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In response to a question
about an upcoming pennant race back in the 1950's, Leo Durocher of the
New York Giants once replied, "Whom knows?" This charmingly
crude retort pretty much sums up our best answer today to how the great
economic upheaval looming ahead of us will unfold. The thousands of
convoluted variables shifting in and out of importance daily, that
comprise the global economy, make human efforts at forecasting about as
reliable as our predictions on the weather. Still, despite the
exasperating uncertainty over it all, there are several strong
probabilities that we can glean from the political-economic tea leaves
if we are good enough students of history and human nature.
I
engaged in debate the other evening about these probabilities with some
acquaintances who held the view that I was an unreasonable Cassandra
spreading undue alarmism. As they saw it, deflation was impossible, the
economy was robust, America had endured far worse before, and she would
do so again. What follows are some answers to their optimistic scenario.
Deflation
Not Possible
Their
first objection to my "alarmism" was that deflation is not
possible with a paper currency.
This
is probably true, I replied. It would be difficult for the money supply
to deflate as long as the boys at the Fed have access to a printing
press and the willingness to use it. But bubbles can, and will
deflate. For example, Basic Investment 101 says that the bond and
Dow bubbles must burst and deflate in the face of intense dollar
inflation on the part of the Fed. (The real estate bubble is a wild card
in this scenario and could go either way.) The problem that many people
have with this issue is that they see the clash of inflation and
deflation as an either-or kind of thing. This is a false picture brought
on by viewing deflation in only its narrow monetary
definition and ignoring its relation to prices (more on this later). In
my last article I said we would see both Scylla
(inflation) and Charybdis (deflation) in tandem, which is a more
accurate picture of what must unfold.
How
precisely the tandem will come upon us we can't say with precision, of
course. But as I see it, there will be wild dollar inflation from
the Fed because that is all they know how to do. And they will feel that
they have to do something in the face of a melting down economy. But
their dollar inflation will not sustain the Dow; it will kill the Dow
and send it to the bottom of the charts around 4000. Thus, we will have
dollar inflation and Dow deflation.
The same scenario will take place with Treasury bonds. As the dollar inflates,
bonds will deflate.
Greenspan's two major bubbles (the Dow and Treasuries) will burst in a
slow motion collapse that grinds down over the next 5-10 years. And
since the Dow is such an integral aspect in the people's perception of
how wealthy they are, there will be a catastrophic transformation of
mood among the millions of investors that look to the Dow as the
indicator of "how we are doing economically in America."
This
second bursting of the Dow (and the dramatic mood change it evokes) will
bring on a painfully STAGNANT economy along the lines of the 1970's
stagflation. Only this time it will develop into hyper-stagflation, or
what Franklin Sanders has termed a "hyperinflationary
depression." This will be the Kondratieff winter of 2000-2015. It
will manifest differently than the last Kondratieff in the 1930's, just
as that one in the thirties manifested differently than the prior
winters of the 19th century. This difference of manifestation is due to
the cultural and technological differences of our era and also to the
fact that we have learned from the past. Unlike our predecessors in the
1930's, we now know about the Kondratieff cycle. And because we
do, we will take defensive action to try and avoid its winter season as
it descends upon us. All we will accomplish, however, is to delay and
exacerbate the winter's ultimate intensity. We will not prevent it from
its highly deflationary, debt-purging role.
A
final crushing blow will be some sort of ruinous restructuring of Social
Security that will be painted by our government as a "new realistic
plan for America's seniors in the 21st century." But the public
will perceive it for what it is -- a royal screwing by our oleaginous
windbags in Washington. And their mood will further reflect such a
perception by turning darker still.
Therefore,
inflation is coming in a big way because the manipulative
charlatans at the Fed have nothing else in their arsenal. But their
"dollar" inflation will NOT keep the ravages of deflation
from afflicting the various bubbles of our economy. The Dow and Treasury
bonds are headed south to Antarctica. The jury is still out on real
estate; it might escape deflation in the meltdown because the public
will have to have some place to funnel their depreciating dollars that
the Fed is so benevolently printing for them. Of course, gold will
benefit greatly (and probably silver also).
So
we will have an economy in which some sectors are deflating,
while other sectors are inflating. The key is to get our money
into the ones that are inflating. While the establishment lemmings will
get fleeced by the Wall Street-Washington touts hawking the idiocy of
bonds and equities to the bitter end, those of us in the hard money
community know better than to listen to snake oil spin to sell paper
illusions. The choice for us will not be difficult at all. We will stash
our wealth in gold (and in silver for those who are certain it will
become the "poor man's money").
Why
the Optimists Are Wrong
Part
of the problem for today's punditry is that they define the term
"deflation" as only a shrinking money supply. Consequently,
they insist that a depressionary scenario is impossible because the Fed
can print money whenever it wishes and will dispense that money to
whatever extent it needs to. Therefore in the eyes of the Keynesian
establishment, no deflation can ever take place with the Fed primed at
the printing presses and their helicopters gassed up at the airport.
The
flaw in this kind of thinking is that deflation has other connotations.
There is "monetary" deflation, and there is also
"price" deflation. There are two types of deflation just as
there are two types of inflation. All free-market advocates realize that
monetary inflation brings on price inflation. It is the prior increase
in the ACTUAL SUPPLY of money that brings on general price inflation.
The monetary increase causes the price increases -- elementary cause and
effect that sadly escapes the Keynesians. Deflation operates in a like
manner, only in the opposite direction.
There
is a far more essential point about all this, however, that is vital to
understand. The strict cause and effect relationship between money
creation and prices that leads to general price inflation does not
always apply to the deflation scenario. For example, once an economy has
reached an advanced stage of monetary inflation, it can experience a
"price deflation" without a decrease in the ACTUAL
SUPPLY of money. All that has to take place is a decrease in the RATE of
monetary expansion on the part of the Fed, and prices will start
nose-diving. The actual money supply itself does not have to decrease;
there just has to be a slowing of the speed with which the Fed is
expanding the money supply. For example, if the Fed has been
expanding money at an average annual rate of 6% over several years and
then slows the expansion to an average rate of 3% for several years, it
will bring on price deflation in sectors that are vulnerable (i.e.,
asset classes such as real estate and equities).
Since
monetary creation today is primarily debt creation, the Fed's monetary
policies to regulate the economy are putting the American people deeper
and deeper into debt with each passing year. The speed of this debt
creation is increasing at an alarming rate, yet it is bringing less and
less increase in national income and GDP.
For
example, Michael Hodges shows us in The
Grandfather Economic Report that the amount of debt creation needed
to generate national wealth today is almost 2 times what it was just 20
years ago. In 1983, it required $11.5 trillion in debt to generate $5
trillion in national income. Today it requires $37 trillion in debt to
generate $8.7 in national income. [See]
What
this means is that debt has to be created at a faster and faster rate in
order to keep the economy growing. If the Fed does not continually
increase debt at a faster rate every decade, it runs the risk of the
economy slowing to a halt. The vulnerable sectors of equities and real
estate will start to deflate. The bubbles will start to burst.
Twenty
years ago, we needed $2.3 in debt to create $1 in growth. Today we need
$4.3 in debt to create $1 in growth. How much debt will we need next
year? Next decade? This is a monstrous debt spiral trap that we have
climbed onto. This is why the Fed has to keep inflating the money at
prodigious levels. If it doesn't, we face an economic meltdown.
More
and More Credit Needed
The
question is: How much more debt can be loaded onto the American people?
The Keynesian credit train that we boarded in 1936 is no longer just
chugging along creating mild amounts of debt as in the fifties and
sixties. The train is now streaking down the tracks in order to keep the
economy afloat. At some point the debt load it is creating will become
insufferable to the consumers and businesses of America. They will then
undergo a dramatic change in mood. They will then stop borrowing and
start saving. They will start paying off debt instead of incurring more
debt. This will slow the rate of monetary expansion and bring on price
deflation in those asset sectors that are vulnerable.
It
is at this point that the Fed will be forced to ratchet up its
"liquidity injections" to a fever pitch in order to induce
enough monetary growth to avoid crashing the economy. They will have to
start monetizing heavily. They will have to gas up the helicopters. They
will have to run the risk of bringing on hyperinflation and the terrible
fate of Germany's Weimar Republic of the early 1920s.
Eventually
the Fed's choice will be either to continue onto Weimar, or attempt to
slow the speed of credit expansion so as to avoid collapse of the
currency. But if the Fed engineers do attempt to slow monetary growth,
then just the slowing itself will induce the prices of various
sectors to DEFLATE. Thus serious price deflations are coming to our
economy in the upcoming years even though the Fed will be pushing
credit/debt expansion and outright monetization to ever-higher levels.
This
is what I mean when I talk of deflation visiting us in tandem with
inflation. I mean that prices will be seriously deflating in
various sectors, not the actual supply of money throughout the
economy. The two most crucial sectors susceptible to price deflation
will be the asset classes of equities and bonds.
Does
this mean then that an actual deflation of the supply of money is
impossible? Not at all. Actual monetary deflation could take place also.
For example, if things get bad enough, if prices deflate far enough in
such sectors as equities, bonds, and real estate, then all businesses
and consumers could draw in their horns drastically. There would take
place a catastrophic mood change throughout the economy. Velocity of
money would slow to a crawl. People would cease to borrow and spend.
They would become very cautious and rush to pay off debt. Those who
couldn't handle their debt load would default. Bankers would tighten up
their loan qualifications to protect their bottom line. If severe
enough, these actions could bring about an actual shrinking of the money
supply because modern day money is basically credit/debt. It is not
cash. It is all merely computer entries of promises to pay. When those
promises dry up, then what we now consider to be money dries up.
This
would be a classic deflationary spiral in which the total money
aggregates for the economy actually shrink. It would be a disaster.
While unlikely, it is not impossible. The collective mood of the
billions of spenders and investors that make up modern day economies
cannot be predicted with certainty. Monetary deflation could happen. It
all depends upon how vigorously the Fed is willing to pursue the
outright printing of new money, and then how vigorously the people will
be willing to spend it.
The
Terrible Choice We Face
What
are we to conclude from all this? The level of credit and debt that we
are now creating CANNOT continue to be increased at a faster rate
indefinitely? Eventually the credit/debt expansion on the part of the
Fed will encounter what a runaway freight train with ever-increasing
speed must encounter. Either its engineers slow the speed, or the train
flies off the tracks. It will be the same for the Fed; either it slows
credit expansion, or it flies off the tracks into a Weimar-style
oblivion. But if it slows the speed of money/debt creation, it puts the
economy in terrible jeopardy because the Dow cannot survive such a
slowing. The fact that all optimists think it can is one more example of
how men hide their heads in the sand in face of uncomfortable truths.
The
paramount question before us then is how long before the Fed's
money/debt train must begin to slow in speed so as to avoid a
Weimar-type scenario? Impossible to say, but hopefully the reader can
see the dilemma we are now in. The Fed must continue to expand credit
and debt at an ever-increasing rate because just slowing the "speed
of expansion" will bring on price deflation in the crucial asset
sectors such as equities and real estate that have been expanded into
bubbles.
This
is why Scylla and Charybdis will descend upon us in tandem, and why
eventually the crisis will be horrendous. Contrary to the grand
Keynesian illusion, the Fed cannot just moderately inflate and
maintain a steady expansion of debt in the economy over time!
Credit/debt creation loses its power to stimulate over time as the total
debt of society increases. This leads eventually to the necessity of
helicopter money, i.e., massive printing of new money that doesn't
require the multiplier effect of fractional reserve banking to be
effective. It is just injected straight into the economy via monetized
deficits for military, pork and welfare spending. It is actual cash that
ends up in the pockets of consumers and doesn't require them to apply
for a loan. This is the last straw grasped for by a desperate Fed trying
to maintain a decent GDP growth rate. This step will, of course, lead to
rapidly rising prices, and if done too vigorously, runaway inflationary
prices and the complete collapse of the currency.
The
only alternative will be to bite the bullet and accept the necessity of
a ravaging meltdown in order to work off all the debt. The reason why
the meltdown must be ravaging is because the level of "debt
creation" we have engaged in for the past 30 years has been
gargantuan, and its growth is now accelerating like a heroin addict's
dosage levels. This must bring a severe corrective phase to balance such
insanity. This is the way the laws of nature work; actions bring
reactions in proportion to the size and intensity of the original
action.
This
is the horrific dilemma that now confronts the boys at the Fed. This is
Scylla and Charybdis starkly staring them in the face, and saying,
"Which one of us do you prefer? You must choose; you cannot have an
in-between scenario! You have broken the laws of nature with too much
abandon for far too long! Your greed and power lust are now coming home
to roost. You must pay with suffering."
Not
Yet Rome
This
type of talk did not endear me to the optimists at all, so they changed
tactics and zeroed in on what they felt was the real lunacy of the
Cassandra scenario. They protested that even if we are in for some hard
times, we are not yet Rome and we will not see that happening anytime
soon.
I
agreed. But what we will see, I said, is a velvet-glove dictatorship
taking over America in the next 20 years under the guise of a "new
kind of freedom" that will very subtly attempt to smuggle us into a
one-world tyranny. Yes, we will get through this massive debt problem.
But the question we must ask is, "In
what form will we get through?" As I see it, martial law and a
rewriting of the Constitution to accommodate the jack-boots natural
propensity to bang down doors is quite possibly the way in which we will
"get through the debt problem."
Optimists
must sooner or later come to realize that there is no moderate,
soft-landing scenario that we can bring about between Scylla and
Charybdis. It is too late for that! We must choose, and both
alternatives bring with them a high probability of some kind of ruthless
dictatorial takeover of our country. This, a rational person gleans from
history and human nature. Men will opt for tyranny when chaos is clawing
at the edge of their survival. They will forfeit their liberty in hopes
of establishing stability.
This
is why our role in the gold community is not just to try and profit from
the meltdown scenario, but also to educate the people as to how we must
climb out of the maelstrom. We, who have been blessed with a sounder
grasp of the cause and effect relationships taking place here, must try
to help our fellows understand the nature of the crisis descending upon
our society. We must try and explain to them the true nature of the
chaos and its Federal Government-megabank origin. We must educate them
that liberty and economic chaos do not go together. On the
contrary, liberty and economic order go together as Adam Smith
and the Founding Fathers understood. It is our centralized, manipulatory
government that has brought us to the chaos. It is government that is
obliterating the harmony of our economy in the way that a bear disrupts
an industrious beehive in pursuit of the honey that those bees are
producing. Government's paws are large and clumsy, and they wreck
everything they touch in the path of their greedy reach.
Thus
it is a fallacy to say that we must bring about a more centralized and
more interventionist government in order to alleviate the chaos that is
descending upon us. A true free-market will alleviate the chaos and
still allow us to retain our rights and our freedom. It is not
capitalism that has wrought our misery; it is government intervention
into capitalism throughout the 20th century beginning with the Fed and
World War I that has brought us to such a chaotic dilemma.
Government is not the solution; government is the problem!
Can
such a message be accepted in time? Whom knows? But a man must try to
fight the forces of evil that he sees rising up around him. Even if he
is doomed to defeat, he must fight. What kind of life have we lived if
we let the black limousine boys win by default? If we have to go down,
let us at least go down fighting with all the intellectual vigor that we
possess, all the activist passion that we can muster.

© 2004 Nelson Hultberg
Email
Author l Bio and FSO
Editorial Archive
Nelson
Hultberg
Americans for a Free Republic
May 10, 2004
www.afr.org
Email
Nelson
Hultberg is a freelance writer in Dallas, Texas and the Executive
Director of Americans for a Free Republic
www.afr.org. His articles have appeared in such
publications as The Dallas Morning
News, Insight, The Freeman, Liberty, and The
Social Critic, as well as on numerous Internet sites. He is the
author of Why We Must Abolish The
Income Tax And The IRS (amazon.com), and he has a forthcoming book, Breaking the Demopublican Monopoly, to be released this summer.
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