a copy of energy with nearly full lack of real value needs coverage in the natural equivalent of money which means coverage in energy of human beings and/or assets including energy of different creatures, and not coverage in gold or different mass measures. Due to superficial control of banks with loans and new investment forms since the 1980th which enabled banks to shift well-known risks in a legal way to customers worldwide in the past, this coverage was only assumed and believed in human society but missing in reality and caused a reaction of the superior natural order to find a balance in real terms. This reaction we observe as a clash down of (uncovered) stock market prices in values of human currencies. The author shows that China is also involved in this crisis. He concludes that public measures of governments to provide more (human) money in present don’t solve this crisis, rather they cause a delay and smoothing of its negative impacts by broadening the basis of responsibility within human societies of present and future. A final solution if wanted must consider the rules and constraints of this natural economic order the knowledge of which is to be enlarged urgently.
Paper presented atState University for Economics and Finance11th December 2008St. Petersburg/Russia
ISSN:
1439-3956
Classification:
Corporate finance and investment policy. General ; Management of financial services: stock exchange and bank management science (including saving banks) ; Individual Working Papers, Preprints ; Individual Conference Proceedings ; Global Resources