Currency Wars by James Rickards

Currency Wars by James Rickards PART 3

 

Canada

capital controls implementation capital flight

capital markets capitalism, state Carter, Jimmy catastrophic collapse catastrophic events central banks

gold and aftermath of Panic of 2008

IMF as a global central bank

and reserve currencies

role in Great Depression

See also Federal Reserve, U.S.

certainty, in economics

Chaisson, Eric J.

China

Beijing

consumption and increased U.S. exports

currency manipulation

early history of government collapse

economic zones

and European sovereign debt crisis of 2010

excess population of single men

fears of U.S. currency devaluation

and G20

one-child policy

rare earth exports skirmish with Japan

State Administration of Foreign Exchange

and SWF investments in U.S.

Tiananmen Square protests of 1989

U.S.-China bilateral trade relations U.S.-Chinese currency war

U.S. quantitative easing programs in and U.S. Treasury debt

U.S. Treasury holdings

See also yuan, Chinese

China National Offshore Oil Corporation

China-U.S. Strategic Economic Dialogue of 2006

Christ, Carl F.

Churchill, Winston Citibank

Citigroup

civilizational collapse, causes of

Clinton, Bill

CNBC

Cogan, John F.

Cold War era

Collapse of Complex Societies, The (Tainter)

collateralized debt obligations (CDOs)

commodities

Commodity Futures Modernization Act

Communist Party of China

competitive devaluations

complexity theory

Connally, John

connectedness, in complex systems

convening power theory

copper

correlation, in global financial warfare

Cosmic Evolution (Chaisson)

Coughlin, Charles

counterfeiting

Credit-Anstalt Bank of Vienna

critical state systems

critical thresholds

currency collapse

capital flight response to

dollar collapse in complexity theory

1920s

currency convergence

currency devaluations

competitive

dollar devaluation against gold, 1930s and 1970s

1930s and 1970s

sterling devaluations

Tripartite Agreement of 1936 and

currency markets

currency peg

currency wars

Atlantic theater

benefits of

chaos as outcome of Currency War I (1921–1936)

Currency War II (1967–1987)

Currency War III (2010–)

Eurasian theater

Pacific theater

Czechoslovakia

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