I think the Canadian dollar hit $86.80 US yesterday? I would think that very soon the US trade deficit with Canada should begin to move the other way? In other words more American products should be entering Canada and less Canadian products entering the US?
I will admit this whole dollar thing baffles me. For example: If I had $1,000 in 2002, when the Canadian dollar was worth 63 cents US($630 US) then today my $1,000 is worth $868 US...or 37.8% more? So in three years my $1,000 earned real value of close to 12.6% per year...just on the changing value?
Now this seems absurb because it doesn't seem to have anymore buying power!
How can any reasonable market exist when the money difference is all over the map like this? For really effective free trade wouldn't it make more sense if Canada/America/Mexico had a common currency?
The way it is now, when we sell 600 lbs calves for $1.30, how does that relate to what we were getting in 2002...if we put it into American dollars? In 2002 our $1.30 calf was worth $.82 US($491)? That is what an American feedlot paid for them in US dollars. In 2005 our calf was worth $1.13 US($677)?
Can you understand how a group like R-CALF might be a bit upset here? In 2002 a lot of calves went south, partly due to the drought, but a lot to do with the dollar difference? Due to the cheap Canadian dollar the American cow/calf man saw their market undercut. And I would say they had a valid concern?
I have often wondered how Australia could ship old cows to Canada and compete with our 20 cent cows and I suspect it is this same sort of monetary inbalance? Someone can manipulate the money supply to get pretty well any result they want, it seems?
I suspect the Bank of Canada was manipulating the money difference in some way...and I suspect it is being done again...only the other way? I will admit I sure don't understand how these bankers do it!
How can two countries have real free and fair trade without a common money supply or some kind of control over what the bankers do? These parasites can basically control both countries monetary policy and therefore pick the winners and the losers? How did our governments ever let this get out of their control? Who actually makes the decisions at the Bank of Canada...and the American Fed? Is it the governments or private bankers?
I will admit this whole dollar thing baffles me. For example: If I had $1,000 in 2002, when the Canadian dollar was worth 63 cents US($630 US) then today my $1,000 is worth $868 US...or 37.8% more? So in three years my $1,000 earned real value of close to 12.6% per year...just on the changing value?
Now this seems absurb because it doesn't seem to have anymore buying power!
How can any reasonable market exist when the money difference is all over the map like this? For really effective free trade wouldn't it make more sense if Canada/America/Mexico had a common currency?
The way it is now, when we sell 600 lbs calves for $1.30, how does that relate to what we were getting in 2002...if we put it into American dollars? In 2002 our $1.30 calf was worth $.82 US($491)? That is what an American feedlot paid for them in US dollars. In 2005 our calf was worth $1.13 US($677)?
Can you understand how a group like R-CALF might be a bit upset here? In 2002 a lot of calves went south, partly due to the drought, but a lot to do with the dollar difference? Due to the cheap Canadian dollar the American cow/calf man saw their market undercut. And I would say they had a valid concern?
I have often wondered how Australia could ship old cows to Canada and compete with our 20 cent cows and I suspect it is this same sort of monetary inbalance? Someone can manipulate the money supply to get pretty well any result they want, it seems?
I suspect the Bank of Canada was manipulating the money difference in some way...and I suspect it is being done again...only the other way? I will admit I sure don't understand how these bankers do it!
How can two countries have real free and fair trade without a common money supply or some kind of control over what the bankers do? These parasites can basically control both countries monetary policy and therefore pick the winners and the losers? How did our governments ever let this get out of their control? Who actually makes the decisions at the Bank of Canada...and the American Fed? Is it the governments or private bankers?
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