“The way our current monetary system works, the careful savings of a lifetime – including your pension – can be wiped out in an eyeblink.” Dr. Lawrence ParksExecutive Director, Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education
By Nick Barisheff [http://www.bmsinc.ca/] published on Kitco.com
The unrestrained creation of money since 1971 has gradually been eroding the purchasing power of most currencies, and has resulted in a subtle form of indirect taxation. In terms of purchasing power, the US dollar has lost 82% as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI). All the world’s other major currencies, freed from the constraints of gold, have lost similar amounts. The Canadian dollar, for example, has lost 83% of its purchasing power. Today, most people view inflation as an increase in the cost of living as measured by the CPI. However, the accurate definition of inflation is an increase in the money supply that leads to rising prices. Increasing money supply is the cause; increasing prices are the effect. In recent years, most industrialized countries have been increasing M3 by more than double the reported increases in the CPI. Some of the annual increases in 2005 were: US 7.8%, Canada 8.4%, Euro zone 7.6%, and Britain 12.1%.
Apart from increases in the cost of goods and services, expanding money supply can also lead to financial bubbles. In the 1980s, Japan increased its money supply by a factor of three. This led to both a stock market bubble and a real estate bubble. Both sectors experienced massive declines when the bubbles burst, and are still more than 75% below their 1989 peaks. In the US, expansion of the money supply started to accelerate after the market crash of October 1987, when Greenspan began lowering interest rates and expanding the money supply. The excess money first flowed into NASDAQ stocks. In December 1996, Greenspan made his famous “irrational exuberance” speech as the NASDAQ approached 1,000. The market became even more “irrational”, however, and climbed to 5,000 by March 2000. When the first bubble burst, the NASDAQ lost 75% of its value, and today remains 58% below its 2000 high. As interest rates were lowered even further, new money flowed into the real-estate market, creating a housing bubble as consumers bought new homes with low-cost mortgages. The housing bubble set off a wave of consumer spending, as proceeds from mortgage refinancing were used to buy consumer products. Today the real- estate market is beginning to falter, with mortgage foreclosures and debt defaults accelerating.
“The way our current monetary system works, the careful savings of a lifetime – including your pension – can be wiped out in an eyeblink.” Dr. Lawrence ParksExecutive Director, Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education
The effects of uncontrolled money expansion have already been experienced in Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, South-East Asia, Japan and Russia. Each has experienced a major currency crisis accompanied by plunging stock markets and collapsing real-estate markets, while many bonds and other debt instruments became worthless. Precious metals prices increased dramatically during these currency crises, acting in their traditional safe-haven role. Now, warnings of trouble ahead for the US dollar are being sounded. As measured by the US Dollar Index, the trade-weighted value of the dollar has declined by 25% from its peak in 2001. In gold terms, however, it has lost over 50%. Since mid-year 2005, all currencies have started to decline against the prices of gold, silver and platinum, signaling that astute investors are beginning to lose confidence in paper currencies and are turning to precious metals to preserve their wealth.
As even more credit money is created, global investors will begin to lose confidence in the US dollar and question whether the US is able to repay its massive debt obligations. The US federal budget deficit, trade deficit and current account deficit are already growing exponentially. Eventually, investors will be unwilling to purchase US debt as they have in the past. This will force the Fed to increase the money supply even further in order to purchase federal debt obligations that foreign investors are no longer interested in. As more money is created, the exchange value of the dollar will plummet even further, and foreign investors will suffer increasing currency exchange losses. Eventually they will begin selling their US investments and converting their US-dollar proceeds into other currencies and precious metals.
Just as all previous attempts to implement a purely fiat monetary system have failed, so will this 35-year paper money experiment. Throughout history, kings, emperors and politicians have never had the self-discipline to limit their spending in the absence of the restraints imposed by gold. While the timing of a US-dollar collapse and the global currency crisis that will accompany it may be difficult to predict, it looms ahead nevertheless. There is little chance that the mountain of US debt will ever be repaid, or that the US trade deficit will be reversed. Without massive inflation, the US has no way to meet its $50 trillion Social Security and Medicare obligations. As global investors look to other currencies, they will realize they are not fundamentally any better. Most foreign central banks will attempt to debase their currencies to match the decline in the US dollar in order to stay competitive in exports, resulting in a round of competing currency devaluations where all paper currencies decline relative to gold, silver and platinum. Individual investors, institutions and central banks will turn to the historical safe haven of precious metals to protect their wealth. Since all three metals are already in a supply deficit and aboveground supplies are minute in comparison to financial assets, growing demand will push precious metals’ prices dramatically higher.
The ultimate consequences of Richard Nixon’s decision to close the gold window on August 15, 1971 will then be understood by everyone.
:) Falkor
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