Yanis is an Economic Legend-🙌👍👊. I have been listening to his Economic research and analysis since the 2007/08 global financial crisis. He is legendary for dissecting the prognosis of economic and political issues like a piece of cake.🙌😎👍👊✊️
Yanis, it's so good to hear an intelligent reasoned argument against the status quo constantly pumped out by the majority of the media. Please keep it up.
@@Jovan_Jarkarane He was the only one who spoke out against the exploitation of the EU and the euro. He had the guts to say no to the EU but Tsipras betrayed him He is the only one that wants Greece out of the EU and the euro. For Greece to be free unlike the traitors and fake patriots New Democracy and their hypocritical supporters.
@@GuitarTherapy144 Varoufakis is a narcissist, who almost got his country totally destroyed in 2015 by putting his personal beliefs and his personal vendetta with EU above his country. Thank God we got ride of him
I hope Yanis is back to full health... He is a diamond; telling us what is really going on in the murky world of global capitalism. Thank you Al J for having him on. I listened to him months ago explaining how we were being fleeced by energy producers and suppliers. His insights and analyses are necessary and educational in order to see through the opaque systems of finance which govern our lives. He cares about the workers of the world. Thank you Yanis..
@@marywest6844 the truth is that his opponents in Greece and EU that own all media, presented to the public a huge campaign of character assasination on him. The main narrative was that he destroyed Greece. Just like that. Without any further explanations. People believe what media says. So there's your answer. But Yanis is a diamond of a person. Humanity will be a better place because of his actions. In Greece we have soon elections and our party Mera25 seems to be doubling its force in the parliament. The future will be very interesting in Greece, Europe and the world. ☮️💛
@@marywest6844 lol, Greece is heavily indebted, and it is so especially because of politicians like him. I like his critique of capitalism, but as a politician and as a financier he is a clown.
@@marywest6844 With his policy I used to stand in front of ATMs for months in huge rows to take my daily 60 euro. Because he closed the banks. Also my best friend went bankrupt because his e shop could not make transactions with other countries. Follow Yannis, the success is guaranteed.
Love to hear Yanis talk. A man of the left so maybe I'm biased but his reasoned analysis serves to provide a genuine (not simply a bloated rhetorically device) alternative to our current financial system. Lets be clear his ideas are not perfect and there will be opportunity costs for sure. No system is perfect but at least he knows the details well enough to show what can be done to restructure the system away from bank and financial institution friendly interventions, towards an intermediation mechanism that directly fits with needs of the people and small/medium sized companies
Yeah let the government track your every move - what can go wrong. In democratic theory, what do you do with the government that get's corrupt? You vote in the opposition? Good luck getting an actual opposition in a world where the corrupt people can shut genuine opposition with one click of a button.
Just finished Yanis's book "Adults in the room". Highly recommended it, its such an eye opener on the corruption and anti-democratic practices within the EU.
Exactly what we should have done in 2008-2009. Let the "too big to fail" banks fail. If you or I start a business and manage it horribly, we go bankrupt. The same should be true for all financial institutions otherwise we're kicking the moral hazard can down the road for an even bigger collapse. There shouldn't be bailouts for any businesses or institutions that choose greed over sound business practices. We're going to pay big time for the past decade and a half of bailouts and "quantitative easing".
The US national debt is more than $31 trillion, with 38% of it held by foreign entities. The US also has $38 trillion in unfunded Medicare liabilities and $17 trillion in unfunded Social Security liabilities The US dollar is the dominant reserve currency, backed by its perceived strength, allowing the US to print unlimited dollars as long as the world maintains trust in it. The US dollar is the backbone of US power, and any actions that undermine confidence in the currency threaten to destabilize its position of dominance. Each unilateral sanction imposed by the US risk damaging the stability and credibility of the US dollar, leading to dire consequences for the nation's power and influence. The US is the only country actively undermining the strength of the US dollar. The freezing of Russia's $300 billion currency reserve by Western governments may lead countries to reconsider investing their funds in US Treasury bonds. A significant portion of US dollars is held outside the US, estimated at 60-70% of all US dollars in circulation, due to its status as the dominant reserve currency and wide use in international trade and finance. The one trillion dollar trade deficit of the US is a consequence of being the reserve currency, as a strong dollar makes it difficult for US businesses to export goods and services while simultaneously making it easier for other countries to sell to the US. Countries are shipping goods to the US in exchange for green pieces of paper. The US budget deficit is $1.38 trillion in 2022 which must be paid for by selling more Treasury bonds. The interest on this debt is greater than the military budget. To pay the interest on its debt, the government sells more Treasury bonds, leading to a cycle of increasing debt. The US printing of dollars has been exporting inflation in other countries for decades, but will eventually increase US inflation. Raising interest rates to fight inflation decreases consumer and business spending, increases the trade deficit, and higher interest payments on government debt. Other countries will respond to the US raising of interest rate by raising their interest rate, risking global recession. The Plaza Accord addressed this issue in the past, but it will be challenging to implement such measures now. A well-run country collects taxes to fund essential services and infrastructure. In the US political system, wealthy corporations and individuals can lobby for tax breaks. The shortfall in funding for the US government has reached $31 trillion. Instead of collecting taxes from wealthy corporations and individuals, the government pays interest to them. Banks hold Treasury bonds for their safety, liquidity, regulatory compliance, and potential profitability. When interest rates on Treasury bonds rise sharply, the decrease in bond values reduces liquidity and makes it harder for banks to raise cash quickly. This causes depositors to lose confidence, triggering a bank run. In response to the current bank run, the government is issuing Treasury bonds to raise funds to compensate depositors for any lost funds. There are $19 trillion in deposits in US banks. The estimated unrealized loss on these treasuries is $1.7 trillion. The total size of US banks' equity is $2.1 trillion. The new Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) help prevents discounted bondholders from taking losses when they have to sell them urgently. The BTFP accepts discounted bonds at face value to be used as pledges for loans to inject more money into the economy. More inflation. It's a Ponzi scheme.
Duh Why do you think they hate Islam so much which religiously calls for the gold currency system Turkey, Taliban and multiple Muslim nations have tried to bring back the gold standard but kept getting attacked by the West unsurprisingly
@@netizencapet tbf it is an intriguing and largely accurate analysis. The only other way of describing this system than a Ponzi would be to describe it as a pyramid scheme or techno-financial feudalism. The system is corrupt at its core IMO and dont believe calling it out for what it is, a ponzi, in practical terms negates anything said prior.
Mr. Varoufakis is one of the few clear-headed and courageous people who can communicate that economics as it's been structured is a form of brain damage.
@@philipm3173 That why Varoufakis brought Lazard to Greece? Why he imposed capital controls, forcing old pensioners to stand in queues (and often faint under the hot summer sun) to get their pension money from the ATM? Why he proposed 8 billion euros in austerity measures to the troika in April 2015 and signed off on the extension of the second memorandum in February 2015, both times as finance minister? That why he has funds stashed offshore in Oman (oh, man!)?
@@konstantinospapadopoulos134 He is not fooled. You are the fool here. Everything he said happened. Sadly for most of you economics is a science you will never understand.
I totally Agree Yani even from our New Zealand’s banks! As I heard from a reliable Source that bank managers were putting Pressure on their staff to push for more loans from clients etc…🧐 It’s Greed to feed the so called Coperate World banks ever increasing Debt and this in the not to far away future will crash along with Energy Blindness as researched in graphs by Art Berman and Nate Hagens Gitta The Master Series is also a very Awakening Facts 💦🐬🕊🌏🧐
Nice to see someone else championing many of the issues that have been causing me mental health issues. I've been talking about them for a long time. Nice to see someone getting some traction on them. They mock me when I say them. Mentioning them is not the real issue. Sad he got attacked. I think they go after anyone who speaks about it. My life got very problematic. It's better now, though.
Iif this was true living standards wouldn’t have been falling steadily since the 90s. Comparatively, China has the opposite effect, and its just as technologically advanced than the west these days, if not more so.
this was easily one of the most informative + inspiring things I've ever seen, I've just finished watching it for the 2nd time, and I'm really excited to now get the book, Yanis' references to the late 1700s are a terribly relevant example from recent-ish history, so powerful to think we may be on the brink of undoing the current cloud-shackles - I'm really grateful to be able to have access to the thoughts of incredible thinkers around history/economics/revolutionary ideas like this, it's really exciting to think we're potentially only one small revolution away from a far more equitable social situation, given how "globalised" the world asserts to being... it really sounds possible that enough people can agree around the world.. that we don't want to be cloud serfs, maybe more that we want to have a share of the profits being sourced from technological growth. no longer should the risks be socialised with profits privatised, the more people that learn this key human right the better I think. thank you yanis, pls i rly hope that people see the sense in this information..
Inflation also finally materialized because from 2008 to 2020 with cheap money, corporations used the easy money to build upon their monopolies. They gave up margins and accepted losses in exchange for market share. They also used the cheap money to buy/control more components of the supply chain to have complete price control. Now that interest rates are increasing, they can exercise their monopoly and raise prices without any competition for consumers to turn to. This is happening in every industry, from retail to their stranglehold on pricing as suppliers have no other buyers to compete for their goods.
Genuinely curious. What do you mean with cheap money? Money in a time when rent was low? So investing or focussing on growth makes more sense than expecting profit? When rent was low most tech companies focusses on agressive growth and capturing marketshare. Now that savings return rent, boardmembers starting to expect companies to be profitable. And thats the point where we see expensive money?
Sometimes things have to be destroyed and burned down.. like, cancer cells. Systematically broken banks shouldn't be allowed to grow, and definitely shouldn't be saved.
Sensible suggestion. Provision of state backed payment system. A parallel system to remove the monopoly of banks in payments. UPI in combination with eRupee CBDC is a model in place in India. Exactly on the lines of Yanis's suggestion.
Thank you Yanis for the courage to speak out and expose the the nexus of the banks and the governments. Like George Carlin said, 'It's a big club and you ain't in it!'
I absolutely love this guy. Intelligent, honest, moral, ethical. All words one would not use to describe 99 percent of the world's politicians, industrialists and corporate leaders. Keep punching my friend.
Meanwhile in Greece, pension age has been raised to 67 years with almost no backlash at all (I.e. practically nobody is going to get any pension). It’s shameful how the media has put my fellow countrymen to a collective sleep.
This gentleman is making a cogent argument. We need to hear more of it in the united states. I would like to hear more from him. I will be looking for his books. Thanks for a revealing look.
Digital currency,can be shut off- would you want your money shut off,like a Canadian trucker ? Do what you want,but scream no to digital national money.whatever it takes !
!al jazeera, nice vid! to sum it up, we havent learn anything! we just keep repeating history over and over again, which is why we are in another financial crisis, but this time china is not going to help us, cause of the way how we treats them!
Σε αντίθεση με την Ελλάδα, εδώ Γιάννη οι δημοσιογράφοι δεν σε κοροϊδεύουν, ειρωνευονται ή κάνουν χαζές επίτηδες ερωτήσεις. Είναι ωραίο να μιλάς με κανονικούς δημοσιογράφους που είναι διατεθειμένος να ακούσουν, να ρωτήσουν και να μάθουν.
έλεγα να γράψω κάτι σχετικό αλλά βρήκα το δικό σας σχόλιο, δες τι γίνεται και που ζούμε καν, Βαρουφάκις στο εξοτερικό ΤΟΠ για ΤΟΠ και στην Προβατο-Ελλάδα δεν τον θέλουμε καν στη βουλή...ποιοι εμείς που πεινάμε πιο πολύ απ' όλους.....
Have to disagree here with Yanis on relocating funds to a central bank because in agricultural countries , small state banks reach rural areas providing support to farmers where nobody can . Secondly on banks today committing 'no fraud' is a bit misleading since the massive investigation showed how Duestche Bank and others bank in US were heavily involved in money laundering .
I think a central bank could have branches in rural areas, but you're right leading up to 2008 a lot of what happened wasn't necessarily fraud and banks especially Deutsche have been doing illegal things since then.
I liked the ending of the conversation when the idea that RENT is counter capitalistic. This makes lots of sense for me how through the ages the legitimacy of one of the cores of feudalism, was assimilated deep into our current economic model.
Personally I think it would've been better to reduce the retirement age from 62 to 60. The reason is because the majority of French citizens spend their money within the economy anyway. The money supply wouldn't change by that much and furthermore economists could also substantiate a minor tax increase on major corporations in order to make the economic system fairer for consumers and business.
Wait. Varoufakis endorsing CBDCs? I did a double take and a What?! I understand what he said about having the ledger open and transparent. But we know that CBDCs come at a cost to anonimity, privacy and can be frozen and or limited at any time. That's the part that might be most important.
@@nickolasgaspar9660 sure it will work juat as well as rules and regulations for banks, especually considering that in the case of cbdc the regulator and the bank will be the same entity *rollseyes*
Yanis Varoufakis ! Clear, lucid and relatively easy to understand ! Honest and knwledgable man with true sense for what's rigth, and what is wrong in cpitalism !
Arundhati Roy the famed Indian novelist, author and progressive intellectual was once asked why she was so shrill in her opinions. She replied that when the situation was shrill the analysis, description and prescription had to be similarly shrill in order to address it. She was right. And so is Varoufakis.
it doesn't make sense to save a bank or company that doesn't build equity during the good times so when a downturn arises it is not on the edge of bankruptcy. it's greed and ignorance
The story with the banking system goes back centuries with the bank of England, the Dutch bank and later the Venetians. Anyone having read the book about Jekyll Island meeting circa 1910, what happened to Abraham Lincoln, Jackson and Kennedy, will have an idea of the legalized banking fraud occurring.
Yanis is right. There's no reason other than the banks not getting free capital, that we can't implement a .gov website where a citizen has access to a checking/savings account with no strings attached.
@@andykjm Ya the system we have in place now sure is working great. Where people who don't hold a minimum amount in the account or have an arbitrary amount in recurring deposits each month get punished. Oh and you don't earn any interest off that, that belongs to the banks. :)
Would you be happy if we make it free and government controlled, but segment it per 10 million citizens? So one central bank with its own ledger for each province? That way there is no single point of failure...
@10:00 the banks weren't given trillions in bail out cash. They were asked to swap assets for reserves. No new net currency was created. But they cannot by law use their reserves for anything except payments clearing. It was a complete failure of policy. Banks cannot lend out reserves, so the QE had no effect at all on capacity of banks to issue loans. All that happened is they tried to get rid of excess reserves, pushing the interest rate down, which is a good thing for the indebted, but hardly a recipe for rapid economic recovery and more jobs. Fiscal policy is far more powerful than monetary. The Parliaments are the ones asleep at the wheel in our times, not the central bankers. The central bankers are kids with a toy steering wheel who think they're driving the car. They can do some damage with their toys, but they do not have the fiscal tools to make the investments the people need. For one, they have no capacity to relieve a supply cost-push inflation event, unless they hire everyone jobless to go work on the loading docks and permaculture farms, and whatnot, but they have no such fiscal authority.
Haha, i have an even more pessimistic view. Extend the toy steering wheel metaphor to parliament as well. In other words no one is at the steering wheel at this point.
it's not wages that raise prices, it's greed! Companies make hundreds of thousands, millions, billions in profit and yet they raise prices, lay off and fire people!
He is ahead of his time. We are not going to get rid of the fiat system in a hurry. It is admirable that he thinks that the power to create money is going to be yanked from the private sector. The approach he is taking is smart, give the power back to the central bank, divide and conquer. Create a wedge in the symbiotic relationship between public and private sectors that creates the flow of new money.
Thank you Al Jazeera for having on people like Yanis!!
Yanis is an Economic Legend-🙌👍👊. I have been listening to his Economic research and analysis since the 2007/08 global financial crisis. He is legendary for dissecting the prognosis of economic and political issues like a piece of cake.🙌😎👍👊✊️
Great show and respect to the Interviewer for asking the Q and letting the answere be heard in full without interruption
I love how Yanis breaks down and explain the most complex things.
Brilliant mind! one of the key voices in this world to shine the light and make sense of the destruction of the middle class.
@@suezcontours6653 if you are so wise, why dont you give youre analysis.
He's a brilliant self-promoter. He's also a pro-austerity fraud.
@@The.world.has.gone.crazy...
I recommend to read his Book " Adults in the Room " Brilliant !
🌍
@@mariettestabel275 thank you, i will. Have a good day.
Yanis, it's so good to hear an intelligent reasoned argument against the status quo constantly pumped out by the majority of the media. Please keep it up.
This man is a gift for the Greek people, yet on Sunday's elections people didn't even put him in the parliament. We deserve what is happening to us.
That is why they deserve their misery and hopefully more comes their way.
Absolutely fking not . Thank God we got ride of him .
@@Jovan_Jarkarane He was the only one who spoke out against the exploitation of the EU and the euro. He had the guts to say no to the EU but Tsipras betrayed him
He is the only one that wants Greece out of the EU and the euro. For Greece to be free unlike the traitors and fake patriots New Democracy and their hypocritical supporters.
@@Jovan_Jarkarane why? whats wrong with varoufakis? id like to hear more.
@@GuitarTherapy144 Varoufakis is a narcissist, who almost got his country totally destroyed in 2015 by putting his personal beliefs and his personal vendetta with EU above his country. Thank God we got ride of him
I hope Yanis is back to full health... He is a diamond; telling us what is really going on in the murky world of global capitalism. Thank you Al J for having him on. I listened to him months ago explaining how we were being fleeced by energy producers and suppliers. His insights and analyses are necessary and educational in order to see through the opaque systems of finance which govern our lives. He cares about the workers of the world. Thank you Yanis..
That man destroyed his country back in 2015.
Why you say that. He chose NOT to go with huge DEBT upon his people. Indebtedness.
@@marywest6844 the truth is that his opponents in Greece and EU that own all media, presented to the public a huge campaign of character assasination on him. The main narrative was that he destroyed Greece. Just like that. Without any further explanations. People believe what media says. So there's your answer. But Yanis is a diamond of a person. Humanity will be a better place because of his actions. In Greece we have soon elections and our party Mera25 seems to be doubling its force in the parliament. The future will be very interesting in Greece, Europe and the world. ☮️💛
@@marywest6844 lol, Greece is heavily indebted, and it is so especially because of politicians like him. I like his critique of capitalism, but as a politician and as a financier he is a clown.
@@marywest6844 With his policy I used to stand in front of ATMs for months in huge rows to take my daily 60 euro. Because he closed the banks. Also my best friend went bankrupt because his e shop could not make transactions with other countries. Follow Yannis, the success is guaranteed.
Love to hear Yanis talk. A man of the left so maybe I'm biased but his reasoned analysis serves to provide a genuine (not simply a bloated rhetorically device) alternative to our current financial system. Lets be clear his ideas are not perfect and there will be opportunity costs for sure. No system is perfect but at least he knows the details well enough to show what can be done to restructure the system away from bank and financial institution friendly interventions, towards an intermediation mechanism that directly fits with needs of the people and small/medium sized companies
Yeah let the government track your every move - what can go wrong. In democratic theory, what do you do with the government that get's corrupt? You vote in the opposition? Good luck getting an actual opposition in a world where the corrupt people can shut genuine opposition with one click of a button.
Yanis Varoufakis you are a gift to humanity! thank you
Varoufakis is a great economist. His explanations is cutting through the bs of corporate media.
Also thank you to great host Lamont Hill.
Glad we have this brave Man Mr.Varoufakis.
Oh, so brave! He's a pro-austerity fraud.
What happened back in 2015 in greece is not even that far in history.
Yes he is!
@@averayugen7802 Yes he is what? A fraud. That he is, certainly.
@@averayugen7802
Did you read His Book " Adults in the Room "? Brilliant ! .
A Must Read.
Just finished Yanis's book "Adults in the room". Highly recommended it, its such an eye opener on the corruption and anti-democratic practices within the EU.
Right ! I read that book too. Just Brilliant !
All the bankers know they will always get bailed out. Their bonuses are guaranteed!! They cant lose!! What a world we live in?
Refreshing view! Thank you Yanis!
Exactly what we should have done in 2008-2009. Let the "too big to fail" banks fail. If you or I start a business and manage it horribly, we go bankrupt. The same should be true for all financial institutions otherwise we're kicking the moral hazard can down the road for an even bigger collapse. There shouldn't be bailouts for any businesses or institutions that choose greed over sound business practices. We're going to pay big time for the past decade and a half of bailouts and "quantitative easing".
Agree.. if they are too big to fail… then they are simply too big…
Your post describes why I loathe Obama. He is a traitor to his country
You might do everything right and go bankrupt, because the govt is saving giant banks with trillions.
Purposeful heist alarm bells. Open for business. Purposeful theft is all these crooks are in to.
The problem is, as Yanis said, that they hold us and our cash hostage.
So refreshing to have a reporter ask a question that is not leading and listen to the answer
It's so good to see Marc Lamont Hill.
I have to say I was very impressed by his tone, knowledge and openness!
helps that he is in agreement with Yanis on this but i agree hes got the best presence
The US national debt is more than $31 trillion, with 38% of it held by foreign entities. The US also has $38 trillion in unfunded Medicare liabilities and $17 trillion in unfunded Social Security liabilities
The US dollar is the dominant reserve currency, backed by its perceived strength, allowing the US to print unlimited dollars as long as the world maintains trust in it. The US dollar is the backbone of US power, and any actions that undermine confidence in the currency threaten to destabilize its position of dominance. Each unilateral sanction imposed by the US risk damaging the stability and credibility of the US dollar, leading to dire consequences for the nation's power and influence. The US is the only country actively undermining the strength of the US dollar. The freezing of Russia's $300 billion currency reserve by Western governments may lead countries to reconsider investing their funds in US Treasury bonds.
A significant portion of US dollars is held outside the US, estimated at 60-70% of all US dollars in circulation, due to its status as the dominant reserve currency and wide use in international trade and finance. The one trillion dollar trade deficit of the US is a consequence of being the reserve currency, as a strong dollar makes it difficult for US businesses to export goods and services while simultaneously making it easier for other countries to sell to the US. Countries are shipping goods to the US in exchange for green pieces of paper.
The US budget deficit is $1.38 trillion in 2022 which must be paid for by selling more Treasury bonds. The interest on this debt is greater than the military budget. To pay the interest on its debt, the government sells more Treasury bonds, leading to a cycle of increasing debt. The US printing of dollars has been exporting inflation in other countries for decades, but will eventually increase US inflation. Raising interest rates to fight inflation decreases consumer and business spending, increases the trade deficit, and higher interest payments on government debt. Other countries will respond to the US raising of interest rate by raising their interest rate, risking global recession. The Plaza Accord addressed this issue in the past, but it will be challenging to implement such measures now.
A well-run country collects taxes to fund essential services and infrastructure. In the US political system, wealthy corporations and individuals can lobby for tax breaks. The shortfall in funding for the US government has reached $31 trillion. Instead of collecting taxes from wealthy corporations and individuals, the government pays interest to them.
Banks hold Treasury bonds for their safety, liquidity, regulatory compliance, and potential profitability. When interest rates on Treasury bonds rise sharply, the decrease in bond values reduces liquidity and makes it harder for banks to raise cash quickly. This causes depositors to lose confidence, triggering a bank run. In response to the current bank run, the government is issuing Treasury bonds to raise funds to compensate depositors for any lost funds. There are $19 trillion in deposits in US banks. The estimated unrealized loss on these treasuries is $1.7 trillion. The total size of US banks' equity is $2.1 trillion.
The new Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) help prevents discounted bondholders from taking losses when they have to sell them urgently. The BTFP accepts discounted bonds at face value to be used as pledges for loans to inject more money into the economy. More inflation.
It's a Ponzi scheme.
not a Ponzi but....very very unfair for the rest of the world... everyone pays for the well being of americans.
Duh
Why do you think they hate Islam so much which religiously calls for the gold currency system
Turkey, Taliban and multiple Muslim nations have tried to bring back the gold standard but kept getting attacked by the West unsurprisingly
I appreciated your review and to an extent agreed with all points up until "Ponzi scheme"...omit that silly tag, as it undermines the rest.
@@netizencapet tbf it is an intriguing and largely accurate analysis. The only other way of describing this system than a Ponzi would be to describe it as a pyramid scheme or techno-financial feudalism. The system is corrupt at its core IMO and dont believe calling it out for what it is, a ponzi, in practical terms negates anything said prior.
Good break down. Thanks 👍
Mr. Varoufakis is one of the few clear-headed and courageous people who can communicate that economics as it's been structured is a form of brain damage.
He's a pro-austerity fraud.
It's broken in a way that's still working phenomenally well for those in top.
@@philipm3173 That why Varoufakis brought Lazard to Greece? Why he imposed capital controls, forcing old pensioners to stand in queues (and often faint under the hot summer sun) to get their pension money from the ATM? Why he proposed 8 billion euros in austerity measures to the troika in April 2015 and signed off on the extension of the second memorandum in February 2015, both times as finance minister? That why he has funds stashed offshore in Oman (oh, man!)?
@@neoellinas man you are fooled. Search for truth. Improve your info sourcing system
@@konstantinospapadopoulos134 He is not fooled. You are the fool here. Everything he said happened. Sadly for most of you economics is a science you will never understand.
Thank you Yanis , Al Jazeera for this objective analysis.
Hi Professor Hill, so glad to see you're doing well and working for Al Jazeera. Peace to you.
Love to see Lamont Hill with his own show
This video should have millions of views ...
I totally Agree Yani even from our New Zealand’s banks! As I heard from a reliable Source that bank managers were putting Pressure on their staff to push for more loans from clients etc…🧐
It’s Greed to feed the so called Coperate World banks ever increasing Debt and this in the not to far away future will crash along with Energy Blindness as researched in graphs by Art Berman and Nate Hagens Gitta The Master Series is also a very Awakening Facts 💦🐬🕊🌏🧐
Nice to see someone else championing many of the issues that have been causing me mental health issues. I've been talking about them for a long time. Nice to see someone getting some traction on them. They mock me when I say them. Mentioning them is not the real issue. Sad he got attacked. I think they go after anyone who speaks about it. My life got very problematic. It's better now, though.
Pure genius insight
Your savings are safe, but your freedom is gone.....
Mr. Varoufakis always points out the truth. Thank you!
Just spot on again, Yanis. You are a gem in these depressing times.
Aren’t we always in a banking crisis? The entire house of cards would come crashing down tomorrow w/o government’s guarantee of bail out.
Capitalism needs repeating crisis, Marx pointed that out 100 years ago
@@ThomasVWorm its the same thing. Its build to entertain crisis!
Iif this was true living standards wouldn’t have been falling steadily since the 90s. Comparatively, China has the opposite effect, and its just as technologically advanced than the west these days, if not more so.
Produces* not needs. @@jaguartony
thanks Yanis, good to see you back
this was easily one of the most informative + inspiring things I've ever seen, I've just finished watching it for the 2nd time, and I'm really excited to now get the book, Yanis' references to the late 1700s are a terribly relevant example from recent-ish history, so powerful to think we may be on the brink of undoing the current cloud-shackles -
I'm really grateful to be able to have access to the thoughts of incredible thinkers around history/economics/revolutionary ideas like this, it's really exciting to think we're potentially only one small revolution away from a far more equitable social situation, given how "globalised" the world asserts to being... it really sounds possible that enough people can agree around the world.. that we don't want to be cloud serfs, maybe more that we want to have a share of the profits being sourced from technological growth.
no longer should the risks be socialised with profits privatised, the more people that learn this key human right the better I think. thank you yanis, pls i rly hope that people see the sense in this information..
A unique ability to know like an insider, but see like an outsider ...
Amazing interview 👌
I need to rewatch and take notes!
Yanis Varoufakis ❤✊
Prof. Yanis.
A great contemporary thoughts 🙏
Inflation also finally materialized because from 2008 to 2020 with cheap money, corporations used the easy money to build upon their monopolies. They gave up margins and accepted losses in exchange for market share. They also used the cheap money to buy/control more components of the supply chain to have complete price control. Now that interest rates are increasing, they can exercise their monopoly and raise prices without any competition for consumers to turn to. This is happening in every industry, from retail to their stranglehold on pricing as suppliers have no other buyers to compete for their goods.
Excellent comment! The so called free market promoters are actually anticompetition by the very actions you describe.
Genuinely curious. What do you mean with cheap money? Money in a time when rent was low? So investing or focussing on growth makes more sense than expecting profit? When rent was low most tech companies focusses on agressive growth and capturing marketshare. Now that savings return rent, boardmembers starting to expect companies to be profitable. And thats the point where we see expensive money?
Every time I listen to Yanis, I agreed with him.
Apart from the content of this interview, baby, that studio center-piece table is AMAZING!
You have to listen Dimitris Kazakis from Greece!
Right, you should definitely invite Dimitris Kazakis on your show.
OH WOW!!!! SO HAPPY TO SEE MARC LAMONT HILL ON AL JAZEERA!!!!
I haven't tuned in for a hot minute, what a surprise!
Sometimes things have to be destroyed and burned down.. like, cancer cells.
Systematically broken banks shouldn't be allowed to grow, and definitely shouldn't be saved.
Exactly.
Sensible suggestion. Provision of state backed payment system. A parallel system to remove the monopoly of banks in payments.
UPI in combination with eRupee CBDC is a model in place in India. Exactly on the lines of Yanis's suggestion.
Great to see him healthy and alive…..bless you Yanis
Thank you for this. Just great.
Smart and whit a lot common sense guy . Respect
The host did great job preparing. just watching another interview with both of them
Thank you Yanis for the courage to speak out and expose the the nexus of the banks and the governments. Like George Carlin said, 'It's a big club and you ain't in it!'
I absolutely love this guy. Intelligent, honest, moral, ethical. All words one would not use to describe 99 percent of the world's politicians, industrialists and corporate leaders. Keep punching my friend.
💯
Yannis is a brilliant economist and a futurist who sees beyond the obvious ..
Meanwhile in Greece, pension age has been raised to 67 years with almost no backlash at all (I.e. practically nobody is going to get any pension).
It’s shameful how the media has put my fellow countrymen to a collective sleep.
Varoufakis is my hero!
This gentleman is making a cogent argument. We need to hear more of it in the united states. I would like to hear more from him. I will be looking for his books. Thanks for a revealing look.
I recommend to read his Book "Adults in the
Room " Eye opener.
Greeks-the Light of the World. 💫
Once a cancer has grown its too late to incise it. We should never had let the financial speculators grow this far out of proportion.
this guy is insanely good at explaining these things, 100% behind him!
That was great, Thank you all.
These long segments are good. Don't get them on other channels usually
Great Interview! Thank you for this AlJazeera!
Digital currency,can be shut off- would you want your money shut off,like a Canadian trucker ? Do what you want,but scream no to digital national money.whatever it takes !
Will repeat this a few times to memorise his mind blowing breakdown of what is happening.
Excellent Talk 💫
!al jazeera, nice vid!
to sum it up, we havent learn anything!
we just keep repeating history over and over again, which is why we are in another financial crisis, but this time china is not going to help us, cause of the way how we treats them!
Terrific and thought provoking discussion.
Freedom for Palestine
Σε αντίθεση με την Ελλάδα, εδώ Γιάννη οι δημοσιογράφοι δεν σε κοροϊδεύουν, ειρωνευονται ή κάνουν χαζές επίτηδες ερωτήσεις. Είναι ωραίο να μιλάς με κανονικούς δημοσιογράφους που είναι διατεθειμένος να ακούσουν, να ρωτήσουν και να μάθουν.
έλεγα να γράψω κάτι σχετικό αλλά βρήκα το δικό σας σχόλιο, δες τι γίνεται και που ζούμε καν, Βαρουφάκις στο εξοτερικό ΤΟΠ για ΤΟΠ και στην Προβατο-Ελλάδα δεν τον θέλουμε καν στη βουλή...ποιοι εμείς που πεινάμε πιο πολύ απ' όλους.....
surprise surprise that Yanis is pushing CBDC's. I was literally shocked to hear that.
Yes, I was totally shocked too! I mean he is not in the von der Leyen camp, normally!
"Digital currency" no thanks, your time is up anyway.. bye bye centralised banking system bye bye petrodollar!!
To all people not understandin what he is saying.. GO READ MARXIST THEORY that's real economics
Have to disagree here with Yanis on relocating funds to a central bank because in agricultural countries , small state banks reach rural areas providing support to farmers where nobody can .
Secondly on banks today committing 'no fraud' is a bit misleading since the massive investigation showed how Duestche Bank and others bank in US were heavily involved in money laundering .
I think a central bank could have branches in rural areas, but you're right leading up to 2008 a lot of what happened wasn't necessarily fraud and banks especially Deutsche have been doing illegal things since then.
I love Yanis Varoufakis
Wow. Extraordinary.
I liked the ending of the conversation when the idea that RENT is counter capitalistic. This makes lots of sense for me how through the ages the legitimacy of one of the cores of feudalism, was assimilated deep into our current economic model.
Economic investigator Frank G Melbourne Australia is still watching this very informative content cheers Frank
Love you Yani
Thank you! Excelent.
Banking possibly the greatest con of them all , they keep your money but you still think it belongs to you, when it actually belongs to them
Personally I think it would've been better to reduce the retirement age from 62 to 60. The reason is because the majority of French citizens spend their money within the economy anyway. The money supply wouldn't change by that much and furthermore economists could also substantiate a minor tax increase on major corporations in order to make the economic system fairer for consumers and business.
Wait. Varoufakis endorsing CBDCs? I did a double take and a What?! I understand what he said about having the ledger open and transparent. But we know that CBDCs come at a cost to anonimity, privacy and can be frozen and or limited at any time. That's the part that might be most important.
He explains in details (in other conversations) the legal framework on when such actions should be permitted.
@@nickolasgaspar9660 sure it will work juat as well as rules and regulations for banks, especually considering that in the case of cbdc the regulator and the bank will be the same entity *rollseyes*
Yanis Varoufakis ! Clear, lucid and relatively easy to understand ! Honest and knwledgable man with true sense for what's rigth, and what is wrong in cpitalism !
Glad to see these two interacting again.
Arundhati Roy the famed Indian novelist, author and progressive intellectual was once asked why she was so shrill in her opinions. She replied that when the situation was shrill the analysis, description and prescription had to be similarly shrill in order to address it. She was right. And so is Varoufakis.
Thanks 😮
May God protect him for speaking the truth
Amen 🙏🏼
brilliant!
Varoufakis is always great, also good job by the journalist, which is rare nowadays
it doesn't make sense to save a bank or company that doesn't build equity during the good times so when a downturn arises it is not on the edge of bankruptcy. it's greed and ignorance
Hearing Yanis say 'shenanigans' is worth it by itself :)
The story with the banking system goes back centuries with the bank of England, the Dutch bank and later the Venetians. Anyone having read the book about Jekyll Island meeting circa 1910, what happened to Abraham Lincoln, Jackson and Kennedy, will have an idea of the legalized banking fraud occurring.
Venetians were the 1st of the bunch.
On that note, thank you TH-cam algorithm for recommending this video.
Ah man... Why have I never heard of this guy before 😮
He was never out of the (U.K. and European ) news a few years ago!
Yanis is right. There's no reason other than the banks not getting free capital, that we can't implement a .gov website where a citizen has access to a checking/savings account with no strings attached.
There is. It’s a single point of failure of a globally critical system. This is foolish!
@@andykjm Ya the system we have in place now sure is working great. Where people who don't hold a minimum amount in the account or have an arbitrary amount in recurring deposits each month get punished. Oh and you don't earn any interest off that, that belongs to the banks. :)
The U.S. used to have postal banks.
Would you be happy if we make it free and government controlled, but segment it per 10 million citizens? So one central bank with its own ledger for each province? That way there is no single point of failure...
Yanis the world leader!
Love your work and insight Yanis. Thank you.
@10:00 the banks weren't given trillions in bail out cash. They were asked to swap assets for reserves. No new net currency was created. But they cannot by law use their reserves for anything except payments clearing. It was a complete failure of policy. Banks cannot lend out reserves, so the QE had no effect at all on capacity of banks to issue loans. All that happened is they tried to get rid of excess reserves, pushing the interest rate down, which is a good thing for the indebted, but hardly a recipe for rapid economic recovery and more jobs. Fiscal policy is far more powerful than monetary.
The Parliaments are the ones asleep at the wheel in our times, not the central bankers. The central bankers are kids with a toy steering wheel who think they're driving the car. They can do some damage with their toys, but they do not have the fiscal tools to make the investments the people need. For one, they have no capacity to relieve a supply cost-push inflation event, unless they hire everyone jobless to go work on the loading docks and permaculture farms, and whatnot, but they have no such fiscal authority.
Haha, i have an even more pessimistic view. Extend the toy steering wheel metaphor to parliament as well. In other words no one is at the steering wheel at this point.
it's not wages that raise prices, it's greed! Companies make hundreds of thousands, millions, billions in profit and yet they raise prices, lay off and fire people!
Amazing❤
He is ahead of his time. We are not going to get rid of the fiat system in a hurry. It is admirable that he thinks that the power to create money is going to be yanked from the private sector. The approach he is taking is smart, give the power back to the central bank, divide and conquer. Create a wedge in the symbiotic relationship between public and private sectors that creates the flow of new money.
a super interview *******
Go Yanis!❤