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請別學黨外人士鬼叫﹐中共的小川行長先生
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麥芽糖

請別學黨外人士鬼叫﹐小川行長先生
2009/03/28 07:29:08 瀏覽25|回應0|推薦0

呵呵呵﹗談錢﹐那沒事﹐問題不大的﹐小川行長。

嘿嘿嘿﹐沒人擴大引伸談政治﹐否則就有麻煩喔﹗至少貴寶地的『人大』﹐會不高興您提到『橡皮圖章』﹐這太敏感哦﹐對吧﹖

貴地現在沒文革﹐也沒有台式民主﹑聯網雞鴨泛政治化﹐也無人說『清風不識字』﹔不過凡事﹐還是小心些好﹐別學王光美出國訪問戴珠寶﹐那太明目張揚﹐對吧﹖

上貼後註

太公原先在此﹐顧左右而言他﹐不想談『市場無力自管』論。蓋要談這個嘛﹗能懂的﹐聯網人有幾人﹖

就簡單提個鳥問題﹕既然自由市場欠缺自控力﹐那有啥東東能管﹖上帝耶穌﹑阿拉﹑我佛慈悲﹖還是凱恩斯的『債信(主言公債)』("bond myth") 抽象神話﹖

中共的祖宗爺馬克思先生﹐雖大大非議資本主義﹐卻也是學六祖﹐只說『明鏡本非台』﹐沒有提出『不必勤擦拭的』解答﹐本質上他要建構啥樣的東東。對吧﹖

說穿了﹐小川先生站出來﹐是中共用低調﹐表達某些關切(註﹕行長相當部長級﹐太公說低﹐太輕視他﹖錯矣﹗高低是一種相對動態﹐這總比由老胡國家元首級﹐或老溫總理級出面﹐有個低調緩衝﹐對吧)唯一的目的﹐還不是在世俗界﹐替『政府擴張權力』說話﹐為政府干涉張牙舞爪﹐找個替代神的『人為的主子』。

資本主義固然不完美﹐誠如老外說的“nothing is perfect”﹐小川先生左挑剔右批評﹐老說菜不好﹐又能拿出個啥美妙東東﹖難道您本事大﹐會比朱毛劉周高﹖別忘了﹐老共在五十年代﹐完全拋棄資本主義﹐一切全權交給政府管﹐又能出個啥天堂﹐弄出個啥一窮二白﹖怎麼才放棄國營社會﹐回頭重啃舊社會老骨頭﹐搞『現代崛起』﹐有個二﹑三天好日子﹐就土八路原形再現﹐本性難改想扒糞乎﹖

人類的社會永遠不會是天堂﹐再說天堂是啥個樣子的模型典範﹐日子又如何安排﹐這又有誰人知﹖像成功嶺那樣衣食無慮﹐人亦無腦﹐或像四化前的大陸﹐人無情慾也無企劃力﹖

伊娘列﹗太公訪問過史密盺﹑馬克思及凱恩斯後﹐分析研判﹐頭腦很簡單﹐認定並堅持自由主義市場機制﹐是現有各種制度中﹐仍是最好的﹔有時政府以慈母式關懷是好事﹐但政府若強力干涉﹐不僅非必要﹐也常是越幫越忙﹐結果常見官僚腐化﹑統治階級『五鬼搬財』﹐造成更大的罪惡。

太公同時也要像小蔣那樣說﹐咱腦子清楚﹐四肢体健﹐只有香港腳﹐就請別學黨外人士鬼叫﹐說咱中華民國﹑民主自由病入膏肓快死啦﹗換您來做﹐可能也不會比阿扁亂政﹐幹得好吧﹖

China's central bank slam global lack of regulation

PBOC says idea that markets can regulate themselves is fallacy

HONG KONG (MarketWatch) -- A new statement by the People's Bank of China lambastes financial regulators around the world for missing the warning signs leading up to the current crisis and dismisses the notion that markets can regulate themselves.
The 2,500-word essay published on the PBOC's Web site late Thursday did not single out the U.S. or European regulatory agencies by name, but identified Enron and WorldCom as "debacles" that should have been red flags for more supervision.
"The evolution of the crisis demonstrated that due to the profit-driven nature of market players, market forces, if unchecked, will lead to asset bubbles and ultimately a disastrous market clearing in the form of a financial crisis like the current one," the statement said.
It did, however, specifically mention problems the Chinese central bank sees with U.S. corporate culture.
"Evidence abounds that boards of directors at some systemically important financial firms in the U.S. were rendered as a 'gentlemen's club,' which rubber-stamp all major decisions sponsored by the management," it said.
"This has led to lack of effective check and balance mechanism, which tolerated excessive risk-taking in pursuit of short-term rewards," the PBOC said.
Latest in a series
The statement, published in both English and Chinese, was similar in tone to three other essays authored by PBOC Gov. Zhou Xiaochuan earlier this week.
Zhou's latest essay, also released late Thursday, said economic growth in China is recovering due to the country's "superior system advantage." See full story on Zhou's latest statement.
The series of remarks from Zhou and his fellow bankers also come as world leaders position themselves for a meeting in London next week of top officials from the Group of 20 leading and developing economies.
Divisions have emerged over the appropriate policy response to revive the global economy, with stimulus-spending measures and new financial-services rules in focus.
Qu Hongbin, HSBC's chief economist for China, said Friday: "This is basically the Chinese government preparing for what they are going to say in the coming G20 meeting. They are trying to increase their voice about how they see things and what their perspective is in terms of the current global crisis."
A broad theme in the latest PBOC article is that regulation has failed to keep pace with the emergence of new financial products, institutions, and markets.
"Regulators do not have a good understanding of the cross-border activities of internationally active financial institutions. In particular, there is a lack of understanding of international capital flows," the statement said.
It called upon the International Monetary fund to set up an "early warning system" to watch out for destabilizing international capital flows.
It added that international organizations have been pre-occupied with exchange-rate regimes of emerging economies while falling short in monitoring international capital flows. Read full PBOC statement.
That last remark was likely a dig at U.S. and other officials who have criticized China for purportedly keeping its currency, the yuan, low against those of its trading partners in order to make its exports cheaper. End of Story
Chris Oliver is MarketWatch's Asia bureau chief, based in Hong Kong.

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