接上回

Back in the 1980s, the US raised interest rates. Now the US interest rate is only about 5.5%, but the highest interest rate at that time could be raised to more than 10%.

What was the purpose of such a sharp increase? Wasn't it to completely blow up Latin America in the 1980s?

At that time, the economy of Latin America was booming and soaring. Many Latin American countries had already reached the sequence of middle-income countries. Wouldn't they become developed countries if they could go up one step further?

So at this time, the US felt that the time was almost right. I want to blow you up~ I can't let you become a developed country. What was the result? The interest rate started to rise, and a problem arose when the interest rate was raised. When these Latin American countries saw that you, the US, were raising interest rates, they followed you to add drama to us. In this way, I can keep my domestic assets, but at this time

The US secretly hooked up with John Liu, wouldn't we just fight a Falklands War? So you can see that the Falklands War broke out in 1982. Once a war breaks out in Latin America, geopolitical turmoil begins. The US dollar is raising interest rates again, and risk-free assets of the US dollar are rising continuously. At this time, it will become a natural safe haven. Therefore, under the dual rhythm of interest rate hikes and geopolitical turmoil, a large amount of funds have been madly tilted from Latin America to the United States, and the economic highlight of Latin America has remained in the 1980s. If you think this is just a case, we can still regard it as a coincidence, but what we are actually looking at now is that in 1999, the United States launched the Kosovo War, because the euro was created at that time, and everyone unanimously expected that it would challenge the hegemony of the US dollar. When the euro collapsed to the Kosovo area, the United States secretly blamed Kosovo for the outbreak, and the United States immediately raised interest rates, and the European debt crisis broke out completely. The euro's ability to challenge the hegemony of the US dollar has thus become a tragedy in history.