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Thoughts
on Monetary Inflation
By
Steve Saville The
Speculative Investor
January
12, 2010
Below is an excerpt from a
commentary originally posted at www.speculative-investor.com
on 10th January, 2010.
Inflation: A deliberate policy,
not the natural way
The
US Federal Reserve ("the Fed") was created in 1913. All
the shares of the Fed are owned by private banks (every bank
operating within the Federal Reserve system must have equity in the
Fed), so it can be said that the Fed is privately owned. However,
the shares held by the private banks confer almost none of the
normal ownership privileges, and control of the Fed is almost
completely within the hands of the US Government. It is therefore
more accurate to consider the Fed a government agency -- an agency
that operates for the benefit of the government and the banks.
The Fed's main achievement during its existence has been massive
inflation of the US dollar supply, the bulk of which occurred after
the loosening of the 'gold shackles' in 1934. And one of the most
obvious effects of this monetary inflation has been a 95% decline in
the dollar's purchasing power (one dollar today buys roughly what 5c
bought in 1913). Furthermore, the loss of purchasing power has
transpired in such a relentless fashion that almost everyone now
perceives rising prices to be the natural way of things. Few people
realise that during the 100-year period prior to the Fed's creation
-- a period during which the US economy made exceptional progress --
the dollar lost none of its purchasing power.
The reality is that a long-term DOWNWARD trend in prices is the
natural way of things in a FREE economy. In the absence of
government manipulation of the money supply, prices will naturally
fall over the long-term due to increasing productivity. This means
that in the absence of government manipulation of the money supply
there would be no need for a person to speculate in order to secure
his/her financial future. A person could simply save cash, safe in
the knowledge that the cash will buy at least as much in the future
as it does in the present. In other words, monetary inflation forces
everyone to become a speculator, an endeavour at which some will
succeed and most will fail.
A few smart people are presently anticipating deflation. We
certainly see the appeal of the deflation view given the present
economy-wide debt burden, but, unfortunately, such a view flies in
the face of both logic and history (the history of the past 75 years
and the history of the past 15 months). We say
"unfortunately" because a period of deflation is needed to
establish the foundation for a sustainable economic expansion,
whereas more inflation will only make a terrible situation even
worse.
Rather than deflation, chances are that the US government, via its
tool known as "the Fed", will continue to borrow and spend
enough new money into existence to more than offset the private
sector's desperate attempts to repair its collective balance sheet.
In the process they will probably end up eradicating much of the
remaining 5% of the dollar's purchasing power.
Money Supply Variations
Rarely
in the past has the choice of monetary aggregate (TMS, M2, M3, etc.)
been so important, because rarely have there been such large
differences between the rates of change of the different money
supply measures. For example, the following chart reveals a dramatic
divergence over the past 12 months between the year-over-year (YOY)
growth rates of M2 and TMS, such that we now have M2's YOY growth
rate at a 10-year low at the same time as TMS's YOY growth rate is
near a 10-year high. Moreover, some measures of US money supply --
most notably, the M3 calculation at http://www.nowandfutures.com/key_stats.html
and Frank Shostak's AMS calculation -- currently show outright
monetary deflation!
When
TMS diverges markedly from M2 and M3 we can be confident that TMS
reflects the true situation. The reason is that M2 and M3 have
components that are not money, and when divergences occur they are
caused by changes in the non-monetary components (Money-Market
Mutual Funds and Time Deposits, primarily). The current situation
contains an additional complication, though, because TMS has also
diverged markedly from the Austrian Money Supply (AMS) calculation
done by Frank Shostak. As discussed in the 21st December 2009 Weekly
Update, this particular divergence is mostly due to the treatment of
the US Treasury's Supplementary Financing Program (SFP).
Specifically, Dr. Shostak's decision to treat the SFP account at the
Fed as "money" distorted the year-over-year numbers in his
AMS calculation by creating a huge upward spike in money-supply
growth during September-November of 2008 and then a plunge in
money-supply growth as the program was unwound during 2009.
The reason we are harping on this subject is that over the next few
months you will very likely read articles in which money-supply
charts are used to 'prove' that DEFLATION is occurring and other
articles in which money-supply charts are used to highlight an
INFLATION problem. It is important to understand how such
contradictory conclusions could be drawn about something that should
be straightforward.
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financial market forecasts and analyses are provided at our web
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