will arab youth revolt turn global

Post on 09-May-2015

8.941 Views

Category:

Business

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

The 7 metrics of revolt will determine wether unrest can be controlled in a dictatorship or a democracy in the volatile global information age.

TRANSCRIPT

WILLARAB

YOUTH REVOLT TURN

GLOBAL?

7 Metrics of Revolt

What fuels Arab youth revolt?

Price Rise : for it hurts the poor.

What fuels Arab Youth Revolt?

CorruptionFor it creates unequal opportunities, and causes dissatisfaction.

What fuels Arab Youth Revolt ?

Income Disparity between the rich and the poor

What fuels Arab Youth Revolt ?

Unemploymentfor it creates anger against the ruling Government

What fuels Arab Youth Revolt?

Repression of dissent for it creates desperation

What fuels Arab Youth Revolt ?

External (NATO) support by western alliance, NGO’s & individuals to install western style democracies and help facilitate better trade deals.

What fuels Arab Youth Revolt ?

Internet and mobile communicationHelping youth interact and learn about why and how to revolt and win freedom

7 Metrics of Arab Youth Revolt

•Price Rise•Corruption•Income Disparity•Unemployment•Repression• External (NATO) Support•Internet and mobile media support

Food Price Rise

Global food prices and agriculture commodity prices have spiraled

Price Rise of Crude Oil

Oil prices have skyrocketed pushing up energy and transportation costs

Price Rise of Metals

Metal and nonmetal commodity prices have been spiked since Nov 2010

Manufacturing Goods Price Rise

The price rise has a cascading effect on global manufacturing & distribution costs

Price Rise is the prime metric of revolt

The poor have been hit the hardest by the multiplier effect of commodity price hikes

What Fuels Price Rise ?

When Demand Exceeds Supply

What Fuels Price Rise ?

Natural calamities and crop failure

What Fuels Price Rise ?

Supply disruptions due war and unrest

What Fuels Price Rise ?

Speculation in financial markets with Banks like Deutsche Bank, JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, buying up commodities from physical traders and spiking prices for high profits.

What Fuels Price Rise ?

Cornering of commodity stocks in financial markets

As per Wall Street Journal a single trader backed by Wall Street Banks cornered over 80% of the copper traded at London Metal Exchange worth over $3 Billion in November

What Fuels Price Rise ?

Liquidity infusion by US Federal Reserve

In November 2010 the US Federal Reserve announced a $600 bn. Quantitative Easing package, that would pump $75 billion per month to boost liquidity in view of low U.S. demand. Markets have boomed thereafter as the excess liquidity found its way to the commodity markets

What Fuels Price Rise ?

Investment by Pension Funds, Sovereign Funds, individuals and hot money sources routed through Wall Street Banks.

7 Reasons of price riseDemand exceeds supply causing commodity shortage

Supply disruptions due to crop failure and natural calamities

Supply disruptions due to war and unrest

Demand surge due to speculation in commodity markets

Cornering of commodity stocks by Banks , hedge funds & traders.

The Federal Reserve monetary infusion.

Pension Funds, Sovereign Funds, High Net Individuals and the ‘Drug & Arms cartels’ investing in volatile financial markets.

Food Riots first began in Mozambique

Sharp rise in food prices that followed hike in energy and water prices by the Government first started riots in Maputo in September 2010 as per a BBC report

FAO warns of high food prices

FAO predicted in November 2010 that Food prices could rise by 20% in 2011 in food deficit countries. Speculators picked up the cue and pushed up prices by 50% in a month

The Poor Eat Wheat Not Meat

Food riots hit Algeria, Tunisia , Egypt

As per Egypt Daily News Food riots had spread to Algeria, Tunisia and Egypt by December 2010

UN Warns Of More Food Riots

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2011/may/27/food-riots-warning-by-un-as-commodities-soar

Near drought conditions in Russia, Ukraine and parts of Europe and extreme speculation in futures market caused UN to warn of food riots in the developing world as per a Guardian report

UAE freezes commodity prices

To arrest price hikes UAE took the desperate move of freezing prices of 400 major commodities till Dec 2011. This may lead to subsidized supplies and increased speculation anticipating state buying.

Price cartels spike food prices

Trade cartels pushed up prices of onions in India wheat, barley and maize in Egypt Tunisia and Kenya and processed foods and livestock in South Korea , Asia Pacific and the middle east.

Regulator trader nexus drives up prices

Profiteering in the financial markets feeds the network of politician & regulators who allow unchecked speculation at commodity markets and trading cartels in local markets.

Corruption is a key factor

Corruption is a prime cause of social unrest

Corruption is hurting globally

Corruption is causing unrest not only in the Arab world , but also in Africa, India, China, Mexico, Indonesia, Russia, Italy, and Greece .

What Is Corruption ?

Corruption is defined by Transparency International as the

abuse of entrusted power for private gain.

Entrusted power is not only the power a citizen confers to a public office holder. It is the power that future generations have vested in all of us, in our stewardship role for the planet. Hence the youth are so agitated about the abuse of power and corruption as it affects their future.

http://www.transparency.org/news_room/in_focus/2011/gcr_climate_change#downloads

Reasons of corruption

Financial markets have created ‘super profits’

which is protected by a new class called

‘facilitators’

‘Facilitators’ help protect super profits

They include politicians & bureaucrats

They include regulators & administrators

They include middle men who help deal making

They include people from media, police, judiciary who help protect high profits .

The Corruption Gravy Train Feeds And Nurtures ‘Facilitators’ Legally.

Facilitators are ‘priority’ like shareholders. They are today provided for, through legal Banking channels, to ensure financial markets can be run with high profits.

How Corruption Became OTCCorruption is no longer clandestine and under the table

Bribery has been transformed into professional deal making

It is now institutionalized like a “Over The Counter” OTC trade

How corruption became institutional

Bribes today are paid out as fees, commissions, stocks, options, donations to political parties, NGOs, schools and educational institutes , and as consultancy assignments, research grants and even as bailout money.

It is professionally managed as any investment by Swiss Banks, Wall Street Banks , hedge funds and some of the best financial and legal brains in the world.

Corruption can’t be regulated

Corruption as a business deal can be perfectly legal, because the vetting process to a private business deal can never be regulated and people framing such deals are experts in law.

Corruption is now is too complex and sophisticated to stop or track and can’t be stopped easily.

Even if caught facilitators help easy ‘out of court settlements’

As per Guardian UK, US regulators in March 2010 facilitated an out of court settlement of a modest $50million with Wall Street Bank Wachovia , now a part of Wells Fargo for channelizing 378.4 billion dollars of hot money from a Mexican cocaine cartel during 2006 to 2008. Wachovia escaped without admitting guilt.

One Way To Reduce Corruption

One way to reduce the corruption is to make financial markets efficient.

If Financial markets become transparent and competitive , the super profits from market volatility will vanish and the recycling of the gravy from the corruption gravy train will be much less.

How oil markets work

Production Price of Crude Oil : $ 5 to $10 per barrel

Oil producers like a margin of $50 to $60 per barrel to run their economies ( of this around $10 per barrel goes directly to the ruling elite )

Refinery, blending, storage & transportation costs : $5 to $10 per barrel

Margins for facilitating the deals $5 to $15 per barrel : Negotiated kickbacks

Financial markets super profits $ 10 to $ 25 per barrel : oil majors + big banks

Retail consumer price at pump $ 75 to $120 per barrel

Now see the spin offs when 85 to 90million barrels of oil is produced daily !

The Economics of oil

How Banks Regularize Dirty Money

Arab nations have a larger share of profits when oil prices are moderate

Oil producing economies have 2/3 of the oil pie when crude prices are moderate . Production costs considered at lower end of the band.

Banks & Oil Cos gain in volatile markets

Oil producing economies have 1/2 of the oil pie when crude prices are volatile . Production costs considered at higher end of spectrum. Financial market players and facilitators gain most in volatile markets.

The commodity traders make most money from such volatility

But when markets are volatile and oil price is high it is the financial markets and facilitators who gain most. As per a recent FT report the Switzerland based commodity traders Trafigura, Glencore, Vitol, Mercuria, Gunvor reported super profits in the first quarter of 2011 following the Arab revolt, besides the big Wall Street Banks and Oil companies.

How the Arab people got poor

Arab nations are net importers of food, metals and manufactured goods, whose impact was much greater than the gains from oil.

Oil Prices Hold The Key

Oil prices are still the key factor in global inflation as its effect on transportation and manufactured goods has a multiplier effect on prices.

OPEC can still save Arab Land

If OPEC ramps up its oil production significantly for the next 3 summer months and oil prices stabilize, global inflation will taper off and ‘ Price Rise’ the key metric of Arab revolt will be neutralized.

Repression and food security

Food and security are the primary needs of humans.Repressive regimes can keep people quiet as long as they are able to guarantee cheap food and secure living conditions under the autocratic regime.

Where Extreme Loyalty Is A Virtue

Compliance in the Arab world is usually achieved by making extreme loyalty a virtue. Order, obedience and fear, are invoked in the name of the supreme leader . With prices going out of control, the order was destroyed .

Repressive regimes face challenges

As the order was destroyed the Arab states and other dictatorships started facing major challenges, that saw a increase of violence and repression. New models of dictatorship may evolve over time.

Repressive regimes will innovate

Regimes are likely to change methods of enforcement of law and order to tough policing on transparent but extremely stringent laws administered speedily by local authorities. The benevolent dictator will ultimately replace the autocrat.

High Income Disparity

Income disparity is a major reason of dissatisfaction and dissent. In several oil rich nations the top 1 % of the population own, control or have access to 99% of the nations wealth. As per the Economist in Qatar one of the wealthiest nations of the world the richest receive 13 times of the poorest .

Unemployment sparks unrest

In places like Egypt it was unemployment and sharp wheat price hike that created the major spark for revolt. Being the largest importer of wheat Egypt was the hardest hit after the crop failure in Russia and Putin’s ban on wheat exports.

Unemployment for women

Saudi

Saudi Arabia and Bahrain among the richest oil states have 2% and 5% literacy rates for women. The unemployment rate for Saudi women holding university degrees is 78% as compared to 16.9 % for male graduates.

Unemployment for youth

Since 2005 Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and UAE have been investing heavily in education and training . Despite investing over SR 150 billion in 2009 on education, 39% of Saudi youth aged 20-24 and 20.3% of those aged from25-29 were unemployed.

Private sector employs expats

Migrant workforce enjoying global life style drives the core of the booming middle east oil economy from segregated expat enclaves . The private sector employs only 10% of the local youth primarily because of poor work culture, low skill and knowledge base of the locals.

External Support for democracy

Active support by G7 Governments both tactical as well as monetary helps the Arab revolt gain momentum in a bid to usher in democracy.

Western troops on ground in Libya reports Guardian to support rebel forces

External Support for Libyan war

Support has also included the continued heavy bombardment of Libya by NATO to wreck Qaddafi forces.

Investors Flee To London from Mid East

Billion of dollars of investment headed for the Middle East have been re-routed to London and Paris ever since the revolt broke out in Egypt

Refugee influx

Every day thousands of ravaged war widows and children create intense pressure on other neighboring states and parts of Europe .

G8 Promises monetary support

G8 nations promise monetary aid through the World Bank for Egypt, Tunisia and other nations who would be willing to adopt the western style of democratic Government as per Wall Street Journal.

Quid pro quo benefits

A friendly Arab state would ensure commercially profitable trade deals. Both in the oil trade and as sellers of consumer products and arms , Anglo French Company’s would gain in the long run.

The internet and mobile support

The people’s support to the revolt is much more potent than the NATO support and has been facilitated by co-ordination on the internet and mobile phones, that cannot be curtailed.

The internet and mobile support

The educated Arab youth know that they are equipped with information and technology and can force changes on their closed society.

Local wireless support

Scores of local wireless stations operate across the world providing routes to communicate freely despite censorship.

Is Revolt Viral ?

Will the Arab Revolt Spread ?

It will depend on the metric

Nations who have issues on the 7 metrics of revolt could face unrest.

Only way out is to face and solve them

In Europe Greece is Facing Unrest

Greece is facing unrest for price rise, corruption, income disparity, falling wages and unemployment

Revolt in Greece is brewing

Greek unemployment and price rise is spiraling out of control

Greece Debt needs Restructuring

EC support to Banks has stopped debt restructuring for the Greeks.

Banks want national assets of Greece

Greeks are up in arms as Banks want it to sell its national assets like Parthenon and the Aegean islands. Would US sell the Statue of Liberty, India the Taj Mahal or France the Eiffel Tower under debt they ask?

Angry Greece could Europe’s flashpoint

If Greece is left to drown it could bring Europe to the edge like the Arab world

Portugal, Ireland and Spain are next

Other Euro zone economies will also erupt over the time

Unemployment in Spain

Unemployment is a key factor for social unrest not only in the Arab world but also in the neighboring Euro zone. Thousands have taken to streets in Spain lately protesting against unemployment which is over 21% .

London Profits from Euro unrest

London profits from Euro zone Capital Flight says Reuters . Investors flee from Spain and Greece.

Asia on the revolt watch list

Corruption, Price Rise and income inequality in India and China has started demonstrations and unrest in several parts

China too is uneasy

China has cracked down on demonstrations and unrest but fears more protests in future.

Corruption an election game changer in India

After major scams erupted in India Anna Hazare started a fast unto death against corruption . The ruling party and allies were decimated in elections in Tamilnadu that nurtured the corrupt politicians.

Income Disparity in the US could be a election issue

The Gini coefficient for income disparity is a extremely high at 45 for the US as per Economic Policy Institute data as against 34 for the UK and 36.8 for India. Could be an election issue.

Watch the 7 metrics

Nations who want a peaceful existence in the information age must watch the 7 metrics carefully. Even democracies could face unrest and revolt and electoral defeat in its absence .

Author Profile

A professional journalist and international business consultant I write for

CleanBiz Asia HK

Economic Times New Delhi

ISEdb Ohio

NewsCollective Stockholm/Mumbai

Suite 101 Vancouver

Technorati San Francisco

Follow me at www.twitter.com/ ecothrust

Or my column What Happens If ? In Economic Times

Other presentations by usBusiness Risk management Series

http://www.slideshare.net/SandipSen/living-dangerously-managing-risks-in-business-ba01ppt

Business Risk Case Studies Ba31http://www.slideshare.net/SandipSen/business-risk-case-study-ba31

Business Risk Case Studies Ba32http://www.slideshare.net/SandipSen/business-risk-case-study-ba-32-1751378

What is Carbon ?

Energy Risk Management Series ERM 01

Energy Risk Management Series ERM 01

What is Carbon – ERM-01 http://bit.ly/bjDTl2

Countering Peak Oil – ERM-02 http://www.slideshare.net/

SandipSen/countering-peak-oil-erm-02

Risk Managing Turbulent Markets BA 41http://www.slideshare.net/SandipSen/risk-managing-volatile-markets

References: WSJ, Business Week, Bloomberg, Financial Times, Guardian, Telegraph, mongabay .com, Reuters, Economic Policy Institute, Economist, WB data and Ecothrust. Our Blog : Economy to Ecology: Our goal is to help promote clean, safe and better practices in economy and ecology worldwide. Balanced, efficient and a little more sustainable. Kindle Blog Ecothrust ASIN: B0029ZAUAY For non kindle users : www.ecothrust.blogspot.com

Our Blog at Economic Times : What happens If http://blogs.economictimes.indiatimes.com/Whathappensif/entry/can-nuclear-risk-mitigation-be

Follow us at twitter : www.twitter.com/ecothrust Acknowledgements:To Google, flickr photolibrary and other image sources.

For any queries or request for download, mail to Sandip Sen sen.sandip@gmail.com

top related