Friday, February 26, 2010

Foreign & Domestic Environmental Costs

By Cammi Cuartero–Crawford
The Blue Print
on Housing, Banking & Urban:

Due to the large levels of sulfur dioxide gas, a compound often found in acid rain, it may be harder for countries to receive foreign loans from private investors in the United States. Expect a change in climate, and if so; Indonesia faces the reality of failed agriculture and a failed economy, likewise for the United States and every other agricultural nation.

Through leading channels, private parties have the means to provide obtainable credit, to preserve cost-cutting measures. Preparation early on, can avoid the failure of our markets and markets globally. We, as Americans, have already seen the difficulty of performing everyday activities when credit is difficult to acquire. Credit measures a nation’s success and strength. Private investors built our economy, and they can save our economy now.

The United States government must do more than lead the change, but it is easier to prevent a problem than solve a problem. The failure of crops also directly leads to the collapse of other ecosystems in the area, and it is only fair to expect for other living systems to fail. This collapse may throw our environments out of balance if one life must struggle to find nutrients from a life that has disappeared from the area.

If left alone, nations will be stuck in the midst of an even more difficult problem leaving more and more private investors to bail out economies.

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