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Yesterday, Elisabeth, Anthony and I walked the streets of Rome, the
little village of seven hills founded in 753 B.C. that rose to rule the
world from the Persian Gulf to the Atlantic coast.
At its height, Rome
dominated 120 million citizens and subjects, nearly half the world’s
entire population.
Its land area stretched
across 2.5 million square miles, more than the total of all West and
East European countries today (with the exception of Russia’s).
What caused its demise?
For the answer, Edward
Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire has long been
the bible of historians. Gibbon attributed Rome’s decline to the
gradual weakening of its military — the outsourcing of its defense to
questionable foreign mercenaries and the dilution of Roman martial
virtues with the advent of Christianity.
But in recent years,
historians, sociologists and economists have begun to recognize a series
of closely linked economic factors that played a larger role in
the empire’s decline than previously believed. And today in Rome, I
saw some of the evidence ...
First,
everywhere we went, we saw the remnants of massive — and often
excessive — government spending.
The Roman Forum, the
Arch of Titus and many more were built out of pure marble and probably
cost the Ancient Roman Empire the equivalent of hundreds of billions in
the context of today’s economy.
The
Pantheon, a great circular temple located near Piazza Navona, could
easily have cost billions more. It’s one of the few that still stands
almost exactly as it was built nearly 1,900 years ago.
The massive Castel
Sant’Angelo, on the banks of the Tiber at the other end of the Via
della Conciliazione from St. Peter’s basilica, was built by the
Emperor Hadrian as a mausoleum for himself and his successors —
another huge drain on Rome’s coffers.
Rome’s networks of
roads, aqueducts and public baths were also not cheap.
A clear pattern that we
noticed today: The most magnificent structures were built in the early
years of the Empire, between 50 B.C. and 200 A.D. But in the third and
fourth centuries, the big civic building projects dropped off rapidly as
Rome was forced to spend more on its military and social services.
One major exception:
The vast Aurelian walls that snake their way through modern-day Rome,
built in 270 A.D. But unlike the structures of earlier years, these were
strictly military fortifications — not temples or public buildings.
Rome’s coffers were
further drained by the cost of its vast standing army of 500,000.
Nor was it cheap to
keep the restless populace happy and distracted. Rome paid a fortune for
its network of great games and spectacles — the equivalent of $100
million per year, according to historians, which, in proportion
to their resources, would be the equivalent of thousands of times more
today.
Plus, Rome dug itself
into a financial hole with huge pension liabilities owed to a growing
mass of retired soldiers and bureaucrats.
Second,
much like the U.S. today, Rome was drained by threats from the Persian
Gulf.
Most people think the
primary attacks against Rome came from the north — frequent battles
with Germanic tribes such as the Ostrogoths and the Visigoths, which for
centuries harassed the Roman Empire ... plus even bloodier conflicts
with the Huns, stampeding from Eurasia.
But now, recent studies
are shifting much of the blame to the east — especially Persia (now
Iran), which Rome fought for more than 600 years.
First Rome battled the
Parthian Empire, which included all of today’s Iran and Iraq.
Then, Rome battled the
even larger Sassanid Persian Empire (A.D. 226 - 651), encompassing not
only today’s Iran and Iraq, but also Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, all of the
Persian Gulf states, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Lebanon and others.
Three of the biggest
names among Roman leaders — Pompey, Mark Anthony, Trajan — became
enmeshed in battles against the Persians. Many others suffered similar
losses.
Indeed, historian Peter
Heather, in his recently published The Fall of the Roman Empire,
suggests that it was Rome’s long entanglement with the Persian Gulf
and Mid-East empires that largely sealed its fate.
And it was primarily
the colossal spending to meet the growing Persian threat that forced the
Roman government to seek new sources of revenues, which leads me to ...
The third
factor that drove Rome into ruin: Excessive taxation!
In the early days of
the Empire, the tax burden to Romans was minimal: Citizens paid a sales
tax, but it was capped at only 1%. Land taxes were limited to 10% to 20%
of the land’s yield. Inheritance taxes were only 5%. Import duties and
tariffs were inconsequential. And there was a tiny per-person head tax,
based on a regular census.
In this low-tax
environment, the economy prospered. But as the costs of maintaining the
Imperial army grew, so did the tax burden.
Rome began to levy
special income taxes and fees — like the primipili pastus, an
obligation of local landowners to supply all rations necessary for a
garrison ... or the follis, a tax on senatorial estates.
The taxes became so
onerous that heirs routinely declined large inheritances because they
couldn’t afford to pay the taxes required. Middle-class Romans went
bankrupt. Upper-class Romans soon joined them.
Tax revenues plunged.
Rome was strapped for cash. And it could no longer pay its professional
soldiers — mostly Germanic tribal mercenaries — to guard its
northern borders. Another pillar of the empire was crumbling.
The fourth
and most fatal blow to Rome: Inflation.
When the Roman
government needed more funding and had difficulty raising more tax
revenue, it did what nearly all governments have done before and since:
It manufactured more money and debased its currency.
The
silver content of the most common coin, the denarius, was a
hefty 90% in the age of Nero (54 - 68 A.D.). Two centuries later, by the
reign of Claudius II (268 - 270 A.D.), it was down to a meager 0.2%.
The value of silver
surged and inflation raged.
One historian estimates
that the cost of a measure of Egyptian wheat rose from seven to eight
drachmas in the second century to 120,000 in the third century — an
inflation of 15,000 percent.
The combination of
these factors — not just the Goths and the Huns — was the true cause
of Rome’s collapse.
Fair Warning
Let this be fair
warning to all governments, especially our own, regarding the grave
perils of overspending and overbuilding ... overtaxing its people while
squandering their wealth ... overextending the military and ...
overinflating the economy while debasing the currency.
If each of these
blunderous policies were being scrupulously avoided in America today, we
might be able to breathe a sigh relief. But, alas, nothing could be
further from the truth. The facts:
-
Overspending:
U.S. government spending is out of control. The cost of Medicare
alone could bust the country, according to the U.S. Government
Accountability Office (GAO).
-
Overbuilding:
The housing and construction boom in the U.S. has been the greatest
of all time. The ensuing bust, now already under way, could be
equally great.
-
Overtaxing:
Despite repeated promises by our leaders to stem the rise in taxes,
overtaxation remains a huge burden for most Americans. This year,
for example, Tax Freedom Day didn’t come until April 26, according
to the Tax
Foundation. Until that date, every single penny earned
by the average American needed to be set aside for paying this
year’s taxes. Only after that date was your money yours to keep.
-
Overextending
the military: The Pentagon reports that the U.S. government
has virtually exhausted the resources of its armed forces and must
now pull more National Guard troops away from their homeland defense
and disaster relief operations in order to continue supporting the
efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Meanwhile, due to its lack of forces, military experts are saying
that any conflict with the Persian Gulf’s largest power — Iran
— would have to be restricted almost entirely to an air war. A
U.S. ground attack would be almost impossible. (For details, see my
report, “Eye
of The Storm.”)
-
Overinflating
the economy while debasing the currency. This is ongoing.
As I demonstrate in “The
Greatest Scam of All Time,” the true inflation rate in the
United States is at least 7% right now, sinking your purchasing
power at much faster rate than the government recognizes.
Meanwhile,
here in Europe, the value of the U.S. dollar continues to sink. The
dollar bought 1.21 euros at its peak in 2000. Today, it buys only 0.79
cents.
My
Recommendations
First,
don’t assume the American Century will last for 100 years. Already, a
relatively small, backward country like Iran is in a position to thumb
its nose at the United States. Already, a non-democratic nation —
China — has emerged as the new locomotive of the world economy,
accumulating foreign reserves that are far larger than ours were at
their peak.
Second,
don’t assume our government can continue to overtax, overspend and
overinflate without severe consequences for U.S. investors, including
vast losses of wealth.
Third,
take protective action. We don’t know for sure that the decline in
America’s economic, financial and military power will continue. We
pray that it won’t. But we do know with certainty that you need to
protect yourself from that risk.
That means keeping a
substantial chunk of your net worth in the safest and most liquid
investments you can find — such as U.S. Treasury bills or a
Treasury-only money fund.
Our favorites include:
- American Century
Capital Preservation Fund (CPFXX)(800-345-2021),
- Dreyfus 100% U.S.
Treasury Money Market Fund (DUSXX) (800-645-6561),
- Fidelity U.S.
Treasury Money Market Fund (FDLXX) (800-544-6666),
- USGI U.S. Treasury
Securities Cash Fund (USTXX) (800-873-8637),
- Vanguard Treasury
Money Market Fund (VMPXX) (877-662-7447), or
- Weiss Treasury Only
Money Fund (WEOXX) (800-430-9617).
It also means
allocating a portion of your portfolio to investments that are likely to
go up when the dollar declines — such as gold, energy and other
natural resources.
Fourth,
shift some money to areas enjoying a renaissance of economic progress
and growth.
Two weeks from today,
we’ll be in Venice, where the Renaissance began and today’s modern
capitalism was born. I’ll tell you more about it then.
Good luck and God
bless!
Martin
Martin
Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money Report
support@martinweiss.com

© 2006 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editorial Archive
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