Financial Industry
There appears to be a disjointed understanding concerning the functioning of a capitalistic economy and its use of money. Financializaition is a mostly new model of the use of money as a valuable resource in and of itself. Money is essentially fetishized as the most prominent capitalists strive to gain more and more money. Money makes the world go around in many ways, but there lies a question in to how humanity uses the precious inventions of trade and commerce in more reasonable and just manner that excludes the negative aspects that financial institutions and their machinations attempt to dominate the economic progress of a people.
The purpose of this essay is to argue that financializaition and its offspring intermediaries have set the capitalistic world balance off a productive trajectory. The greed of those who seek value in material wealth without any real or substantial backing is at the heart of this issue as this essay will argue that without a better understanding of how money works or is created, the trends towards to financializaition will also be marginalized at perhaps a great price.
This essay will discuss the process of the creation of money using the American Dollar as an example of how financializaition is ultimately based on no real tangible backing or asset. Using this argument as a premise this essay will continue to argue that the offspring of the banking systems that have been created has provided the root cause to the problematic effects that financializaition appears to have on the world's economy and the state of the human race as it seeks to peacefully coexist and conduct commercial activity without the unnecessary conflicts that are often residual from financial institutions that supposedly have a lock hold on the way the world operates and conducts business.
Background
There is less secrecy regarding the power structures of the world, and it appears that financial institutions certainly play a very large role in the powering of this planet and has its hands in many human endeavors. Pike and Pollard (2009) explicitly agreed with this idea when they wrote "financializaition -- shorthand for the growing influence of capital markets, their intermediaries, and processes in contemporary economic and political life -- generates an analytical opportunity and political economic imperative to move finance into the heart of economic geographic analysis. Drawing upon long-standing concerns about the relatively marginal location of finance in economic geography, we emphasize the integral role of finance in connecting the entangled geographies of the economic to the social, the cultural, and the political."
Denning (2014) also commented on the nature of the economy when he wrote "throughout history, periods of excessive financializaition have often coincided with periods of national economic setbacks, such as Spain in the 14th century, the Netherlands in the late 18th century, and Britain in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The focus by elites on "making money out of money" rather than making real goods and services has led to wealth for the few, and overall national economic decline. In a financialized economy, the financial tail is wagging the economic dog." This idea of how money became such a popular item to have despite having any real value presents unique problems that depicts an economic world that is based on many false illusions.
Creating the U.S. Dollar
The U.S. Dollar, despite recent disasters and turbulent times remains a powerful currency on the global market. This means that those who own U.S. Dollars have significant buying power of goods and services in markets that accept such currencies. This is not a problem until it is revealed the nature of money and how this money comes into materialization. The manipulation of this system by financial institutions have spread their influence in the form of financializaition throughout the global economy much like a harmful virus out to destroy the very organism it chooses to feed off of in its state of peril and weakness.
The U.S. Dollar is created out of thin air in a seemingly act of magic and illusion. To complete this transaction, the U.S. Congress asks a privately owned bank known as the Federal Reserve, to create money for them. The Federal Reserve is an internationally owned private bank. This small institution creates U.S. Dollars and loans them to the U.S. Government with a rate of interest. Unlike the past, the U.S. Dollar is not based on any precious metal standard or have any real financial banking. It is play money. The gold standard was replaced many decades...
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