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New Year 2008 may destroy
USA’s
struggling economy

Source: Pravda.Ru
25.12.2007
URL:
http://english.pravda.ru/world/americas/103144-economy-0
A
forecast made by Denmark-based Saxo Bank, chaos will take a grip on
the world in 2008.
Oil prices
will skyrocket to 175 dollars per barrel, the Chinese market will
collapse by 40 percent, whereas the U.S. will suffer a 25-percent
setback. All this will happen because of the mortgage crisis in the
USA which already slows down the U.S. economy.
High oil
prices can bring only good to Russia, though. On the other hand,
even if the above-mentioned forecast comes true, Russia will face
serious problems in its economy too. It is worthy of note that the
majority of Saxo Bank’s previous forecasts for 2007 have proved to
be true to fact.
On New
Year’s Eve most people recollect the outgoing year and hope for the
best. However, Saxo Bank experts seem to be an exception from this
nice tradition. David Karsbol, the head of market strategy for the
bank, said that the forecast had not been made to intimidate people.
“It gives a reason to think about the future of the market,” he
said.
Saxo
Bank experts believe that
oil prices
will hit the level of 175 dollars per barrel in 2008, whereas grain
prices will double. The U.S. and the Chinese markets will collapse
by 25 and 40 percent respectively by the end of the summer of 2008.
Every third of ten U.S. large building companies will go bankrupt.
The British economy will also start declining.
The bank has
its forecast on the new U.S. president too. The bank predicts that
Ron Paul, the Texan Republican, will take the office in 2008.
On the
other hand, if the
U.S. economy
slows downs its development as predicted, it would mean the decrease
of the oil consumption and the oil price.
Oil prices
much depend on the political constituent. If the USA launches a
military action against Iran, oil prices will most likely jump up to
250 dollars per barrel according to a recent forecast by Standard &
Poor’s.
The dark
forecast from Saxo Bank does not mention Russia. There was no report
issued in 2007 outlining apocalyptic perspectives for the Russian
economy. The ongoing economic rise and the stable ruble protect
Russia from financial shocks.
Most likely,
Russia’s economy will not be subjected to considerable changes or
fluctuations during the forthcoming year either. Nevertheless,
Russia is a part of the global financial system, which means that
the country will obviously suffer from a possible economic collapse
that may occur in another part of the world.
Russian specialists say, though, that the nation’s economy will
continue to endure unpleasant surprises due to the growing
inflation rate.
They say that prices in Russia will grow by ten percent in 2008
against seven percent as predicted by governmental officials.
The
Conference Board, an international organization that provides
trusted insights for businesses worldwide, said that its index of
leading indicators reflecting the state of the U.S. economy reduced
by 0.4 percent in November and reached the minimum level since July
of 2005. Seven of ten indicators (stock prices, the index of
consumer expectations, etc) show that the economic setback may begin
already in the spring of 2008.
The U.S.
Treasury put forward an initiative to reduce the income tax against
the background of the credit crisis. The U.S. economy will only gain
profit from it because the nation experiences difficulties of
cooperation with other countries which use less burdensome tax
systems. U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson stated that it could
be possible to replace the income tax with the entrepreneur tax
which would be similar to the currently used value added tax (VAT).
U.S.
President George W. Bush has not lost his optimism about his
nation’s economy despite the gloomy forecasts. The U.S. sub-prime
mortgage crisis
of 2007 may be replaced by the credit card crisis in 2008, as
Americans have been falling behind in paying their bills, with
credit defaults climbing by double digits. The value of U.S. credit
card accounts that were 30 days overdue rose 26 per cent in October
to $17 billion.
Companies
like GE Money Bank and HSBC said they’ve seen a 50 per cent increase
in accounts that were 90 days past due. Experts said that could lead
to more problems for an already struggling economy.
Source:
agencies
Translated by Dmitry Sudakov
Pravda.ru
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