It is the absence of real demand.
Central
Banks around the globe have induced a supply side monetary orgy. One
that has gone deeply awry, complete with perpetual and parallel moral
hazards.
The
powers that be have the world economy propped up with credits simply
trying to inject demand into the system that's overdosed on their
malpractice.
Cheap
and easy credit is as addictive as a drug, but the patient has begun to
show signs of self admission, the Betty ford Clinic is around the bend.
Demand
is for the Credit drug is waning, sans the financial peddler’s ever
billowing ponzi paper circus, the cacophony of fraud has gone too far.
The
current stage in contrarian media and to a far smaller degree mainstream
financial media is the unending debate between the forces of inflation,
deflation and disinflation. Given the high degree of conviction from all
viewpoints, viewer mail has been piling up begging the question, what is
ahead and why is there such an array of disparate points of view.
Actual
‘Deflation’ is has nothing to do with monetary phenomena. It is
purely a structural and self correcting and natural baseline for our
very existence.
Imagine
an endless supply of money, not terribly difficult in the present
environment; then conceive a resource we all presently require that is
coming under increasingly constrained supplies.
Inflationist
(Monetary Inflationist) would argue the increase in the supply of money
is driving up the price of this important resource as the supply of
money expands or more Dollars are chasing the same amount of the
resource.
Now,
suppose we were circulating Silver/GOLD/Platinum as money and not Fiat
currency. Assume these precious metals were allowed to float in value
determined by the market.
Let
us now put a face on the resource and use Crude Oil as our baseline.
As
the supply of Crude Oil declines, the amount of Silver required to
purchase an equivalent amount of crude Oil might become to cumbersome
for exchange, GOLD would be used in a fractional amounts until the
exchange value of GOLD declined to the point whereby Platinum would be
used in exchange.
The
exchange value is merely another way of saying ‘price,’ the
increasing quantities of Silver/GOLD/Platinum in exchange represent the
diminished ‘value’ in exchange, price is a misnomer as facilitating
a near zero cost of money is priceless to some, but in reality has
little exchange value when broad conditions begin to change.
Fiat
money may facilitate exchange in the absence of alternatives as has been
the case throughout history, but in reality it was the lack of
alternatives that lead to its acceptance and not fungibility and/or a
store of value. These ‘traits’ were of course promoted by the very
same money masters who owned the printing press.
If
the amount (supply) of Crude Oil were to be consumed, there would be
none left for exchange and the exchange value of Silver/GOLD/Platinum
would then depend upon what remained in markets for exchange, no amount
of these would be able to purchase Crude Oil.
An
agricultural community in the Après-Petro World might produce delicious
and healthy compost fed vegetables in a local environment, but demand
honest exchange for their efforts (Labor), they may well be unwilling to
accept Fiat Dollars, but instead would accept items they deem of value
to facilitate their communities continued success.
They
would seek a medium of exchange based upon the demands of consumers, on
which served the necessary functions for a medium of exchange, ‘real
bills’ would be an excellent beginning. Antal
E. Fekete has provided volumes of precise, clear rationale.
Silver/GOLD/Platinum
could easily facilitate the ‘store of value’ but might find
themselves relegated to savings as opposed to fungible mediums of
exchange should their value component rise to steeply. They might serve
to meet final clearing of self liquidating credits accumulated over
time, from one minute to one year.
It is
important to note the quantity of Silver/GOLD/Platinum would not have
likely diminished in a world whereby the supply of Crude Oil reached
Zero. In all likelihood the supply of each, on a relative and per person
baseline would have increased. Silver would certainly remain an
important metal for any number of important reasons, and its supply
would likely decline much faster than either GOLD or Platinum.
There
is far more GOLD than is reported by the World Gold Council anyway, but
the markets have had many decades to digest the immoral fraud
perpetrated by this affront.
It is
difficult to discuss a reduction in population, but this is precisely
what will occur as the supply of Crude Oil begins to rapidly diminish.
Many illusory theories will be put through their paces and fail the test
of what constitutes common sense. Jan
Lundberg has a great deal to contribute on this front and is a
highly recommended read.
The
wealth effect has allowed people to increase consumptive demand as their
personal balance sheets improved. A polar opposite situation of the
negative wealth effect causes demand to reverse, much like Peak Oil.
Consumer wealth remains the housing bubble and much like the Internet
bubble, it too shall burst.
The
lowering of interest rates caused housing prices to increase, and
refinancing simply allowed people to tap the accumulating wealth in
their real estate.
Reality
is that DEBT has supplanted the moneyness of money and become widely
accepted as such. DEBT is not money, money is only perceived to retain
its moneyness as long as it facilitates exchange. CONFIDENCE in our
ability to take a Dollar and exchange it for goods and services we
require in order to exist remains a deeply rooted, but entirely fallacious
assumption on the part of those holding dollars.
When
we are unable to purchase what we need for any amount of money, what is
money’s value let alone price. We will still demand the necessities,
but will monetary phenomena dictate demand in the absence of confidence?
This
is unlikely, highly unlikely.
At
present the ‘productivity miracle’ is a structural phenomena, or
more closely aligned with common sense, ‘productivity.’ During prior
economic contractions, productivity fell. Market participants
(Proprietors, Partners and Corporations) held on to their work forces as
production was scaled back.
Enter
the age of ‘Globalization’ whereby ‘Labor Arbitrage’ is being
leveraged to increase productivity: lowered prices, increased wages, and
increasing profits.
Unfortunately,
these gains are accomplished outside of the United States. Yes, U.S.
based multinationals were racking up record profits overseas while
laying waste to the structural foundation within our borders. Our
ability to produce what we need was diminished with little regard to
actual costs. Our ability to accomplish gains in productivity was
exported along with increasing amounts of Fiat promises, DEBT and
delusion all for the sake of profits.
Therein
lies on of the greatest short comings of economics.
For
all of the data being peered over, very few value judgments are being
made with respect to the true costs of doing business, all costs. Social
and environmental are all but ignored.
Productivity
is a natural phenomena, one that is a key component of structural
deflation.
When
everyone in a market based economy performs in conjunction: prices fall,
income and profits rise. Productivity driven deflation is good as it
gets for our economic environment.
Sadly,
we no longer produce the majority of what we require, let alone aspire
to consume.
There
remain many unanswered questions with respect to the power ‘to coin
money’ and ‘regulate the value thereof’ given the Constitutional
Congress.
More
importantly and aside from the unending debate centering around this
empowerment is the question of why the value of money should be
regulated by anything other than the market.
Value:
An amount, as of goods, services, or money, considered to be a fair and
suitable equivalent for something else; a fair price or return.
Regulate:
To control or direct according to rule, principle, or law.
The
rule of law was unclear and left to future generations to settle;
unfortunately they did not manage to constitute clarity and left the
moneyness of money to predatory banking interests who took full
advantage of the open ended implications.
Denying
the Federal Government the specific power to emit bills of credit has
deteriorated to such an extent as to be unimaginable to our founding
fathers. Their efforts were the result of a considerable debate among
many disparate parties.
The
relevant sections of the Constitution eventually approved read:
Article
1 / Section 8: The Congress … shall have power …
2: to
borrow money on the credit of the United States …
5: To
coin money, regulate the value thereof… and of foreign coin, and fix
the standard weight and measures.
Article
2 / Section 10: ‘No state shall coin money nor emit bills of credit
nor make anything but gold and silver coin a legal tender in payment of
debts …’
Clearly,
today’s Fiat money is entirely unconstitutional.
States
lost their previous sovereign power to coin money and to issue paper
money. In addition, states were restricted as to what they could declare
as legal tender.
The
natural question arises as to whether the Congress may legally issue
paper money; Bills of Credit are often cited as the leading inference.
As
with most things Constitutional; if the power was not explicitly given,
it is denied.
Legal
tender was defined, but the paper money issue was left open as the
future potential remained unseen. In the case of further attrition from
Europe, war would require ‘issuance of bills of credit,’ look no
further than the War of 1812.
Dispossessing
Congress of this power was nearly impossible or so difficult as to be
ineffectual under the duress of looking through the future’s glass.
The abuse of the power was separated from the states, but the intent
remained amorphous as to the how its application constrained Congress.
Intrinsically, it was left for future generations to resolve.
And
unresolved it remains to this very day.
It
was understood the Federal government would be the only creator of
money, the net benefit suggested too be a stable currency and by
extension the Federal government must also be, by law, the ONLY
controller of the value of money.
Since
1913, the Federal Reserve Act removed from Congress all rights to create
money or to have any control over its creation.
There
were prior pivotal events: President Lincoln’s ascension of Centrist
government, wars of opportunity and credit fueled boom/bust cycles prior
to the Federal Reserve Act, but it was this single act that nailed the
coffin shut.
Regulation
of the ‘value’ of money was essentially swept into the dustbin.
Congress
delegated its money creating right to an international banking cartel,
the Federal Reserve System and to the commercial banks of the many
countries.
By
creating money, banks provide the exchange medium by which the economy
needs to function.
This
control rests in private hands.
The
banking cartel is concentric, emanating out of the Bank for
International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland.
This
banker’s bank exercises immense power over economic cycles, business
activity, income and wage distribution and economic volatility.
The
BIS, as well as its Central Banks such as out Federal Reserve remain
entirely independent in their monetary policymaking. The Federal Reserve
is not required nor does it seek the approval of any branch of the
United States Government for its policies or actions.
The
very System itself decides on the desired result and targets policy
action to achieve the stated ends to which there is little, if any
political responsibility for the country's economic policies.
Government's
fiscal actions well within the economic sphere of our Federal Reserve
Bank; They own the United States Treasury which issues ‘Bills of
Credit;’ namely: bills, notes and bonds.
The
supply of money and credit assists in determining the general level of
interest rates paid for the use of money, employment, prices, and
economic growth or so conventional economic theory holds.
Many
economists believe the money supply is the most important determinant of
these variables.
I
would argue it is the ‘Quality’ of money that prescribes the
determinant. Value in its pure form, a fair and suitable equivalent
based in principle, but determined by the markets in which it circulates
as a media for exchange, the value, self regulating.
Alan
Greenspan, once again, waxed poetic on interest rates addressing the
conundrum as baffling, but not threatening as this time it is truly,
well possibly, different. Miracles do happen according to Alan, but then
everything is a miracle of Central Banking according to Chairman
Greenspan.
In
2002 Sir Alan was direct and to the point during his the lecture in
Brussels. In addressing the instability within the Global Financial
System Chairman Greenspan spoke directly to the fact that we could all
lose our savings in the blink of an eye.
In a
rare moment of clarity, Sir Alan unloaded, this degree of truth has not
been spoken since the sixties by the Chairman. The ‘Wip Inflation
Now’ period of his career steered simple, eloquent and all to common
sense into the present cesspool of political pandering.
Chairman
Greenspan understands that interest rates represent the cost of capital,
but more importantly the cost of living.
When
business/households borrow to conduct their short, intermediate and long
term operations; interest charges are added to every niche, corner and
link within the economy. Interest is continually forward shifted until
it eventually reaches the consumer.
This
is essentially the ‘real bills’ effect in reverse. Perfect, elegant
and criminal as banks are not actually necessary for an economy to
function, they may provide a discounting market for cash flow, but
beyond that, they are predatory and usurious entities.
If
the cost of interest cannot be paid by business/households; output is
unsustainable at the present cost of ‘money’ and business activity
is curtailed.
Credit
becomes difficult to obtain and investment in plant and equipment
declines. Big business remains at the head of the credit line. Witness
General Motors, $300 Billion in DEBT with $15 Billion in cash…
This
is the equivalent of the average small business servicing $3 Million in
DEBT with $150,000… this situation cannot last very long, choked by
the interest alone even if allowed to borrow at the discount rate, the
monthly interest payment alone would be $10,625.
At
this rate, you would be out of business within 14 months.
This
would be ONLY servicing the interest on the DEBT.
Forget
about turning on the lights, paying employee, rent, keeping suppliers
happy and socking some dollars away for a rainy day.
When
investment in DEBT falls, companies find their orders slump, so they
reduce their workforce in order to cut costs in addition to cutting
their own orders for intermediate good they use to produce.
Income
and output collapse.
'Too
many dollars are chasing too few goods,' is the Keynesian holistic
inflation mantra.
The
twin towers of deficit destruction require higher interest rates to keep
capital flowing to the United States.
Inflation
fighting is considered tantamount to success while ‘Price Indexes’
for both business and consumers are fraudulently adjusted by laughable
government accounting bodies.
Pent
up purchasing power and savings are practically non-existent.
Killing
the economic patient is considered effective treatment for our
inflationary illness.
The
very charter for ‘Price stability’ so endearing to the Federal
Reserve is a sham, a complete farce.
The
endgame is in play, make no mistake, we are heading directly into the
abyss.
No
amount of money, credit and or liquidity is going to halt our demise.
Not
that these criminals won’t try…