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    13 commenti

    1. UpgradedSiera6666 on

      Global broad money supply surged +6.7% YoY in September, reaching a record $142 trillion.

      This measure covers 169 economies, representing 99% of global GDP.

      Year-to-date, money supply has jumped +9.1%, driven by China, the EU and the US.

      Since 2000, global money supply has risen +446%, or $116 trillion, a compounded annual growth rate of +7.0%.

      China now makes up the largest proportion, at $47 trillion, or 33% of global liquidity.

      The European Union follows at $22.3 trillion, or 16.2%, and the US at $22.2 trillion, or 16%.

      Naturally the 3 Economic Superpowers are the Leading Engine of the Global Monetary status.

    2. JustOneTwoThree4 on

      China… crazy… they’re battling deflation even though they’re printing money like no other.

    3. No_Advertising_3313 on

      The European Economy would be able to surpass the American if we were only willing to make the kinds of unpopular trade offs this would require. Things like the incomplete banking union encouraging inefficient ‘national champions’ rather than permitting competition, subsidies to ineffecient companies and sectors, no action on construction bottlenecks and refusing to even discuss actual steps to handle aging populations beyond ever increasing taxes and immigration. Europeans have done more to hold ourselves back than Trump could ever hope to achieve.

    4. Econ_Orc on

      That grey rest of the world portion is a lot of land, people and resources not being used for development of neither land nor people.

    5. epSos-DE on

      The EU could win that !!!

      Legarde said they want to try to be prudent, OR at least more prudent than the global competition.

      The current issue is that the USA are getting the digital USD in every app on the phone and basically all other currencies become irrelevant on the phone.

      Happens in Asia, Latin america and Africa, where local money is not strong.

    6. IcecreamLamp on

      As economies grow, they need more money to transact with. There is ample historic evidence to show that a fixed money supply is a very bad thing.

    7. HomieMassager on

      lol I love the ‘US dollar depreciation’ tick that is in a trough so small you need a magnifying glass, followed by a jump up in the dollar’s value that you can easily see.

    8. I’m curious why Hong Kong is counted separately here; do they not also use the yuan like the rest of the PRC?

    9. “Money supply!”

      Always makes me laugh. Paper with imaginary amounts scribbled on them. By whom I wonder?

      By whoever has money!

    10. hellmarvel on

      My heart rejoices the fact that the euro is on par with the dollar as a reserve currency. Because I don’t think anybody buys yuan to trade with China, China is printing that money TO USE INTERNALLY. 

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