tv Counting the Cost Al Jazeera December 27, 2020 6:30am-7:01am +03
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saying be open again initially but sadly visitors might be able to place any order is just sweating in pump a have on earth an ellis shaped counter that suff hot food to ancient romans until it was destroyed in a volcanic eruption 2000 years ago crews are found cooking utensils food containers and animal remains the menu is thought to have included a variety of dishes from snails to paella. there i missed on. the headlines here on al jazeera nearly $14000000.00 americans will lose their unemployment benefits within hours unless president obama trump signs a coronavirus relief and spending package as includes a one time payment to americans to help them during this pandemic but he says it's not enough frozen jordan explains the impact on the president's decision on the lives of struggling americans short version is that everyone who had been receiving
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unemployment benefits through this week won't be getting them next week and that's because even if the president were to sign this bill on sunday or on monday well the whole process has essentially stopped and it would take the federal government in coordination with state governments some time to really ramp the process back up states can't just give out of employment benefits because they have to have a balanced budget they basically are the pass through from the federal government to provide these unemployment benefits to the millions of people who desperately need the money. central african republic sconce to 2 tional court has ruled that sunday's election can go ahead despite violence escalating between government forces and rebel fighters more un peacekeepers have arrived trying to ensure that that force is peaceful and preparations are also begun for sunday's presidential and legislative elections in egypt that would be the west african states 1st peaceful transition of power between elected leaders has been grappling with
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economic woes and violence by armed groups. several people have been injured in a large fire that broke out at a syrian refugee camp north of tripoli in lebanon there are reports that it started during all to cation between residents of that camp and people living nearby the u.n. says several tents have been destroyed but campus home to about 75. and 3 nations have started kovan 1000 backs nations a day earlier than the official mass rollout in germany a 101 year old woman was among a small number of people to receive the fast fire as a biotech jobs vaccines were also administered to frontline health workers and hungry and in slovakia well those are the headlines i'll have more news for you here after counting the cost. to you to see streaming live on the you tube channel. last thousands of our programs will be documentaries
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don't. subscribe to. al-jazeera english. sami's a than this is counting the cost on al-jazeera your weekly look at the world of business and economics this week predatory lender and hidden debts china loans more money to the world than the richest $32.00 nations what does the world china and what does beijing get when you don't pay our. was this man really responsible for a one trillion dollar loss on wall street or was he a convenient scapegoat for taking on big investors. and the story of the world over
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migrant workers stranded in thailand without jobs and no money for rental food. the world's 20 largest economies agreed to give $76.00 of the poorest a debt repayment holiday but china has yet to publicly offer any support at a time many nations need the extra financial headroom to tackle the coronavirus pandemic beijing has been rapidly rolling out its belt and road initiatives to build infrastructure and increase its influence in mostly developing nations it's land jass has come a huge cost for many of the $138.00 nations that have signed up to the program you may remember sri lanka couldn't keep up with payments on the ports and eventually had to hand over the facility on a 100 year lease many nations have been rethinking their involvement amid accusations china was over pricing road and rail links. trying to understand just how much money beijing has lent the world has been
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a challenge for many but the kill in-situ for the world economy has managed to cut through the opaque lending practices it says between 2002017 the world's debt obligations to china rose from $500000000000.00 to a staggering 5 trillion dollars that's about 6 percent of the world's economic output most of that has been bought on international debt markets beijing and its subsidiaries of lent $1.00 trillion dollars directly to $115.00 nations that makes china the world's biggest creditor overtaking the i.m.f. and even world bank or beijing has also made an reported loans worth $200000000000.00 which is wiring as other investors and international lenders can't make accurate investment decisions over recent years washington has grown reluctant to bail out ations time to china's initiatives through the i.m.f. and world bank let's bring in the author of that report 1st of christophe trash
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good to have you with us 1st of all one color of lend is beijing is it fair to describe it as private trying. i wouldn't use the word i think. it was just let me where china can be characterised in 3 main ways 1st it states driven meaning that it is the government entities who are almost all of the and then being overseas 2nd it is all power meaning that china and its entities only do not share details on where it lands and at what terms and 3rd is as a market the basis that so spike is being a state lender the loan term slow corrupt they're like private law in terms of yet restraints are comparatively higher maturity is a comparative short this is us dollar and debt and there are strings attached for
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example collateral clauses that would guarantee china repayment in case of a default for example by our oil export proceeds do some of those details difficult widely from what other world powers might offer for example and what you make of beijing's line that really at the heart of all of this is a lot of resistance from other world powers who don't want to see china take its rightful place on the world stage. so i would say what china is doing at the moment is very reminiscent of what rising powers have done in the past so i don't see many differences there to the rise of say the u.k. in the in 1000 century or the rise of the us in the 20th century. those rising powers extend their footprint globally by trade by our finance and by the military and china is doing just the same so it's no surprise that china is extending more
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and more low winds and is integrating economically and financially with the rest of the world especially making markets so is taking money from beijing more of a problem then compared to taking money from other institutions if not all the world powers know the world bank so i wouldn't call it a problem i would say the it's a very different deal that you get from from say a loan by the world bank of china china usually lens as part of a package where you might get an infrastructure. construction project that is financed. by a chinese loans and implemented by chinese for chinese workers and the terms there are market oriented right so if there are to be high interest rates whereas the world bank does not offer these package deals that in my request political conditions but the interest rates are usually low then it's concession also
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maturity so long as all these are loans that are easier to back them than the ones that china or i well in addition to that there is the concern over china's hidden debt why is that an issue. it is an issue because for a risk pricing say i'm going bester and i want to buy bonds of the african nations then $1.00 of the fundamental things i want to know is whether you know what the debts stop looks like and how much debt is coming due in the coming years and that information is lacking from many countries with regard to the large chinese debts so market risk pricing of sovereign bonds is impaired by the lack of transparency in our view and also sustainability analysis mako risk analysis they want to judge the likelihood of a financial distress fault then i need to know what how that debt and the debt you
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are looks like and that information is that king for the chinese and that's a major problem is the situation compounded by china's holdings of german euro bonds u.s. treasuries except for i would say that's a bit of a different story so. i mean there's also not much transparency with regard to the holdings of china's central bank so we don't know how much exactly of advanced countries debt they have been you know purchasing in the past but that's a very different set up because those are market based instruments and germany knows very well you know how much debt it has it has sold to the market which was then purchased at secondary market by chinese entities. that the real problem is with the developing country loans that are not picked up by you know any market based institutions say they fall to the cracks the rating agencies are bloomberg don't have them you know basically there is no way to get this information whereas
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for sovereign bonds of the bronze countries there's much more point have the chinese been willing to renegotiate a debt to forgive debt. so in the past day they have done so in multiple cases more than 100 cases since fact. but the approach was case by case so they would really go she ate with individual debtor countries they did not take part in these coordinated debt relief initiatives which other government lenders took part in are the i.m.f. the world bank took part in china it was kind of a side did its own deals and most of these deals were actually maturity extensions so a you know. lengthening of the debt. maturity but not actual that forgiveness like we've seen for the parents but governments so immense that you see in whether you know they will change that approach and be part of the more global coordinated initiative and whether they will agree to face value that
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right balance that's been the question of these debts in dollars because there's a question if they if they are how they've been able to remain hidden and avoid u.s. scrutiny. so they are in u.s. dollars and think that the u.s. government you know has not. to my knowledge at least tracked these many confused themselves or what scrutiny has come from the academic side so they have been very important attempts by you know teams in the united states 8 or size cari where researchers have invested years and years of putting together all these lending information on chinese activities and loans abroad. and that has you know added a lot of transparency in our study goes in that same direction in trying to shed light in this very on this very hard. lending activity that china is engaging in
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and given the large volume that's very important so scrutiny has has really come from the economic side all right thanks so much for your thoughts. professor christoph trouble thank you very much. a 2nd the raimi an all time has entered venezuelan waters carrying much needed fuel the united states has imposed sanctions on both countries and says it's more the situation venezuela and iran have warned washington not to interfere with deliveries stories about reports. the iranian oil tanker fortune is quoted by the venezuelan military in the caribbean sea. it's just one of the 5 tankers carrying over 1500000 liters of gasoline it's heading towards the refinery in the state of qatar a war. president says he's country has a right to import gasoline to the most literal we have the right to trade freely in
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the seas of the world in the skies of the world between us between iran and venezuela to exchange products to buy a product promise to sell products to us but not everyone agrees especially the united states washington has already imposed sanctions on both countries and is considering new ones gasoline is cars in venezuela due to a near complete breakdown of its refining network years of mismanagement and lack of investment have had a devastating effect into what once was one of the biggest oil exporters in the world. the venezuelan government imposed a strict lockdown almost 2 months ago to deter the spread of call that 19 most gas stations in caracas are closed and in the ones that are open people have to line up for hours and local maize they come here every month and it takes us one night i came at 5 and i have to stay until the next day i only get 20 liters.
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gasoline from iran will only last for a while it won't change anything there are political reasons social economic we depend on the offshore riches to give us gas and letters move it will last only for a few munger's. iran has become a strategic partner for venezuela see as well chavez came to power in the past months venezuela relied on companies like russia's haase nafta for gasoline but the situation has changed in the past year. by rosneft stop being interested in venezuela mostly because of the sanctions it has to do with strategic decisions they will have to invest lots of money and there are so many troubles in venezuela that people are not attracted to iran is a desperate measure for a country that has been collapsing for years. a desperate measure that will give the government some air in the months ahead but that won't solve the endemic
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troubles venezuela is facing today now on may the 6th 2010 an unexplained glitch rattled the s. and p. $500.00 temporarily wiping one trillion dollars off its value it's fair to say that to this day no one has been able to figure out what exactly went wrong or most 5 years later u.s. authorities did finally caught up with the man they blame for triggering the crash at the time 36 year old live in the surround was day trading out of his parents' west london home are known to his family he had amassed a $70000000.00 fortune the arrest was met with incredulity while most insiders thought high frequency trading and the rise of algorithms were to blame. well my next guest financial journalist and author liam vaughan has written a book called flash crash he's examined the claims the window was sentenced in january to a year in the home detention why let's serve bring in then mr von why don't we
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start by asking you what you thought of him so even dissing surround is a kind of a fascinating character he grew up in a fairly modest house in hands loaches below the heathrow flight half he was about as far removed from the kind of world of high finance will she is as you can get he got his breaking trading by applying to an ad for in a newspaper which literally said wanted futures traders he started out what was then called a trading arcade where basically there was a fund one of the traders to see if they could make it buying and selling financial futures as a say a long way from the likes of j.p. morgan or the world quite finance but never was just an incredibly gifted trader a real natural in the job and he had amazing mental arithmetic skills. focus that there was some extreme that he would literally train for hours and hours
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at a time without a branch and he also had this amazing ability to completely disregard the value of money. so he would bet increasingly large sums without really caring too much either way whether he won or lost and those combination of characteristics combined you know to to allow and to be extremely successful well how did he make his money there was it all down to long hours and intelligence and ability to read the markets or something else. yes my book sort of tracks the journey of nav from those of humble beginnings where he starts working in this arcade with all the other young kind of one of these really and he progresses very quickly his specific style of trading is not try and predict which way you know interest rates are going to move or whether a company's line to do well and he focused on
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a very short term start of trading which is known scalping which is really just about looking at alders coming into the leaving the market and trying to use that data to predict which way the market is about to lose on a very very short basis and so nerves kind of sense of actual very well suited to that style of trading and so you made ahead of our money doing that the between 2003 when he started in 2009 he made 15000000 pounds a lot of that in his bedroom in his parents' house announced that the way the book is interesting and when the subject matter starts to become really fascinating is that in around 2007 or 2008 the market started to be increasingly infiltrated by a new type of market participant known as high frequency traders the which are essentially kind of autonomous preprogramed robots that reacts afresh information incredibly quickly and these robots essentially squee each human beings like now
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they're out of the market. and they kind of twist of fate where the story turns is that rather than quitting which is what a number of pennies. you know pay group did now have made a fateful decision that he would fight back and he built his own machine he called it the nav. and what it did is it fired force orders into the market and then quickly cancel them but in doing so he would trip the algorithms about which way the market was about to move and he would capitalize on that short term move. and it was an event of the past as a thing or was any of that illegal. well yes and that was the only downfall in the whole thing it was illegal i mean one of the discussions in the book is what point does it become illegal the rules around what he was doing which is known as spoofing came into force in 2011. you know your eagle eyed viewers will note that the flash crash happened in 2010 so there was some argument made that you know what
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he was doing wasn't illegal at the time but he was also charged with fraud so yes it was but i think what made nab such a compelling character is that lots of people believed that the marketplace that he was operating in was itself increasingly kind of dominated by entities that they use nefarious practices. and you know there's a famous book by michael lewis who flash boys which goes into that and the contrivances around high frequency trading so now have argued not just when he was arrested that's rather a spirit that he was operating in a rude market and therefore he was doing was a form of fighting back and what came out as you were sized that was going to be my next point that what does the evidence show were bigger firms doing exactly the same thing he was or something very similar anyway at the time i mean it you know if you want to question in terms of sleuthing. a number of high frequency trading
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firms have been charged you supposing since nabs arrest so that so that is a fair point but what i think the traders do is often closer to the you know is within the line of the law but if you were to explain it to other people you would argue that it may be. you know ethically it raises other questions so for example high frequency traders will look for alters coming into the market by say a very large pension fund and they were used to typical analysis and high speed computers to determine which way the market's about to move and then jump ahead of it so what ends up happening is that that pension fund will get a slightly worse price in trading and you know critics will say that that doesn't actually provide any social good and is actually a form of front running the activity firms themselves would argue actually it provides a service to the market and provides liquidity and you know ultimately it's legal
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but it's certainly a moral gray area even if it's not a legal one. side of the moral gray area when we are this is the argument that big trading houses have employed similar if not the same tactics but they get a dental slap on the wrist because when you know when they've got wayward traders on their boats because they have great influence because they have the argument goes cushy relationships with the markets because markets regulate themselves so any truth to that i mean it's definitely true the largest trading houses have great relationships with the regulators you know for example who was on stuffing themselves only came in in 2011 some of the biggest advocates for those rules were the high frequency trading firms and the reason for that is because if they can't predict which way the market's going to move actually donate hard labor issues amounts of money that they're used to making and then you have someone like now
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have who literally you know is operating in his bedroom is playing markets like a computer games but no access to lawyers or compliance offices. you know and there's a sort shoosh gulf between those 22 things are the only thing i would say is that now have didn't necessarily always make life easy point self so for example when the regulators started kind of snooping around what he was doing so he had this kind of slightly and see other tarion street which maybe didn't help his cause in the end or or what happened to them when there's money in the end that's really a story in itself isn't there. yes so one of the twists and turns of the book and now into story is that he was a quiet you know humble guy didn't really spend any of the money that he made and in fact you parents didn't even know what he was doing. $70000000.00 when the f.b.i. turned up and when he was taken to prison his bio were set at $5000000.00 pounds
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which should have been an easy something to get his hands on base and she moaned. but unfortunately he had intrusted his money to a kind of literally so-called investment advisers and when nash lawyers started running them up and trying to get hold of the money to get him out of prison it quickly materialized at the money wasn't available to him. and you know there was this great irony i guess that this guy who was accused of being a criminal mastermind was potentially himself the victim of so much more unscrupulous investment types so incredible story isn't it thanks so much for coming in and sharing your insights about the story about the vendor thank you so much time ends 4000000 migrant workers are more vulnerable than ever after a recent layoff stu's of the covert 19 pandemic with most borders closed thousands of stranded and relying on handouts scott highly reports from some would suck on.
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about an hour south of bangkok a summit stuck on the hub for thailand's seafood industry and home to the largest population of migrant workers in the country primarily from e.m.r. . up now because of the covert 1000 shutdown many are without jobs and are relying on food handouts to prevent the spread of the virus pile and sealed it borders with neighboring countries back in march stranding tens of thousands of migrant workers mostly without any assistance from the thai government. mar momo had been a garment factory worker here for 9 years she lost her job when the shutdown started to take hold any. the accommodation amador this crisis is probably the worst one that i've experienced there are no jobs in the market and i couldn't find work i haven't paid my rent for the past 2 months she only has another few weeks to pay which she owes before she and her family are kicked out they want to go home to mandalay in myanmar but can't the average daily salary for my coworkers here in
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some province is only 10 dollars that goes for those who are working on a fishing boat the factory workers now there's growing concern that jobs like this could become a few or want to thailand for the reopened for business to turn a gallic lies says thousands of workers have called her migrant worker rights network seeking help from the organization has been providing food bags for family but to me admits even if the markets are able to get to their home countries they'll end up coming back to thailand once there's work she says they'll return even more vulnerable than before the pandemic. i'm worried that the workers will be forced to work for longer hours for a smaller wage they're quite vulnerable unlike thai workers who have more rights and power i think fewer workers will be employed but have to work harder. the thai government has opened selected border checkpoints for a limited number of workers to return home each day but many don't have the money
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to travel. a few fortunate ones are able to get some work but most remain stuck on land facing mounting debt they will have to be paid back when they do finally find a job. and that's our show for this week but remember you can get in touch with us via twitter use the hash tag a j c d c when you do drop us an e-mail account in the cost of al-jazeera dot net is our address there's more for you on live at al-jazeera dot com slash c t c that'll take you straight top page which has individual reports links and entire episodes for you to catch up on. that's it for this edition of counting the cost time sammy's a ban from the whole team here thanks for joining us the news and al-jazeera is next. water scarcity has become a major global issue the demand is going right up and the supply is going straight down turning an essential natural resource into
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a commodity traded for profit just because life doesn't mean it cannot be priced what about the guy that can afford it guys tell these water. al-jazeera examines the social financial and environmental impact of water privatization loads of water on al-jazeera january on al-jazeera it's 10 years since the arab spring sought to bring change to the middle east al-jazeera looks into how successful. a new documentary series examines history and she takes of drug trafficking and the way states and drug lords used it as an instrument of power and speculations a big goal down to around the world hope of returning to name it comes back again with media trends constantly changing listening post continues to analyze how they discovered. the will of the most intense election campaigns the u.s. is set to integrate its 6 1st of. january on al-jazeera.
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and millions of americans risk losing unemployment benefits unless president trump signs a crucial really fell within the next hour. of their i'm starting to taper says al jazeera live from doha also coming up a court gives the go ahead for the election in central african republic despite fighting between rebels and the army. we're living like and the most human and the well noone like better of us. nearly a 1000.
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