Saturday, April 19, 2025

Polaris of Enlightenment

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Bitcoin reaches historic milestone – passes $100,000

Published 5 December 2024
– By Editorial Staff
Analysts believe that bitcoin will continue to multiply in value in the coming years.

For the first time ever, the cryptocurrency Bitcoin reached and passed the $100,000 mark.

Since Trump won the US presidential election, Bitcoin has advanced strongly and his choice to nominate “crypto tsar” Paul Atkins to head the US Securities and Exchange Commission is believed to have further strengthened the belief in the cryptocurrency.

The world’s largest cryptocurrency has risen steadily since Trump won the election, from just under $70,000 on election day to just under $100,000 in just over two weeks.

At the time of writing, one Bitcoin is valued at almost $103,000. The milestone was close to being reached already in November, but instead dropped temporarily after several heavy investors chose to take the opportunity to collect their profits.

In 2024, the price of Bitcoin has so far increased by 133 percent – and analysts have predicted that it could continue to rise and reach $200,000 in 2025.

According to analysts, it is not unlikely that the cryptocurrency will reach $125-130,000 before the end of the year, and Bitcoin analyst Michael Saylor believes that it is reasonable for the cryptocurrency to reach $13 million in 2025.

The extremely positive development for Bitcoin is believed to have been strongly influenced by Trump’s nomination of Paul Atkins as the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission – the US agency that oversees securities trading.

“The whole cabinet owns Bitcoin”

Atkins is apparently very positive about cryptocurrencies in general and Bitcoin in particular and there is now talk that there will be a “crypto tsar” in the Trump White House who has the potential to strengthen the position and role of cryptocurrencies in the US economy.

According to crypto billionaire Mike Novogratz, Trump’s presidency represents a “paradigm shift” for an industry regulation of cryptocurrencies and he believes that Bitcoin will continue to rise in value going forward.

– The entire cabinet almost owns Bitcoin and are advocates of digital assets. The people around that table are very positive about this space. They are for innovation, they are for digital assets, they are for Bitcoin.

Trump has also previously pledged to create a national Bitcoin reserve, with the Federal Reserve buying 200,000 Bitcoins each year over a five-year period, until they reach one million – which then represents just under five percent of the total global supply.

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Fast charging electric cars now more expensive than gas in Sweden

Published yesterday 7:21
– By Editorial Staff

In Sweden, fast charging of electric cars at public stations has become more expensive than refueling with gasoline, according to a recent calculation. However, home charging is still cheaper than gasoline.

It is Privata Affärer that has compared the costs of driving 10 kilometers with an electric car versus a gasoline car. The calculation is based on a gasoline car consuming 0.7 liters of gasoline per 10 kilometers and an electric car consuming 2 kilowatt-hours per 10 kilometers.

At current prices, fast charging at public stations costs 11.38 SEK per 10 kilometers, while gasoline refueling costs 11.02 SEK per 10 kilometers.

This means that fast charging can currently be more expensive than gasoline. This type of charging is mainly used during longer trips or when a quick top-up is needed, while home charging is the most common and cost-effective option for most electric car owners.

Home charging still cheaper

The calculation shows that home charging an electric car is significantly cheaper, with a cost about 75 percent lower than the per-kilometer cost of a gasoline car.

At the same time, costs are affected by several factors, including driving style, outdoor temperature, and the fuel consumption of different car models. Electricity prices also vary depending on the time and provider, meaning the cost of home charging can vary significantly depending on where in the country you live and when you charge the car.

Swedish government: Unprecedented economic turbulence ahead

Published 15 April 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Elisabeth Svantesson during Tuesday's press conference.

Elisabeth Svantesson, the Moderate Party’s Minister for Finance, believes that Trump’s trade tariffs and the unrest they have caused will also affect the Swedish economy.

– We had good conditions for getting the economy going. But then this happened, which we’ve talked about a lot – the trade war has materialized, she emphasizes.

According to Svantesson, the Swedish economy was recovering at the end of 2024 but this recovery has now been interrupted, and the Americans are being blamed.

The finance minister says that confidence in the US has been badly damaged and will take a long time to rebuild and that the Trump administration’s actions have damaged both the US and European economies.

It is sad that one of Sweden’s partners, the United States, is acting in this way, she said:

– What we are experiencing now is unprecedented. We have a trade war at a time when markets are highly integrated.

“Higher costs for businesses and households”

Although the finance minister admits that the consequences of the trade war are difficult to determine in advance, she nevertheless maintains that Sweden remains strong “with world-class public finances” and the focus of the spring budget, according to Svantesson, is on getting “the wheels turning” through various economic measures such as increased tax deductions and increased funding for the Swedish Public Employment Service.

We don’t know all the consequences of the trade war yet, but we know that it is harmful… But with this budget we are protecting Sweden, and we are prepared to do more, she adds.

Despite the SEK 11.5 billion (€1 billion) in measures, unemployment is predicted to rise from 8.2% today to 8.6% by the end of the year, and inflation to 2.5%, from 1.9% previously.

The Ministry of Finance expects Sweden’s GDP to grow by 2.1% in 2025 lower than previous estimates. However, growth is expected to pick up in 2026 and 2027, according to the forecast, which may be revised in the future.

The announcement of increased import tariffs in the United States has caused turbulence in financial markets and sharp stock market declines. Higher tariffs are expected to lead to higher costs for businesses and households, which is expected to dampen demand. At the same time, increased uncertainty itself risks dampening economic activity as firms and households postpone investments, hiring and purchases”, the assessment says.

Economy professor: Trump’s tariffs rooted in “flakey” trade deficit analysis

Donald Trump's USA

Published 9 April 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Jeffrey Sachs of Columbia University.

In a wide-ranging interview with The Duran , economist Jeffrey Sachs critiques Donald Trump’s tariff policies, calling the administration’s understanding of trade deficits “completely flakey” and warning of severe economic and geopolitical consequences.

Sachs, a Columbia University professor and former UN advisor, emphasizes that tariffs will not address the root causes of US trade imbalances and instead risk fragmented trade, rising consumer costs, and global instability.

Sachs begins by rejecting the core argument for Trump’s tariffs: the claim that US trade deficits result from “unfair” foreign trade practices.

– The trade deficits have nothing to do – I will say nothing to do – with the trade policies of the rest of the world. They have no indication whatsoever that anybody is ripping off anybody, especially that the rest of the world is ripping off the United States.

He defines a trade deficit as a macroeconomic imbalance, not a trade policy failure.

– What a trade deficit means – pure and simple – is that a country is spending more than it is earning. That’s all.

Sachs dismisses the Trump administration’s diagnosis as “completely flakey”, comparing it to a shopper blaming stores for overspending.

– Trump calls that a ripoff. It’s a little strange… It’s like a person who goes on a shopping binge, runs a current account deficit against all those stores they visited, and then blames the shops for those imbalances.

– The diagnosis is completely flakey. I taught international monetary economics for 22 years at Harvard. In the second day of the undergraduate course, I explained that a current account deficit was an imbalance of spending and production, essentially – not a measure of trade policy.

The twin-deficit problem

Sachs warns that tariffs will harm US households and industries, raising prices for goods like automobiles and disrupting supply chains.

– If you say, ‘We’re not going to have trade’… that pushes workers into the labor-intensive, low-skilled sectors in this value chain. That lowers living standards.

He highlights the risks of stock market instability, referencing a $10 trillion loss in global markets during tariff disputes.

– This is losing what we call the gains from trade.

Sachs draws a direct comparison to the 1930 Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, which exacerbated the Great Depression.

– The protectionism of 1930 in the United States was an accelerant [of the Depression].

Sachs ties trade deficits to US fiscal policy, emphasizing the “twin deficits” problem.

– We call this the twin deficits problem: You have a large budget deficit that shows up as a large trade deficit, so it’s a twin deficit. This is kind of a chronic characteristic of the US.

He critiques the weaponization of the dollar, noting that US sanctions incentivize countries to abandon the dollar.

– The weaponization of the dollar in confiscating Russian reserves, Venezuelan reserves, Iranian reserves … means that if you have some trade dispute or foreign policy dispute with the US, you’re likely to get your money confiscated.

Geopolitical risks: Taiwan as the next Ukraine

Sachs warns of broader geopolitical fallout, referencing a 2015 Council on Foreign Relations paper titled Revising U.S. Grand Strategy Toward China by Robert Blackwill and Ashley Tellis and highlights its argument for containing China’s rise.

– The argument [in the paper] is China’s rise is no longer in America’s interest. It must be stopped. A shocking idea: we must do damage to another side not because they threaten us, but because they are too big and therefore they undermine US hegemony – that’s literally the argument in the paper. Not a list of nefarious actions by China.

– The grand strategy of the United States, since it’s inception – in essence – is primacy: The United States must be number one. And so, we must prevent any challenge [to dominance] … And this is the motivation for much of what’s happening from 2015: The attempt to form, in crazy ways, new trade groups in Asia that don’t include China, the export bans on technology, the attempt to destroy companies like Huawei and ZTE and rumours and machinations of all sorts of imagined dangers.

Sachs warns that this confrontational approach risks catastrophic escalation over Taiwan, fueled by tariffs and military posturing.

– The unilateral tariffs Trump imposed – not on the world in his first term, but specifically on China – and now the very punitive tariffs on China … are deeply enmeshed in military buildups and military alliances in East Asia, in saber-rattling every day about Taiwan with the real risk that Taiwan turns itself into the next Ukraine by making the same kind of bets on US protection that Ukraine made, that ended up destroying so much of Ukraine, the same thing could happen in Taiwan.

– If it does, the war is going to be even more dangerous for the world, potentially even catastrophic, and with the instability of US economic and political leadership combined with the deep-state animus toward China, it’s pretty risky.

Trump’s new tariffs take effect: “Lots of companies will be wiped out”

Donald Trump's USA

Published 9 April 2025
– By Editorial Staff
Several analysts believe that the trade war is likely to escalate further in the near future.

On Wednesday morning, the trade tariffs previously announced by President Donald Trump were imposed – including import tariffs of 104% on Chinese products.

– Everything the US buys from China will disappear. There will be a huge price shock in every way and shortages of all kinds of things, warns Alexis von Sydow, China analyst at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs.

In addition, an additional tariff on some selected Chinese goods will begin to be levied during the day, according to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.

She claims that Trump is confident that the Chinese will back down and withdraw their counter-tariffs – reiterating Trump’s message that the US has been unfairly treated as a trading partner and will ultimately be the big winner, becoming richer and more prosperous as a country from the tariffs.

The Trump administration has claimed, among other things, that the measures will lead to the creation of more American jobs and shift much of the production that takes place abroad to the United States.

However, most people do not seem to believe in this strategy, as evidenced by the stock market’s blood-red figures. China, for example, has announced that it is ready to fight “to the end”, and Alexis von Sydow believes that the tariffs mean that “everyone is in trouble”, and that many product categories will skyrocket in price.

“Will escalate”

Fredrik Cho, China consultant and vice-chairman of the Sweden-China Trade Council, agrees and does not believe that either side is ready to back down or that the conflict is coming to an end.

– Lots of companies will be wiped out, he predicts, and continues:

– It will escalate further. This will go on for quite a while,

It’s worth noting that China is by far the US’s top importing country, importing around $450 billion worth of goods last year. Many of these such as electronics are now expected to soar in price.

Cho emphasizes that Trump’s policy is directly counterproductive as it will negatively affect the US economy while rapidly forcing China in the direction its leaders aspire to with a greater focus on the domestic market.

– It will accelerate the process towards what the Chinese government wants. They want to focus more on domestic demand and consumption.

Sweden can “find new trade routes”

He does not see any disastrous effects for China, but it may be difficult for the Chinese to achieve the set growth target.

– It is clear that it will be noticed and there will be a bump in the curve.

How the tariffs will affect Sweden and other EU countries is not entirely clear. However, the centre-right government has warned of lower growth and price shocks on many products can be expected.

– In the longer term, there are other effects. For example, we will find new trade routes and will not trade in the same way if the tariffs remain in place in the longer term… But growth will decrease and that is why we say that this is bad, commented Elisabeth Svantesson, the Conservative finance minister, last week.

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