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Hear
Me Now - Believe Me Later
By
Peter Schiff europac.net
March
1, 2008
Having
neither the will nor the means to confront our major economic
challenges, Washington is instead hanging its hopes on words alone.
This week, despite the clearest signs yet that the dollar is in
critical condition, President Bush and Treasury Secretary Paulson
tried to provide reassurance by once again invoking the name of the
mythical “strong dollar policy”. Meanwhile across town, with the latest crop of inflation
figures pointing to the greatest price surges in a generation, Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke tried to do the Administration one better by
insisting that inflation expectations remained “well anchored”,
and that stagflation was nowhere in sight.
The
truth is that Bernanke’s view that inflation expectations are
“anchored” should be afforded as much respect as his prior
pronouncements that the subprime mortgage problems were
“contained”. With official inflation numbers, such as PPI,
CPI, and import prices showing unacceptably high levels of
inflation, the dollar hitting new all-time lows, and market
indicators, such gold, silver, oil and agricultural commodities all
heading straight up, the Fed Chairman risks losing what’s left of
his credibility.
Bernanke
contends that the source of our inflation is rising commodity
prices, which he attributes to strong global demand. This is
Bernanke’s attempt to shift the blame for inflation to external
factors beyond his control. This of course completely misses
the point that increased global demand is a direct result of the
rapid increase in global money supply, the source of which is
Bernanke himself. This Alfred E. Newman routine is obviously
wearing thin as the dollar seems to tick down and gold ticks up
every time Bernanke completes a sentence.
The
biggest factor pumping up demand around the globe is the Fed’s
excessive money creation and irresponsible monetary easing, which
requires foreign central banks to follow suit to keep their own
currencies in relative alignment with the dollar. Of course,
some increased demand is genuine, but that demand is being met by
increased supply. It is only the artificial demand created by
inflation that is pushing up prices.
Amazingly,
Bernanke feels that rising food and energy prices themselves do not
present a problem as long as the increases are contained in those
areas. In other words, as long as these costs can be excluded
from the officially messaged PCE deflator, Bernanke doesn’t care
if American families have to pay more to feed their families, heat
their homes, and drive to work. But if these basic costs
continue to rise, it doesn’t matter what happens to prices of
other goods as few people will have any money left to buy them.
Bernanke
also seem to think that if the economy does somehow slip into
recession, that inflation will subside as a consequence. This
is pure nonsense, as diminished demand here at home will be offset
by enhanced demand abroad. As a weak dollar forces Americans
to cut back on their consumption, strengthening foreign currencies
will give foreigners added purchasing power to consume more.
Therefore fewer foreign made products will be imported while more
domestic made, or in most cases grown, products will be exported. The
result will be reduced domestic supply putting additional upward
pressure on prices.
Equally
naïve is the concept that the Fed can stabilize the economy now by
slashing interest rates while holding out the hope that future
inflation could be reined in through aggressive rate hikes in the
future. Even if a recession could be avoided by easing, our
economy is so dependent on cheap debt, that as soon as Bernanke
reaches for his hawk mask, the economy would immediately
destabilize, necessitating a fresh round of rate cuts and still more
inflation. If Bernanke really were serious about fighting
inflation he would do it right now. By postponing the cure he
simply allows the disease to get that much worse.
Of
course Bernanke is not the only one in denial. Wall
Street’s brain trust has recently devised many explanations that
rationalize the inflation problem. For example, some argue
that falling housing prices are deflationary, and negate the impact
of other prices that happen to be rising. While it may be true
that home prices are falling, the costs associated with home
ownership itself are rising. Most homeowners are not only
facing rising mortgage payments, but higher insurance, maintenance,
utilities and taxes. In
addition to those costs, potential home buyers also face higher down
payments and tighter lending standards as well! Also, when
home prices were rising few considered it an inflation problem, so
why should those very people consider the reverse deflation?
Others
talk about “food inflation” or “energy inflation” as if
there were different kinds. There is only one type of
inflation, which is an expansion of the supply of money and credit.
Prices do not inflate; they merely rise and fall. When
people refer to rising food prices as being “food inflation”,
they are shifting the blame for inflation to rising food prices,
rather than attributing the rise in food prices to inflation itself.
I
have heard others maintain that rising commodity prices are merely a
supply problem. However, tight supply is a function of the
artificial demand created by inflation. If the government
handed out million-dollar bills there would be a shortage of
Ferrari’s as everyone would want to buy one.
Of
course one of the most problematic turn of events is the way some of
the Fed’s biggest cheerleaders have turned critics. For
example, CNBC’s Larry Kudlow, who just months ago was calling for
“Shock and Awe” rate cuts to boost the dollar and revive our
“goldilocks economy”, now blames those very rate cuts for
pummeling the dollar and the economy. If the Fed cannot
instill confidence among its biggest boosters, imagine how this show
is playing to a more skeptical audience overseas.
For
a more in depth analysis of the inherent dangers facing the U.S.
economy and the implications for U.S. dollar denominated
investments, read my new book “Crash Proof: How to Profit from the
Coming Economic Collapse.” Click
here to order a copy today.
More
importantly, don’t wait for reality to set in.
Protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before
it’s too late.
Discover the best way to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com
, download
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foreign equities available at www.researchreportone.com, and subscribe to my free, on-line investment
newsletter.
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