Third is the "symbiotic" Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE) sector, which Hudson defines as "the counterpart to Europe's old post-feudal landed aristocracy living by land rents."
As he describes these three rentier sectors that completely dominate post-industrial finance capitalism at the heart of the western system, Hudson notes how "Wall Street always has been closely merged with the oil and gas industry namely, the Citigroup, and Chase Manhattan banking conglomerates."
Hudson shows how "the most pressing US strategic aim of NATO confrontation with Russia is soaring oil and gas prices. In addition to creating profits and stock market gains for US companies, higher energy prices will take much of the steam out of the German economy."
He warns how food prices will rise "headed by wheat" - Russia and Ukraine account for 25 percent of world wheat exports. From a Global South perspective, that's a disaster: "This will squeeze many West Asian and Global South food-deficient countries, worsening their balance of payments, and threatening foreign debt defaults."
As for blocking Russian raw materials exports, "this threatens to cause breaks in supply chains for key materials, including cobalt, palladium, nickel, aluminum."
And that leads us, once again, to the heart of the matter - "The long-term dream of the US new Cold Warriors is to break up Russia, or at least to restore its managerial kleptocracy seeking to cash in their privatizations in western stock markets."
That's not going to happen. Hudson clearly sees how "the most enormous unintended consequence of US foreign policy has been to drive Russia and China together, along with Iran, Central Asia, and countries along the Belt and Road initiative."
Let's confiscate some technology
Now compare all of the above with the perspective of a central European business tycoon with vast interests, east and west, and who treasures his discretion.
In an email exchange, the business tycoon posed serious questions about the Russian Central Bank support for its national currency, the ruble, "which according to US planning is being destroyed by the west through sanctions and currency wolf packs who are exposing themselves by selling rubles short. There is really almost no amount of money that can beat the dollar manipulators against the ruble. A 20 percent interest rate will kill the Russian economy unnecessarily."
The businessman argues that the chief effect of the rate hike "would be to support imports that should not be imported. The fall of the ruble is thus favorable to Russia in terms of self-sufficiency. As import prices rise, these goods should start to be produced domestically. I would just let the ruble fall to find its own level which will for a while be lower than natural forces would permit as the US will be driving it lower through sanctions and short selling manipulation in this form of economic war against Russia."
But that seems to tell only part of the story. Arguably, the lethal weapon in Russia's arsenal of responses has been identified by the head of the Center for Economic Research of the Institute of Globalization and Social Movements (IGSO), Vasily Koltashov - the key is to confiscate technology - as in Russia ceasing to recognize US rights to patents.
In what he qualifies as "liberating American intellectual property," Koltashov calls for passing a Russian law on "friendly and unfriendly states. If a country turns out to be on the unfriendly list, then we can start copying its technologies in pharmaceuticals, industry, manufacturing, electronics, medicine. It can be anything - from simple details to chemical compositions." This would require amendments to the Russian constitution.
Koltashov maintains that "one of the foundations of success of American industry was copying of foreign patents for inventions." Now, Russia could use "China's extensive know-how with its latest technological production processes for copying western products: the release of American intellectual property will cause damage to the United States to the amount of $10 trillion, only in the first stage. It will be a disaster for them."
As it stands, the strategic stupidity of the EU beggars belief. China is ready to grab all Russian natural resources with Europe left as a pitiful hostage of the oceans and of wild speculators.
It looks like a total EU-Russia split is ahead - with little trade left and zero diplomacy.
Now listen to the sound of champagne popping all across the MICIMATT.
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