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The European Union is far from the position of
strength politicians only a few years ago were portraying it would
be. The socialist welfarism of the recent students riots in France,
Italy’s shift to the left, Britain’s Tony Blair under siege and a
still comatose German ‘Panzer Economie’ – all signal that Europe is
in economic decline. It certainly does not appear that Western
Europe can now afford what it is politically committed to do, and
certainly not so within a decade or two as it regards health care
and pensions for the elderly. The hope is to turn the most populous
former Eastern European countries – Poland, Bulgaria, Hungary and
Romania – into large self-sustaining consumers markets, and that may
one day happen – but certainly not in the foreseeable future. The
economies of the West and the East are too far apart to be
integrated. Even Germany has considerable problems assimilating the
former East Germany, and this notwithstanding all the billions of
Euros that the ‘Deutsche Gesellschaft’ has poured into the East
already. Not to mention the Union’s energy dependence on the
flimsies of the Ukraine and Russia, an entirely separate matter all
in and by itself.
The recent French riots in particular underscore the increasingly
untenable system of job security at the expense of entrepreneurship,
and that the grounds are set for a collision between expectations
and economic reality. And whereas certain niches can certainly be
found for international real estate investors, especially in
countries like Bulgaria, the implied economic risks that must be
assumed far outweigh, for the time being, the profits that can be
reaped.
In China the economic achievements are huge, but so are the
problems. President Clinton, in one of his last speeches, said that
200 million people in China were lifted from absolute poverty from
1978 to about 1999. That's equivalent to about two-thirds of the
entire population of the United States in twenty years. But, at the
same time, the factors of economic instability are many and worry
the leadership. These factors include a financial and banking system
that is basically bankrupt, with bad loans-out greater than the real
net reserves of the entire banking system.
But, perhaps even more importantly, there is a great imbalance of
wealth between the thirty-five percent of the population that lives
in the cities and the sixty-five percent inhabiting the countryside.
If one is lucky enough to be born in a city - and registered as a
city dweller - it is easier to get into university. In the city, one
can work at all the large companies and government agencies.
Conversely, those who are registered as rural persons are subjected
to very severe restrictions on where they can live and work. And
this is actually the biggest human rights problem in China today.
There is a majority of this population of 1.3 billion people that
are, by law, second-class citizens. And unless the Chinese
leadership comes to terms with this reality, this social injustice
is a ticking time-bomb that one day will explode, also in the faces
of those foreign venturers that invest in China.
Since capitalism is, by definition, a system in which the means of
production are predominantly privately owned and operated for
profit, and which operates in the absence of government coercion or
constraint on the production, distribution, or consumption of goods
and services, the whole of Islam, most of Africa and all South
America – with the notable exception of Chile – are entirely cut
out. This includes wealthy countries like the United Arab Emirates
and especially Dubai, where the real estate boom of recent years has
been plagued by slavery, stories of construction workers not being
paid for months on end, and excessive working hours all of which
have led to the rioting early in the year, as upset workers damaged
cars, buildings, and construction equipment. Again, investment
niches can be found anywhere, but risk far outweighs profitability.
Everything taken into account, therefore, real estate markets in the
United States and Canada are still the two safest havens for secure
investments. The production of real estate output depends
essentially on the accumulation of capital. This is so because the
propensity to invest depends on expectations of future profitability
and on the present perceptions of market risk. If the present
perception of market risk increases sharply, capital will exit more
and more from the sphere of real estate production. What drives the
accumulation process, therefore, is the perpetual search for more
surplus value - that is the amount of the increase in the value of
capital upon investment, i.e. the yield regardless of source or
form.
North America’s real estate markets offer this surplus value, both
in the short and long run, coupled by political security and
financial stability, and thus position themselves as the destination
of choice of all those who want to reap the profits of investment
while, at the same time, minimizing the socio-economic risks of
investing.
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