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Letter
Jim
Willie CB is the editor of the “HAT TRICK LETTER”
For specific detailed analysis of the Gold, USDollar, Treasury bonds,
and inter-market dynamics with the US Economy and Fed monetary policy, see instructions for subscription to my
newsletter research reports, which include stock recommendations
positioned to rise in the commodity bull market.
A rant is due, on the
eve of the latest screwball USFed rate hike. While the USEconomy boasts
of being advanced, sophisticated, and developed, the last three decades
have seen a crippling dependence upon inflation for the generation of
wealth. The cost of this inflation has begun to show itself as extreme,
widespread, and overbearing on the middle class. The natural backlash
comes in the form of economic decay, lost jobs, and reduced standard of
living. The undue reliance of the financial engineering has as its
central core power pack the monetary inflation machinery, which has
undermined our national sovereignty. The pathogenesis of inflation as a
disease has been motivated since the 1970 decade by an insistence on a
“guns & butter” agenda. It has required an ongoing justification
based upon shifting chapters of economic mythology to sustain its
dishonest foundation, new definitions on what prosperity means, and even
the means of how wealth is generated.
The consequences of
debt export has only recently revealed a highly explosive, reckless, and
delicate situation whereby foreign entities have embarked on asset
acquisition, typical in any master creditor demanding liquidation and
seizure. We will have to stay on watch for national foreclosures (see
Detroit). The entire landscape must be recognized for what it contains,
money which is no longer constitutionally valid. That is right, the
USDollar would be rejected as invalid before the Supreme Court if any
legitimate body had the stones to challenge it. Why bother? Because the
fallout and disastrous path we find ourselves on is a direct result. In
physics, we acknowledge that every action invites an equal and opposite
reaction. Tainted money and heavy reliance upon inflation invite erosion
and degradation of the entire economy and financial system. That is the
reaction.
MOTIVATION
War as birthplace of inflation:
Lyndon Johnson insisted on a national agenda of “guns & butter”
which is a colorful clever phrase which means both military emphasis and
a network of social programs. Not one, but both. In the late 1960 decade
the USGovt decided to embrace both, and to run large federal budget
deficits for the first time. Monetary inflation was born in the modern
era. It is difficult to pinpoint the original seed of inflation as a
cancerous disease. Some in the gold community point to the abrogation of
the Bretton Woods Accord, and the departure from honest money as the
source. Not me. That was the heart attack response. When the system
founded in integrity degraded sufficiently, the prescribed medicine was
monetary inflation by the inept, corrupt, and ill-advised economic
counselors who led Richard Nixon astray. The LBJ Great Society in
conjunction with the Vietnam War was the birthplace of monetary
inflation. The United States blew a cool $1 trillion in Vietnam.
No discipline:
The seed for the 1971 gold divorce decision was the urge, motivation,
and execution of a bad plan found in extending far beyond what the
nation could afford. Whether urged by world power, or by arrogance, or
by blindness, it does not matter since the outcome is the same. We have
permanently altered the USEconomy and bled the middle class to the break
point. The United States commands a military whose budget is gigantic,
whose shadow extends around the globe. The United States has promissory
obligations for Social Security, Medicare, and Pensions which would put
any company into bankruptcy, like well, General Motors or Ford Motors.
The lack of discipline motivates exacerbation of the problem with
evermore monetary inflation to fix the perceived problems. In good times
we inflate, rationalizing that payback will come from increased
prosperity. In bad times we inflate, rationalizing its necessary to
underwrite future progress and recovery. We consistently enlist the US
Federal Reserve as the underwriter of last resort. The USFed is now the
underwriter of first resort, and intermediate resort also. They have
sadly morphed into a monetary drug dealer.
A big bad business:
Meanwhile, military adventure, bound in spun packages of exporting
democracy, fighting terrorism, and promoting capitalism, has become our
national “raison d’être” it seems. We cling to the Great Society
begun by LBJohnson, even expanding it to include broader promises which
no bank would finance in the private sector amidst the current balance
sheet red ink. The system has gone amok in a clear sense with fraud
cases in the courts, one every season. The corporate contributions to
the inflation system are clear, both on the fraud side but also in a
masked manner through stock issuance. Increasingly, mergers &
acquisitions are financed by printed corporate money, namely stock
shares created by private printing presses.
JUSTIFICATION
Necessary dogma:
The path of the Rambling Wreck from Financial Tech requires heretical
counselors, pied piper cheerleaders, and the cast of a thousand erratic
elves. The USEconomy policy makers have been driven by a sequence of
nonsensical lunacy, one chapter more absurd than the previous, addressed
in “Economic
Mythology” in Sept2004. Giving infected policy its impetus, if not
permission much like promulgated defective dogma, has been a full
generation of badly trained economics professionals. My bio reads “unencumbered by the limitations of economics credentials” meant
as humorous but at the same time a solid true advantage.
Hordes of bad
economists:
Numerous personal conversations with economics degree holders over the
years have revealed to me an absolutely shocking display of ignorance
regarding risk from debt in commerce, risk from debt in currency, lost
control from foreign debt ownership, wreckage from pursuit of low-cost
foreign solutions, insane reliance upon consumption instead of
investment, acceptance of the entire lexicon of FedSpeak, and benign
dismay of economic statistics. These people have been co-workers in
industry, colleagues of friends, and acquaintances socially. One sure
path to acceptance of chronic bad policy is to have it blessed by badly
educated economics counselors. In fact, a full generation of badly
educated economics professionals litters the WashDC and academic
landscape. In a sense, the United States has “re-invented” economic
theory. The movement coincides with the advent and growth of financial
engineering, which is just a nice glib catch phrase for inflation &
leverage. We have degraded into a nation of people who prefer the
sweat-free work in the paper pushing game to the hard work in factories.
We call this progress and the result of evolution. No way! It is
evidence of financial cancer.
Cheer leaders reassure:
The USFed justifies and denies the sickness with regular routine
pronouncements, usually in talk of the next Soft Landing, despite never
having fostered one. They serve as cheer leaders much like a mad
scientist reassures his or her backer, worried sick over the monster
being created in the lab downstairs, complete with nightly groans and
wails. It is all progress, evidence of our sophistication. Horse puckies!
We are being led down a path replete with insurmountable challenge and
ongoing crisis to the point where crisis is considered normal.
DISEASE PATHOGENESIS
This will read like a
sequence of integrally connected symptoms, a medical review.
Birth of inflation:
With the launch of monetary inflation in the 1960 and 1970 decades, more
money has entered the system. Back then, the USEconomy was much more a
closed system. So when more money circulated, prices rose, wages rose,
costs rose, as a new age was born whereby citizens became accustomed and
acclimated to inflation as part of life and landscape. The cost of
living rose to the point whereby the middle class has endured a 30% to
35% decline in real wages since the 1968 date, according to George
Paulos and his work from “An
Alternative Inflation Index” two years ago. Unions enforced
tighter guarantees for wage growth and job security packaged in pension
programs which offered health care assurances. In doing so, they set up
entire industries to fail with the advent of globalization, that
perceived panacea chock full of pain. One must point to inflated wages
for US workers and corporations, which were rendered uncompetitive
because of chronic inflation. The pain of lost jobs to Asian outsourcing
has as its roots inflation doled out for decades.
Cancer waves in each
decade:
The first cancer wave was for high tech industries in the 1980 decade
sent “offshore” to Asia along the famed Pacific Rim with its Asian
Tigers, namely Taiwan, Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore. We said goodbye to
the manufacturing sector’s prized core, technology for computers, some
telecommunications, telephony, and consumer electronics. The second
cancer wave centered upon China after it was granted in 1999 the Most
Favored Nation status by Clinton. Not only did entire additional
manufacturing industries relocate after significant business investment
in China, but service sector businesses relocated in India where English
is much more the spoken language. Few realize that the largest English
speaking democracy in the world is India. China has capitalized on the
industrial buildup. They have wrested almost the entire world mfg
function, with case in point the 150 mfg sites owned by Wal-Mart inside
China. From consumer electronics to housewares, they are made in China.
Moreover, China has an impressive broad government sponsored plan
executed to secure patents via consulting firms and shell corporations.
Years back the Sandia Labs left themselves vulnerable to numerous
weapons designs and schematics stolen via the internet, as the USGovt
contractors dropped their guard. We watch in dismay as over $60 billion
per year in intellectual property is not paid by China to the United
States. We watch in consternation the next cancer wave as foreign
entities attempt to acquire critically important primary assets. This is
not the childlike shopping spree by the Japanese in the early 1980
decade, as they purchased the Rockefeller Center, the Pebbles Beach Golf
Club, and numerous overpriced Los Angeles commercial properties, only to
find themselves “bag holders” when their assets cratered in value.
This wave involves attempts to grab energy assets, port assets,
telecommunications and airline companies, even perhaps the entire car
industry, all highly critical.
Dominant financial
machinery:
The financial sector takes slack up with heightened vigor, much like a
slow galloping cancer. The US actually boasted in the 1990 decade of
“financial engineering” as though it was a national advantage to
possess protected tools for cancer spread. The lesson is quite simple,
that if one chooses (individual, group, or nation) to produce wealth by
means of financial alchemy, a horrendous natural response is invited.
The same is true in the drug dependence world, as addicts need more drug
supply, only to succumb to the ravaged body condition long after the
house is destroyed. Rising prices reverse course, then crush not only
value of income & assets, but also the downstream industries
dependent upon such so-called production. See the mortgage industry,
home building, real estate brokerage, property appraisal and title
search. Notwithstanding, the financial carnage has spawned broad new
businesses in bankruptcy, debt consolidation, debt counsel, and worker
transition training. These might be regarded as the sewage effluent from
financial engineering, much like the highly acidic and toxic sludge from
a dirty industry. Which is better, toxic sludge or bankruptcy? The
question is moot.
Housing dependence:
Even as jobs are well along the path of being “dumbed down” for the
last decade, as workers find jobs in retail and other low wage sectors
like services, the population generally has come to rely upon their
homes as their savings accounts. They send money into their stock
accounts, save nothing, and pull money out of their home equity for
spending purposes. Worse, on a national level one can make a highly
credible argument that perhaps 50% to 60% of all consumer spending since
the year 2001 has come from home equity extraction. If housing property
values go into decline, or even stall, the entire USEconomy, fully
dependent upon housing asset bubbles, will most assuredly go into
decline and recession. The pathway thus has two signposts, one that
wages are in decline (along with benefits), the other that in its place
is wealth from the homestead asset, one’s personal residence. This
entire pathway is reckless, unprecedented in modern history, yet fully
blessed by the economic counselors and other nitwits who have ushered in
the Great Asset Economy paradigm, the latest in a long list of screwball
business models endorsed by hacks and clowns working in WashDC and New
York City. No longer is hard work, true talent, and diligence the potion
for success, since opportunities are vanishing in the time-tested
traditional sense. We have on a national level embraced the wonders of
the housing boom and financial speculation. Even the name “housing
boom” implies an astonishing ignorance that it extends from the
monetary expansion (inflation) directed toward mortgage finance. Few
seem to be aware that Fanny Mae is bankrupt, under liquidation and
receivership. See a dedicated website on the subject of the Fanny
Mae death spiral from a diligent subscriber.
R&D heart &
soul departures:
The most alarming trends to catch my eye in the last year are two. The
outsourcing of Research & Development functions to Asia, and the
death spiral of General Motors (probably Ford too). If intellectual
property is the last bastion for the USEconomy, we must see R&D
preserved and protected like national family jewels and heirlooms. Where
are US engineers to find work? Dell has dispatched its R&D to
Taiwan. Will telecom firms send R&D to China, where their mfg
operations reside? Will car R&D functions in China crop up, with
jobs posted in Detroit newspapers for US engineers? Doubtful, since
China and the rest of Asia produce six times as many science and
engineering graduates from colleges and universities annually, versus
the United States. Not only is the US rendered vulnerable to high wages
brought by chronic inflation, but we cannot compete with the sheer
numbers in the trained Asian work force. Sure, the nation possesses
plenty of research facilities, spanning across academia and elite
institutions to corporate branches. They must be protected, not
permitted to wither.
Death of Detroit
carmakers:
The trend is clear. The USEconomy is shedding the rich jobs and
replacing them with crappy jobs. A national tragedy is unfolding. The
entire US carmaker industry is at risk. What saved Chrysler might have
been its near death experience in 1980. Saved by restructuring and grand
changes to its corporate culture toward greater innovation, Chrysler
actually left Daimler Benz to be the bag holder. Talk about selling out
at the top! Nice job, Lee Iacocca, much to the resentment and chagrin of
Germany. At least Mercedes has more access to showrooms, a pathetic
prize in the transaction. It is no wonder to me that BMW and Audi would
have no part in such a disastrous deal. Not only General Motors and Ford
Motors are on their death bed, a long conveyor belt from hospital
chambers to mortuary court rooms, but their entire list of parts
suppliers are undergoing an implosion. See Delphi and Dana, who share
workers in the United Auto Worker union. We might be witnessing yet
another in a long list of bankruptcies whose path was painted by union
contracts. The impact of GM and Ford debt on the bond market is severe,
mostly bullish for USTreasurys in a curious way. Given its forewarning,
the destructive of capital from bond principal loss might be offset by
credit default swap contract gains. The most painful and critical
casualty in the chronic inflation pathogenesis is the death of the US
carmaker industry. It will not downsize; it will die. It will not suffer
and shutter in a crisp sudden episode; it will decline and drag down
numerous associated niche industries with it.
Foreign held debt:
One of the numerous planks in the inflation apologist heresy is the
harmlessness of large scale foreign ownership of US debt. My neighbors
can be my creditor, as long as those neighbors continue to extend deeper
lines of credit, as long as they understand and share my mindset, as
long as they honor contract law such as copyright and patent, as long as
doing so does not collide with their own interests, as long as they
don’t call in the debt at the most inopportune time, as long as they
don’t coerce huge concessions, compromises, and surrenders. More
importantly, as long as they don’t conclude my business will
ultimately fall into ruin. Heck, as long as they don’t compete on the
military battle field, or interfere with the critical passageways that
send needed supplies to our nation. When talking to me as a child, my
father taught me that the federal debt is not so important since “we
owe it to ourselves” which is no longer true. That argument has
vanished curiously. The great mythology heresy spin machine has now
updated their profane doctrine, and attempts to shove down our throats
the teaching that “foreign
ownership of our national debt is ok since our allies own it.”
Check the status, behavior, and patterns from Chinand the Persian Gulf
lately, even Russia. No way!
Foreign debt purchase:
We as a nation cannot continue to avert the coiled spring of natural
consequence from exporting our debt securities. We ransom our future.
The new pattern evident since the 1990 decade is for magnificent growth
in foreign USTreasury Bond holdings. Outsiders own 45% to 48% of our
entire federal debt issuance. Outsiders used to buy over half of new
federal debt issuance, except we cannot be certain anymore. Holdings
recorded out of the United Kingdom have become a lethal brew of hedge
funds, OPEC brokered purchases, and illicit USFed agency fronts. Our
USGovt and financial leaders (more like alchemist insane professors)
seem to prefer less transparency even while they spout words to the
opposite effect. As we find harmless the export of inflation, we prefer
to deny the risk associated with doing so.
Fraudulent accounting:
The USFed enlists foreign central banks to buy into the wondrous US
asset foundation of our debt securities. With a wand we deem such debts
as assets, claim their value as valid, trade them for hard goods built
overseas, and account for such debts in balance sheets on the asset
column, incredibly. The birth of Enron accounting emerged from the
USGovt bookkeeping labs, with analysts and accountants alike busily
conjuring up deceptive practices. See the USFed open market operations,
see the gold lease accounting, see the federal deficit calculation, see
the cost of living adjustment (COLA) figures. Like a wayward career
criminal parent who criticizes children for their lies and theft, the
USGovt prosecutes Enron, WorldCom, Adelphia, Tyco, and a gaggle of
others, with hypocrisy. Govt accounting methods were taught to Wall
Street, then sanctioned as legitimate, forgiven since we stole from
ourselves. No longer, now from foreigners. The inflation era requires
lies to perpetuate the game. Much like a staff of doctors to convince
the patient that the cancer is “no big deal” and rather common and
innocuous, we have a corps of hack economists who spout garbage analysis
and phony accounting to support the frail fractured fraudulent system
founded upon inflation. We must deem debt as assets, so as to claim
possessed wealth and to avoid few if any assets at all. This is alchemy
on its face, and witchcraft among the supporting cast.
Collusion with foreign
authorities:
In no way can the USFed on its own execute on its plan, perpetrate its
financial crime, and perpetuate the game without full complicity among
foreign central bankers. This involves full cooperation, coordination,
and intervention in policy and overnight actions. This involves
clandestine deals, like the less than transparent merger between
JPMorgan and Sumitomo, the giant Japanese bank. This involves the Bank
of Japan doing the US bidding to intervene in overnight rescues so as to
assist an ailing USDollar. This involves the Euro Central Bank pretense
and nonsense about not hiking more than one time last Jan2006 (one
additional hike since then). This involves the mutual embrace of
inflation by Japan, but to a lesser extent by European Union finance
ministers. This involves hidden limits on currency movement being
enforced by the ECB and BOJ, made evident only after repeated defense.
This involves shady deals with official gold sales from central bank
vaults, which are probably in violation of most legal statutes for their
contractor agreements. The victim in the process is democracy itself,
and free markets in particular. The end result is cronyism and
aristocracy deeply engrained in wealth accumulation by illegitimate
economic means. With enough private sector collusion, we invite the
spread of Italian Fascism, a dreaded condition which leads to
suffocation and erosion of the middle class, if not vanished liberties.
Spread of monetary
syndicate:
In other words, the policy to rely upon inflationary apparatus, to set
its gigantic machinery into motion, this requires partners in economic
crime, a syndicate of sorts. The US Federal Reserve is not honoring its
contract with the US Congress. It denies a full accounting and
disclosure in the interest of national security. Whose security? It
denies the sale of the national gold treasure, a travesty. A syndicate
implies tight cooperation in illicit business. The world’s major
central banks clearly qualify in such accusations. If not for cozy
relationships with the power elite, who benefit from “first in line”
status, the USFed and other co-conspirators would be removed from the
scene. The syndicate extends to Saudi Arabia, where Prince Alwaleed
enjoyed no-risk investment in Citibank years ago, which profited in the
billion$ for him. The claim can easily be defended that the practice of
monetary collusion has spawned a veritable syndicate at work which
operates outside Congressional checks & balances. Liberty and free
markets are at grave risk.
NATIONAL PRIORITY &
AUTONOMY
Lost sovereignty:
To claim that having foreigners owning a majority of our federal debt
does not impair our national condition, to me is lunacy. Asia and the
Persian Gulf do not resemble shylocks and loan sharks, to be sure.
However, one should not claim we remain strong, viable, and of an
independent spirit in the process. Foreigners also own a substantial
portion of our mortgage debt and corporate debt. They own a large slice
of our stock market. In the math field, an effective technique is to
exaggerate a condition to the extreme, thus to expose the impact. For
instance, if every US firm outsourced to China, India, and Mexico, then
nobody in the USEconomy would be employed with a job. Our spendable cash
would be from home equity extraction, with nothing left for debt
service. That would be an absurdity, untenable, and illustrates the
insanity of low-cost solution pursuit at the macro level. If all US
federal debt was owned by foreign central banks and large foreign
institutions, then all marching orders, all directives, all priorities
would tilt toward the master creditor. That would also be untenable. The
United States is losing its foundation, not just with the manufacturing
sector but also in the creditor hierarchy. Inevitably, USGovt leaders,
USFed leaders will be coerced into placating foreign interests and
demands. It is only natural. Try to lend $100 thousand to a neighbor to
start a business, and then keep hands off, yielding total control and
autonomy to the startup proprietor. Try lending another $10 thousand
every month afterwards, behold a string of bad decisions (like Medicare
obligations, like pork projects in Congressional bills, like a war
overseas on questionable grounds), then stand aside with continued full
freedom granted to the reckless borrower. Foreign interests will
gradually creep into critical decisions and policy. National sovereignty
might be sacrificed without the public knowledge, with gradual lost
control, and increased vulnerability. In the process, our national
security might be compromised. In fact, one might wonder how national
security would not be compromised. A debtor is not in charge of his or
her own fate and pathway. To maintain the pretense otherwise in an
exercise in pure folly. The United States must next advance the
interests of our creditor nations, or else risk losing that valuable
credit supply and support.
Failing empire:
The USEconomy lacks commodity supply, most visibly crude oil and
natural gas. It lacks credit supply, since domestic savings is
non-existent. It lacks independence therefore. It does not lack a
powerful military. However, the military experienced a shortfall of
bullets last summer, and had to turn to foreign suppliers. Key magnet
parts for “smart bombs” are required from Chinese suppliers in order
to make the laser GPS guidance functional. Should we as a nation reduce
costs for rifles by having them built in Mexico or Taiwan or Turkey? The
Moslem world made an historical error in outsourcing weapons systems
over a century ago. The flip side to globalization for a nation whose
economic system runs in gargantuan record setting deficits, is that the
debtor (United States) must become more aggressive in order to secure
supplies (tangible and financial) from our supplier nations, our
partners, as well as those nations that lie on the fringe of partnership
and adversary. Our chronic inflation has led to dependence upon
outsiders, barbarians at the gate, and undue concern for foreign
priorities. We are in the process of losing our perspective, losing
control, and losing our power. We “Export
Inflation, Import Deflation” and expect to get away with it. An
empire beholden to external sources is not strong. It must compromise so
readily that it risks becoming an engrained constant policy. It cannot
be independent and remain sovereign with integrity.
Friction & war
inevitable:
The combination of foreign dependence for both commodity supply and
credit supply makes for a truly lethal mixture. We drive foreign made
cars with foreign supplied fuels to buy finished products made by
foreign workers, using foreign supplied money. We wage war on a foreign
supplied credit card. Worse still, we need it to maintain a gluttonous
lifestyle pockmarked by excessive food intake, excessive debt abuse,
excessive energy usage, excessively sized homes. We must somehow
convince the world to continue to believe in our national priorities, in
our national mandate for freedom, in our national consumption. They
cannot, or else they will not soon. At the same time, the United States
has begun to protect itself from external control and interference. See
the nixed Unocal deal by Chinese interests. See the altered Dubai Ports
World deal by Middle Eastern interests. Watch the Lucent deal by French
Alcatel interests. Friction is on the rise. More visibly and with
spilled blood, warfare is on the rise in Iraq. Domestic marches and
demonstrations are also on the rise internationally. Much debate
surrounds the real motives for the Iraqi War. For those who claim energy
supply was not a top priority in Iraq, may a frontal lobotomy be
suggested. Few see war as a delayed fuse to inflation.
CONCLUSION – WEIMAR BUZZ
Integrity to be challenged:
It has long been a Von Mises belief that in the wake of tainted money
comes lost integrity, honesty, and honored rules of the game. The entire
statistical factory in WashDC has become a charade. This makes perfect
sense when viewed against the “fallible mankind” backdrop. If a
group of people can counterfeit with impunity, a few will eventually do
so. If a government can counterfeit with temporary reprieve from
consequences, it will do so from the outset. Nobody should trust the
consumer price inflation, the GDP economic growth, the productivity
level, the unemployment level, the savings rate, or any statistic which
has been adjusted for inflation. An entire fallacious statistical system
has been put in place, one which fortifies the national agenda of “wealth
generation through inflation” and “economic
progress through housing bubble,” each a travesty in dogma. At the
same time, an absurd emphasis of soft statistics like consumer
confidence and business expectations has shifted into full practice. If
time tested statistics all stink on ice, why not emphasize bogus
statistics?
USFed as Weimar
Politburo:
We must perceive the US Federal Reserve as the modern day equivalent of
the Soviet Union Politburo. Tactics complete with dominant bullying,
threatened closure of our markets to foreign exporters, coercion for
consistent inflationary accommodation abroad, such are typical within
our central bank. It is given far more respect than it deserves. It has
presided over the colossal decay of the USDollar value, and the
unprecedented erosion of jobs through outsource. Their business
experience is easily challenged. Their economics credentials are built
upon faulty training in the field, since the slippery ground of debt
serves as the accepted capstone of both our economy and currency. USFed
governors are devoted to inflation as the engine for growth. The USFed
Chairman is an avowed advocate of printing money at virtually no cost,
of managing the Treasury yield curve, and even dumping money on
household lawns. My label for the post is the Secretary of Inflation,
complete with disrespect. Inflation is deeply engrained in our national
DNA, our genetic code, our entire psyches. We are repeating the Weimar
hyper-inflation with our own style, at our own pace, in a new era. We do
so not in a closed system known to Germany eight decades ago. We do so
amidst global trade and global interdependence. We lure the rest of the
world to play our reckless game, led by crusty old farts in our US
Politburo, misled by the delusion that we can control the USEconomy any
better than the Soviet Union did. We do a much better job, but the
outcome might actually be more devastating and messy on a global scale.
We leave no room for error, led by “The
Green Ben Bernanke” and a highly inexperienced pack. In fact, we
actually invite error by relying upon concurrent data to signal an end
to interest rate hikes, when competent decisions might be directed by
forward indicators. These clowns actually admit it, with no pretense of
statistical expertise from reliable indicators. Convenient indicators
are forced to the forefront.
Trade
friction & warfare:
The battle for US assets, the bidding war, has only begun. Resistance
will be fierce and joined from many corners. We taunt China into
upgrading their yuan currency, claiming on the delay issue, “they
do so at their own peril.” What nonsense, to pressure an exporting
nation to supply finished products at a higher cost, to pocket the
increased revenue, so that we don’t enact a tariff and pocket the
gains ourselves. The result will be higher imported product prices, a
mild surge in consumer prices, and an effect on long-term interest
rates. Nobody in his or her right mind believes the US mfg sector will
win market share from more competitive prices due to yuan exchange rate
changes. We have no mfg sector left, the consequent effect of economic
policy folly. Foreigners will next want to purchase US assets, like any
creditor wishing to control the business operations on a wider basis.
Friction has begun, and is highly likely to worsen. Waged war only adds
a flammable fuel into the geopolitical cauldron. My view is that
exported inflation invites foreign control of assets and steady
sacrifice of the government policy priorities. We are gradually making
clear that foreigners are welcome to accumulate our USTBonds as
promissory notes, but they are not so welcome to use them as legal
tender to purchase our prized assets. Then why purchase these dubious
USTBonds? Given the path we are on, a wider spread of war is leaps &
bounds more likely than the spread of democracy. Inflation is out of
control. So is the friction in its wake, which has spawned growing
chaos. Nobody likes war, except killers and war profiteers. The gold
price likes war from the safe haven. The crude oil price likes war from
interrupted and destroyed supply. War is but a symptom of chronic
inflation gone amok from decades past. By the way, there is nothing to
stop China from using its nearly $1 trillion in reserves to build a
powerful modern military, complete with navy and air force.
©
2006 Jim Willie, CB
Editorial
Archive
Jim
Willie CB is a statistical analyst in marketing research and retail
forecasting. He holds a Ph.D. in
Statistics. His career has
stretched over 24 years. He
aspires to thrive in the financial editor world, unencumbered by the
limitations of economic credentials.
Visit his free website to find articles from topflight authors at
www.GoldenJackass.com.
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