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[Marxism] 45 percent of world's wealth destroyed: Blackstone CEO





__
    * From: "Joaquin Bustelo"  
    

We are referred to the following article:

"NEW YORK (Reuters) - Private equity company
Blackstone Group LP (BX.N) CEO
Stephen Schwarzman said on Tuesday that up to
45 percent of the world's
wealth has been destroyed by the global credit crisis.

"'Between 40 and 45 percent of the world's
wealth has been destroyed in
little less than a year and a half,'
Schwarzman told an audience at the
Japan Society. 'This is absolutely
unprecedented in our lifetime.'

Back when Jerry Ford was president,
 there was a Herblock (I think!) cartoon,
that had various people coming into the
oval office with the caption "Send
in the Clowns" and the label, economic
advisers.

This article reminded me of that cartoon.

NO percent of the world's wealth has
been destroyed by the current "crisis."


Hundreds of oil wells did not disappear not
were thousands of factories
devastated by saturation bombing.

The ONLY thing that has been affected is the
capacity of capitalists to set
productive resources into motion in such a
 way as to give them average or
greater profits. But even more: the only thing
 that has been affected is the
confidence of the capitalists that they can
set productive resources into
motion in the economy in such a way as to
give them average or better
profits.




^^^^^^^^^^^^
Marx writes:
"To the extent that the depreciation or increase in value of this
 paper is independent of the movement of value of the actual
capital that it represents, the wealth of the nation is just as
great before as after its depreciation or increase in value.
" 'The public stocks and canal and railway shares had
already by the 23rd of October, 1847, been depreciated
in the aggregate to the amount of £114,752,225."
 (Morris, Governor of the Bank of England, testimony in
the Report on Commercial Distress, 1847-48 [No. 3800].)'
"Unless this depreciation reflected an actual stoppage of
production and of traffic on canals and railways, or a suspension
 of already initiated enterprises, or squandering capital in
positively worthless ventures, the nation did not grow one cent poorer
by the bursting of this soap bubble of nominal money-capital."
(Marx, Karl (1894), Capital, volume III, chapter 29,)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fictitious_capital


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