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Welcome to Call to Decision
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| Doomsday
for the Greenback
By Mike Whitney
“Of all the contrivances for
cheating the laboring classes of
mankind, none has been more
effective than that which deludes
them with paper money.” Daniel
Webster
04/10/07 "ICH"
-- -- -The American people are
in La-la land. If they had any idea
of what the Federal
Reserve was up to they’d be out on
the streets waving fists and
pitchforks. Instead, we go our
business like nothing is wrong.
Are we really that stupid?
What is it that people don’t
understand about the trade deficit?
It’s not rocket science. The
Current Account Deficit is over $800
billion a year. That means that we
are spending more than we are making
and savaging the dollar in the
process. Presently, we need more
than $2 billion of foreign
investment per day just to keep the
wheels from coming off the cart.
Everyone agrees that the current
trade imbalances are unsustainable
and will probably trigger major
economic disruptions that will
thrust us towards a global
recession. Still, Washington and the
Fed stubbornly resist any change in
policy that might reduce
over-consumption or reverse present
trends.
It’s madness.
The investor class loves big
deficits because they provide cheap
credit for Bush’s lavish tax cuts
and war. The
recycling of dollars into US
Treasuries and dollar-based
securities is a neat way of covering
government expenses and propping up
the stock market with foreign cash.
It’s a “win-win” situation for
political elites and Wall Street.
For the rest of us it’s a
dead-loss.
The trade deficit puts downward
pressure on the dollar and acts as a
hidden tax. In fact, that’s what
it is--a tax! Every day the deficit
grows, more money is stolen from the
retirements and life savings of
working class Americans. It’s an
inflation bombshell obscured by the
bland rhetoric of “free markets”
and deregulation.
Consider this: In 2002 the euro was
$.87 on the dollar. Last Friday
(4-6-07) it closed at $1.34-- a
better than 50% gain for the euro in
just 4 years. The same is true of
gold. In April 2000, gold was
selling for $279 per ounce. Last
Friday, at the close of the market
it skyrocketed to $679.50---more
than double the price.
Gold isn’t going up; it’s simply
a meter on
the waning value of the dollar. The
reality is that the dollar is
tanking big-time, and the main
culprit is the widening trade
deficit.
The demolition of the dollar isn’t
accidental. It’s part of a plan to
shift wealth from one class to
another and concentrate political
power in the hands of a permanent
ruling elite. There’s nothing
particularly new about this and Bush
and Greenspan have done nothing to
conceal what they are doing. The
massive expansion of the Federal
government, the unfunded tax cuts,
the low interest rates and the steep
increases in the money supply have
all been carried out in full-view of
the American people. Nothing has
been hidden. Neither the
administration nor the Fed seem to
care whether or not we know that
we’re getting screwed --it’s
just our tough luck. What they care
about is the $3 trillion in wealth
that has been transferred from wage
slaves and pensioners to
brandy-drooling plutocrats like
Greenspan and his n’er-do-well
friend, Bush.
These policies have had a
devastating effect on the dollar
which has been slumping since Bush
took office in 2000. Now that
foreign purchases of US debt are
dropping off, the greenback could
plunge to even greater depths.
There’s really no way of knowing
how far the dollar will fall.
That puts us at a crossroads. We are
so utterly dependent on the
“charity of strangers” (foreign
investment) that a 9% blip in the
Chinese stock market (or even a .25
basis point up-tick in the yen)
sends Wall Street into a downward
spiral. As the housing market
continues to unwind, the stock
market (which is loaded with
collateralized mortgage debt) will
naturally edge lower and foreign
investment in US Treasuries and
securities will dry up. That’ll be
doomsday for the greenback as
central banks across the planet will
try to unload their stockpiles of
dollars for gold or foreign
currencies.
That day appears to be quickly
approaching as the 3 powerhouse
economies are
overheating and need to raise
interest rates to stifle inflation.
This will make their bonds and
currencies all the more attractive
for foreign investment; diverting
much needed credit from American
markets.
Just imagine the effect on the
already-hobbled housing market if
interest rates were suddenly to
climb higher to maintain the flow of
foreign capital?
The ECB (European Central Bank),
Japan and China are all cooperating
in an effort to “gradually”
deflate the dollar while minimizing
its effects on the world economy. In
fact, China even waited until the
markets had closed on Good Friday to
announce another interest rate
increase. Clearly, the Chinese are
trying to avoid a repeat of the 400
point one-day bloodbath on Wall
Street in late February ‘07.
Japan has also tried to keep a lid
on interest rates (and allowed the
carry trade to persist) even though
commercial property in Tokyo is
“red hot” and liable to spark a
ruinous cycle of speculation.
But how long can these booming
economies avoid the interest rate
hikes that are needed for curbing
inflation in their own countries?
The problem is, of course, that by
fighting inflation at home they will
ignite inflation in the US. In other
words, by strengthening their own
currencies they weaken the
dollar--it’s unavoidable.
This is bound to hurt consumer
spending in the US which will ripple
through the entire global economy.
The problems presented by the
falling dollar can’t be resolved
by micromanaging or jawboning. In
truth, there’s no more chance of a
“soft landing” for the dollar
than there is for the over-bloated
real estate market. Greenspan’s
bubble economy is headed for
disaster and there’s not much that
anyone can do to lessen the damage.
As housing prices fall and
homeowners are no longer able to tap
into their equity, consumer spending
will slow, the economy will shrink
and the Fed will be forced to lower
interest
rates.
Unfortunately, at that point,
lowering rates won’t be enough.
Interest rates need at least 6
months to take hold and, by then,
the steady drumbeat of foreclosures
and falling real estate prices will
have soured the public on an entire
“asset class” for years to come.
Many will see their life savings
dribble away month by month as
prices continue to nose-dive and
equity vanishes into the ether.
These are the real victims of
Greenspan’s low interest rate
swindle.
The Federal Reserve is fully aware
of the harm they have inflicted with
their low interest rate boondoggle.
In a 2006 statement the Fed even
acknowledged that they knew that
trillions of dollars in speculation
was being funneled into the real
estate market:
"Like other asset prices, house
prices are influenced by interest
rates, and in some countries, the
housing market is a key channel of
monetary policy transmission."
“Monetary transmission”
indeed?!? Trillions of dollars in
mortgages were issued to people who
have no chance of paying them back.
It was a shameless scam. Still, the
policy persisted in a desperate
attempt to keep the US economy from
collapsing into recession. The
upshot of this misguided policy was
“the largest equity bubble in
history” which now threatens
America’s economic solvency.
Author Benjamin Wallace commented on
the Fed’s activities in an article
in the Atlantic Monthly, “There
Goes the Neighborhood: Why home
prices are about to plummet—and
take the recovery with them”:
"Let's assume for a moment that
enough people get fooled, and the
refinancing boom gets extended for
another year. Then what? The real
problem hits. Because if you think
Greenspan's being cagey on
refinancing, the truth he's really
avoiding talking about is that we're
in the midst of a huge housing
bubble, on a scale only seen once
before since the Depression. Worse,
the inflated housing market is now
in an historically unique position,
as
the motor of the rest of the
economy. Within the next year or
two, that bubble is likely to burst,
and when it does, it very well may
take the American economy down with
it."
Or this from Robert Shiller in his
“Irrational Exuberance”:
"People in much of the world
are still overconfident that the
stock market, and in many places the
housing market, will do extremely
well, and this overconfidence can
lead to instability. Significant
further rises in these markets could
lead, eventually, to even more
significant declines. The bad
outcome could be that eventual
declines would result in a
substantial increase in the rate of
personal bankruptcies, which could
lead to a secondary string of
bankruptcies of financial
institutions as well. Another
long-run consequence could be a
decline in consumer and business
confidence, and another, possibly
worldwide, recession”.
If it is not handled properly, the
housing collapse could result in
another Great Depression.
America no longer has the
(manufacturing) capacity to work its
way out of a deep recession. While
the Fed was sluicing $11 trillion
into the real estate market via low
interest loans; America’s
manufacturing sector was being
carted off to China and India in the
name of globalization. Without
capital investment and increased
factory production, economic
recovery will be difficult if not
impossible. The so-called
“rebound” from the 2001
recession was due to artificially
low interest rates and easy credit
which inflated the housing market.
It had nothing to do with increases
in productivity, exports, or paying
off old debts. In other words, the
“recovery” was not real wealth
creation but simply credit
expansion. There’s a vast chasm
between “productivity” and
“consumption” although Greenspan
never seemed to grasp the
difference.
A penny borrowed is not the same as
a penny earned—although both may
cause a slight bump in GDP.
Greenspan’s attitude was aptly
summarized
by The Daily Reckoning’s Addison
Wiggin who said, “GDP measures
debt-fueled consumption--it really
only measures the rate at which
America is going broke”.
Bingo.
America’s biggest export is its
fiat-currency which foreigners are
increasingly hesitant to accept.
Can you blame them?
They have begun to figure out that
we have no way of repaying them and
that the “full faith and credit”
of the United States is about as
reliable as a Ken Lay-managed 401-K
retirement plan.
The fragility of the US economy will
become more apparent as
Greenspan’s housing bubble
continues to lose air and consumer
spending remains flat. As we noted
earlier, home equity withdrawals are
drying up which will slow growth and
discourage foreign investment. The
meltdown in subprime loans has drawn
more attention to the maneuverings
of the banks and mortgage lenders
and many people are getting a
clearer understanding of the Federal
Reserve’s role in creating this
economy-busting monster-bubble.
The 10% to 20% yearly increases in
property values are unprecedented.
They are “pure bubble” and have
nothing to do with increases in
wages, demand, productivity, capital
investment or GDP. It was all
“froth” generated by the
world’s greatest Frothmeister,
Alan Greenspan.
As Addison Wiggin notes, “There is
only one real source of wealth: a
healthy and competitive environment
involving the exchange of goods
coupled with control over deficit
spending.”
Elites at the Federal Reserve and in
the Bush administration have steered
us away from this “tried and
true” course and put us on the
path to debt and catastrophe. It
won’t be easy to restore our
manufacturing base and compete again
in the open market, but it must be
done. Strong economies require that
their people produce things that
other people want. This is a
fundamental truism that has been
lost in the smoke and mirrors of
Greenspan’s shenanigans at the
Fed.
Regrettably, we are probably facing
a decades-long economic downturn in
which the dollar will weaken, stocks
will fall, GDP will shrivel, and
traditional standards of living will
decline.
The trend-lines in the real estate
market will most likely be the
inverse of what they have been for
the last 10 years. This will
dramatically affect consumer
spending (70% of GDP) and put
additional pressure on the dollar.
The dollar is already in big
trouble--the only thing keeping it
afloat is foreign purchases of US
debt by creditors who don’t want
to be left holding trillions in
worthless paper.(US debt is
Japan’s single greatest asset!)
These “net inflows” have created
a false demand for the dollar which
will inevitably dissipate as central
banks continue to diversify.
Last week the IMF issued a warning
that there would have to be a
“substantial” decline in the
dollar to bring the trade deficit to
sustainable levels. That, of course,
is the intention
of the Fed and Team Bush—to reduce
the debt-load by deflating the
currency. It’s a crazy idea. No
one destroys the buying power of
their currency to pay off their
debts. It just illustrates the
recklessness of the people in
charge.
Also, on March 20, 2007 the Governor
of China’s Central Bank Zhou
Xiaochuan announced “that China
will not accumulate more foreign
reserves and will cut a small amount
of current reserves for the
formulation of a new currency
agency”. Zhou’s statement is a
hammer-blow to the dollar. The US
needs roughly $70 billion in foreign
investment per month to cover its
current trade deficit. China is one
of the largest purchasers of US
debt. If China diversifies, then the
dollar will fall and the aftershocks
will ripple through markets across
the world.
The Chinese are very careful about
how they word their economic
statements. That’s why we should
take Zhou’s comments seriously.
Three weeks ago he issued an equally
ominous statement
saying, “China will diversify its
$1 trillion foreign exchange
reserves, the largest in the world,
across different currencies and
investment instruments, including in
emerging markets.” (Reuters)
This should have been a red flag for
currency traders, but the media
buried the story and the markets
dutifully shrugged it off. The truth
is that our relationship with the
Chinese is changing very quickly and
the days of cheap credit and a
“high-flying” dollar are coming
to an end.
70% of China’s currency reserves
are in US dollars. The effect of
“diversification” will be
devastating for the US economy. It
increases the likelihood of
hyperinflation at the same time the
housing market is in its steepest
decline in 80 years. When currency
crises arise at the same time as
economic crises; the problems are
much more difficult to resolve.
Doomsday for the Greenback
It is impossible to fully anticipate
the effects of the falling dollar.
The dollar is a
currency unlike any other and it is
the cornerstone of American
power—political, economic and
military. As the
internationally-accepted reserve
currency, it allows the Federal
Reserve to control the global
economic system by creating credit
out of “thin air” and using
fiat-scrip in the purchase of
valuable manufactured goods and
resources. This puts an unelected
body of private bankers in charge of
setting interest rates which
directly affect the entire world.
Iraq has proven that the US military
can no longer enforce
dollar-hegemony through force of
arms. New alliances are forming that
are reshaping the geopolitical
landscape and signal the emergence
of a multi-polar world. The decline
of the superpower-model can be
directly attributed to the
denominating of vital resources and
commodities in foreign currencies.
America is simply losing its grip on
the sources of energy upon which all
industrial economies depend. Iraq is
the tipping point for America’s
global
dominance.
When foreign central banks abandon
the greenback the present system
will unwind and the “unitary”
model of world order will abruptly
end.
This may be a painful experience for
Americans who will undoubtedly see a
sharp fall in current living
standards. But it also presents an
opportunity to disband the Federal
Reserve and restore control of the
nation’s currency to the
people’s legitimate
representatives in the US Congress.
This is the first step towards
removing the cabal of powerbrokers
in both political parties who solely
represent the narrow ambitions of
private interests.
The War on Terror is a public
relations ploy that is intended to
disguise the use of military and
covert operations to secure
dwindling resources to maintain
dollar supremacy. It is a futile
attempt to control the rise of
China, India, Russia and the
developing world while preserving
the authority of western white
elites.
The strength of the euro
portends increasing competition for
the dollar and a steady decline in
America’s influence around the
world. This should be seen as a
positive development. Greater parity
between the currencies suggests
greater balance between the
states--hence, more democracy.
Again, the superpower model has only
increased terrorism, militarism,
human rights violations and war. By
any objective standard, Washington
has been a poor steward of global
security.
The falling dollar also suggests
growing political upheaval at home
brought on by economic distress. We
should welcome this. America needs
to remake itself—to recommit to
its original principles of personal
freedom, civil liberties and social
justice--to reject the demagoguery
and warmongering of the Bush
regime—to reestablish our belief
in habeas corpus, the presumption of
innocence and the rule of law. Most
important, we need to reclaim our
honor.
Big changes are coming for the
dollar; it’s just a matter of
whether
we allow those changes to bog us
down in recriminations and pessimism
or use them to create a new vision
of America and restore the
principles of republican government.
It’s up to us. |
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