Personal Finance

China’s Car $600.00 – 258 MPG VW

 
 
 

China’s New “Little Car” 

 

This is not a joke and they do sell for $600.00. They won’t be able to make them fast enough–good just to run around town. Here’s a car that will get you back and forth to work on the cheap…$600 for the car.

Only  a one seater however – Talk about cheap transportation…. Volkswagen’s $600 car gets 258 mpg. It looks like Ford, Chrysler and GM missed the boat again!

This $600.00 car is no toy and is ready to be released in China next year. The single seater aero car totes VW (Volkswagen) branding too. Volkswagen did a lot of very highly protected testing of this car in Germany, but it was not announced until now where the car would make its first appearance.  The car was introduced at the VW stockholders meeting as the most economical car in the world. The initial objective of the prototype was to prove that 1 liter of fuel could deliver 100 kilometers of travel. And the Spartan interior doesn’t sacrifice safety.

The areo design prived essential to getting the desired result. The body is 3.37 meters long, just 1.25 meters wide and a little over a meter high. The prototype was made completely of carbon fiber and is not painted to save weight.

The power plant is a one cylinder diesel, positioned ahead of the rear axle and combined with an automatic shift controlled by a knob in the interior. Further Safety was not compromised as the impact and roll-over protection is comparable  GT racing cars.The Most Economic Car in the World will be on sale next year: Better than Electric Car at 258 miles/gallon, this is a single-seat car. From conception to production took 3 years and the company is headquartered in Hamburg, Germany.

  • The will be selling the car for 4000 Yaun, the equivalent of US $600.00.
  • Gas Tank  capacity is 1.7 gallons
  • Top Speed is 74.6 Miles an hour
  • Fuel efficiency is 258 miles per gallon
  • Travel distance with a full tank is 404 miles

August 9, 2013 
Makarska, Croatia

It just never stops.

Here on the European continent, the bureaucrats who run the EU have recently proven to the world how much a ‘government guarantee’ is really worth.

We’ve been discussing in this column lately how the modern banking system is a total fraud– that dictatorial control of 70% of the world’s money supply has been awarded to just four central bankers.

And that the vast majority of banks, especially in the western world, are laughably illiquid… and very thinly capitalized.

But most people never really worry too much about their banks. We’re told, pratically since birth, that banks are safe, responsible, conservative financial stewards. This belief is universally held as truth across society.

And to cap it all off, we’re told that the government will step up to backstop any bank losses and ensure depositors don’t lose a single penny.

The numbers obviously tell a very different story. In the US, for example, many banks hold less than 3% of their customer deposits in cash, and they have to use clever accounting tricks and off-balance sheet vehicles to mask the true health of their balance sheets.

And the FDIC, which is supposed to bail out US depositors in the event of a crisis, has a mere 1.35% of total US deposits in cash. This isn’t safe. This isn’t conservative. It doesn’t even register as a drop in the bucket.

In Europe, though, they’ve just decided that they’re -not really- going to insure deposits at full value after all (see the article in its original German here–

http://deutsche-wirtschafts-nachrichten.de/2013/08/07/neue-eu-regel-sparer-muessen-um-guthaben-unter-100-000-euro-bangen/)

Now, if a bank goes under, governments will make very, very basic payments to depositors, and restrict withdrawals to just 100-200 euros per day.

There’s a term for this. It’s called capital controls. And it’s something that almost every bankrupt government in history has resorted to using.

Capital controls are essentially a restriction on the free-flow of capital. It can take a number of different forms– gold criminalization, bank account confiscation, foreign exchange restrictions, etc.

But at the end of the day, the effect is the same– capital controls are just another way of transferring wealth from citizens to the government, like dairy cows to a farmer.

Meanwhile, across the water, I am sad to report that a number of secure email platforms like Lavabit and Silent Circle, have now folded under intense pressure from the United States government.

Lavabit was an email service used by Edward Snowden. From the very cryptic message that CEO Ladar Levison left on his website, it appears that he has been approached by the NSA to turn over email records.

Rather than work with the NSA, Levison has shuttered his operations.

And to boot, Silent Circle CEO Mike Janke announced that his organization was pre-emptively discontinuing its email platform ‘Silent Mail’.

Janke says he sees the writing on the wall and knows “USG [US government] would come after us.”

It’s incredible that two businesses essentially have to commit suicide in order to keep from violating their promises to their customers.

Just another week in the free world. Have you hit your breaking point yet?

 

Have a great weekend.  
Signature 
Simon Black 
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com

 

A Progressive Thinkers Dream

imagesThe European Socialist State suffers because they don’t have what leftist’s have come to admire.

{mp3}ccccc0809{/mp3}

Canadian employment unexpectedly fell in July on fewer jobs in government and for youths, and wage growth declined to its slowest since 2011.

Employment fell by 39,400 last month, while the jobless rate rose to 7.2 percent from 7.1 percent, Statistics Canada said today in Ottawa. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg Newsprojected a 10,000 job gain and an unchanged jobless rate, according to the median forecasts in surveys with 23 responses.

Canada’s job gains have slowed so far this year, with the average monthly gain of 6,000. That’s down from the 27,820 average recorded in the second half of last year. The job report adds to other evidence of an inconsistent expansion, including a record string of 18 monthly trade deficits, an economy that grew by a less than expected 0.2 percent in May and inflation holding below the central bank’s 2 percent target for more than a year.

….more HERE

Central Banks Low Interest Rates & Prosperity

imagesMichael focuses on Central Banks and their ability to create economic growth and jobs.   

{mp3}cccccc0808{/mp3}