• Home
  • About
    • About Competitive Futures
    • About Eric Garland
    • News
  • Case studies
    • Competitive strategy
    • Economic development
    • Opportunity assessment
  • Services
    • Research
      • Technology foresight
      • Future customer profiles
      • Competitor positioning
      • Investment due diligence
    • Training
      • Future Intelligence course
      • Real Forecasting
  • Media
    • Best practice reports
    • Books by Eric Garland
    • Articles by Eric Garland
    • Podcast episodes
    • STEEP Reports
    • Presentations
  • Blog
  • Contact

Posts Tagged ‘logic’

Dubai’s demise and some basic questions about debt

Monday, 30 November 2009 20:57 Written by Eric Garland 1 Comment

BURJ-AL-ARABThe endless oil-soaked financial Bacchanal known as Dubai, home to air-conditioned ski parks, seven-star hotels, the new headquarters of Halliburton, Roger Federer’s income, and a army of foreign servants supporting a few ultra-wealthy is now officially out of wine, the band gone home, the hangover beginning . It turns out that like so much, Dubai, or at least Dubai World, is leveraged to the edge of its financial capabilities and has ultimately defaulted on the interest payments.

In the streets of Washington and on the Internet, we hear murmurs about the crisis of confidence in sovereign debt, questions on whether Dubai is really a country, really a city-state, really real enough to matter. So many questions about future bond ratings, the effect on gold, a retreat to commodities-backed currencies, the impact on equities. Also, there is speculation on the cause: is it real estate, peak oil, an overestimation of the global ultra-wealthy, the instability of the financial services industry?

In addition to those questions, I have a few basic questions first :

  1. How is Dubai any different from the United States, France, or Japan, countries swimming in massive debt?
  2. Has debt as a concept somehow morphed? Is sovereign debt really expected to be repaid? If not, are the bonds issued from such debt legal financial instruments, or some form of fraud?
  3. How is it that countries basing their fiscal health on debt expect the future to be so much more fruitful, profitable and taxable? Which strategic trends are they seeing to value the future performance of their assets so highly?

Basically, how is it that all these banks, companies, pension funds, and nations can be so extended, engorged on debt? Does anybody run black ink anymore? Why is the future perceived to be of greater value than the present?

I think the answers may be simple. Painful but simple. Better to make money than to owe money.

Now, who is making money out there?

About the blog

This is the official trend blog of Competitive Futures, a management consultancy that provides trend research and analysis for business and government around the world. Here, we update you on interesting trends we see as part of our work for our clients.


For managing partner Eric Garland's new author and speaker blog, please consult and bookmark http://www.ericgarland.co

Get trend updates sent to your mailbox

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Sign up for the CompFutures Trend Report

Trends we’re tracking

Tags

agriculture analysis bailout bailouts banking banks business development business models California China competitive intelligence debt disruption Economic Development Economics economy education Energy Entrepreneurialism Facebook finance financial crisis forecasting forecasts foresight future Futurism Greece healthcare intelligence leadership Media mergers mindsets music oil petroleum psychology publishing Retail scenarios social media social networks strategy urbanization
Podcast powered by podPress v8.8.10.12