Friday, January 18, 2013

Race to the Bottom



The world is taking a dangerous and rocky path to universal monetary collapse.  Japan is now following the United States's Federal Reserve in devaluing its currency ... in order to give its economy a shot in the arm, see: CNBC Story.  The U.S. Fed’s Chairman, Ben Bernanke, has been pushing “quantitative easing” (QE) for the last three years in order to sop up all the debt that this country is forced to issue to cover it’s fire-hose federal spending … to the point where it has expanded our money supply (and its balance sheet) by $3 trillion.  And, in order to keep this crushing debt burden from sinking things further, it has kept generic interest rates artificially low with its banking muscle.  It has been able to run the monetary printing presses night and day without setting off crushing inflation because our economy is still so weak …  reflected in our poor employment and wage-increase statistics.

But one economic “benefit” of this monetary expansion is a weak U.S. dollar which tends to help export markets and crimp importers.  Given how poor the U.S. balance of payments actually is … image what a disaster it would be without the Fed’s dollar deflationary measures?  However, our trading partners are losing patience with us and, as indicated in the referenced article, are now mimicking Bernanke’s strategy.  The European Central Bank (ECB), China, Great Britain, Japan, and even Switzerland (for heaven’s sake) are falling over one another to try to devalue their currencies with their own QEs.  A U.S. Dollar slide begets a Chinese Yuan slide which begets an Euro slide which begets a Japanese Yen slide which begets a British Pound slide which begets a Swiss Pound slide.  This is all a very dangerous race to the bottom.

How will this end?  With all this quantitative easing, the world will be, in short order, awash in money.  The balance sheets of the central banks will have reached unsustainable levels … probably the ECB first; and the only way out will be for them to let the dogs out … allow inflation to reduce the carrying-cost pain of their excessive debts.  And, this time, run-away inflation will not be as localized as it was in Germany in the 1920s.  It will be world-wide and will engender political upheavals that are likely to be quite painful.  (At this point Bernanke will not look quite so angelic.)  So be forewarned and be prepared … own real hard assets (not cash) and owe lots of money … and live in an area of relative political sanity.

1 comment:

DEN said...

Great picture. Talk about hard assets...