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Sep 28, 2010

WAR, INFLATION AND THE STOCK MARKET

I don't think this trick is going to work this time:



Pretty interesting chart here from The Stocks Traders Almanac and Barry Ritholtz.  In essence, the argument can be broken down into this:
1)  Stock markets become depressed due to economic downturn
2)  Wars result during times of economic downturn
3)  Government spending via war and stimulus support the economy
4)  Inflation results
Interesting….
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US monetary authorities are “out debauching” everyone on the planet





From Jim Sinclair's MineSet 

"... the US monetary authorities are “out debauching” everyone on the planet with perhaps the exception of the Japanese monetary authorities although I am beginning to wonder if the BOJ is effectively finished as the most powerful foe of currency traders on the planet. If so, it has died a rather inglorious death certainly not in keeping with the history of the Samurai. The yen is almost right back to where it was prior to their huge intervention efforts less than 2 full weeks ago. If they cannot knock it back down any better than this, then what does that say about their true power? As I have stated repeatedly, the Yen is becoming a serious political issue in Japan for obvious reasons as their economy relies on the strength of its export markets. The strength in the Yen is choking off sales from that sector eliciting howls of disgust and disapproval from powerful, well connected business leaders. We will watch with great interest how this plays out. The Swiss were forced to throw in the towel on the intervention front; will the BOJ be next? If so, we are watching history.


Perhaps we need another sequel – “Last of the Samurai – Part 2”. Tom Cruise can reprise his role leading what is left of Katsumoto’s army against the armies of Ben Bernanke (whom we find out is a distant cousin to Omura)  who mows them all down with a printing press which spits dollars out at blinding speed wrecking the entire countryside after filling it with corpses.


Seriously, as much as one might try to find a fundamental reason to buy the Dollar, there just does not seem to be any. It is evident that the Fed has made the determination to sacrifice the Dollar on the altar of expediency. There is not a country on this earth that is polluting the planet with as much paper as the current Fed. Then again, that might explain cotton prices at new 15 years high since it is my understanding that the “paper” the Dollar is printed on is not actually paper but a cotton fiber blend. How much cotton is it going to require before Ben gets “inflation back to levels consistent with its mission.”



Back to gold however – the push through $1300 is a remarkable display of strength and determination on the part of the bulls who simply keep coming in and buying dips in price. The report is the same – dips in this market are shallow and short-lived as buying sentiment remains very strong. What we are seeing is the market becoming increasingly focused on that recent FOMC statement with the expectation that Bernanke is going to pull the QE2 card out of his sleeve and play it. That’s what is feeding into the bond market, the Dollar, and the precious metals.
Speaking of bonds, the long bond pushed up through last week’s high on further anticipation of the Fed buying every debt issue in sight. The chart pattern indicates a push back towards the recent peak near 137 – 138 is in order should further economic data releases continue to confirm the sluggish pace of any so-called “recovery”. The FOMC has made it clear that they will do whatever it takes to avoid such an occurrence. Bond traders are taking them at their word. If the bonds get back up to that level, it is going to be most crucial moving forward how they act up there.


Keep an eye out for possible downgrades coming out of the Euro Zone. That might put a bid under the Dollar for a short time as the Euro could come under some pressure. So far the Forex markets appear to be discounting that scenario. Either that or they are so eager to sell the Dollar on the QE2 play that they no longer care. If that is true, heaven help our nation.

Click chart to enlarge today’s hourly action in Gold in PDF format with commentary from Trader Dan Norcini





Either a great amount of suckers is asking to be separated from their money, or...


$35 Billion 5 Year Auction Prices At Fresh New Record Low Yield Of 1.26%, 2.96 Bid To Cover

The demand for Tim Geithner paper continues to be insatiable, as today's 5 Year auction prices at an all time low yield of 1.26%, a drop from the previous record of 1.374% from last month. The Bid To Cover continues to demonstrate just how schizophrenic the market has become, where all normal investors buy bonds to front run the Fed, while the Fed-PD complex itself is buying stocks. Make sense yet? Either way, at 2.96, the BTC was the second highest ever, only lower than July's 3.06. And, just like in the previous auction, the Indirects continue to creep ever to the right, taking down the majority of the auction, or 50.1%, leaving 8.7% to the Directs, and a healthy 41.2% to the Primary Dealers, which of course are merely warehousing the paper for a few weeks/months until they flip it back to the Fed for a tidy profit, and use the proceeds for some more 100 P/E stock purchases. Thank you POMO!

Evans-Pritchard: "paranoid gold bugs were right all along"

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
September 27th, 2010
Shut Down the Fed (Part II)
(part I below)


I apologise to readers around the world for having defended the emergency stimulus policies of the US Federal Reserve, and for arguing like an imbecile naif that the Fed would not succumb to drug addiction, political abuse, and mad intoxicated debauchery, once it began taking its first shots of quantitative easing.
My pathetic assumption was that Ben Bernanke would deploy further QE only to stave off DEFLATION, not to create INFLATION. If the Federal Open Market Committee cannot see the difference, God help America.
We now learn from last week’s minutes that the Fed is willing “to provide additional accommodation if needed to … return inflation, over time, to levels consistent with its mandate.”
NO, NO, NO, this cannot possibly be true.
Ben Bernanke has not only refused to abandon his idee fixe of an “inflation target”, a key cause of the global central banking catastrophe of the last twenty years (because it can and did allow asset booms to run amok, and let credit levels reach dangerous extremes).
Worse still, he seems determined to print trillions of emergency stimulus without commensurate emergency justification to test his Princeton theories, which by the way are as old as the hills. Keynes ridiculed the “tyranny of the general price level” in the early 1930s, and quite rightly so. Bernanke is reviving a doctrine that was already shown to be bunk eighty years ago.
Inflation targeting: is Bernanke the new Von Havenstein, head of the Weimar Reichsbank?
Inflation targeting: is Bernanke the new Von Havenstein, head of the Weimar Reichsbank?

So all those hillsmen in Idaho, with their Colt 45s and boxes of krugerrands, who sent furious emails to the Telegraph accusing me of defending a hyperinflating establishment cabal were right all along. The Fed is indeed out of control.
The sophisticates at banking conferences in London, Frankfurt, and New York who aplogized for this primitive monetary creationsim – as I did – are the ones who lost the plot.
My apologies. Mercy, for I have sinned against sound money, and therefore against sound politics.
I stick to my view that Friedmanite QE ‘a l’outrance‘ is legitimate to prevent a collapse of the M3 broad money supply, and to prevent outright deflation in economies with total debt levels near or above 300pc of GDP. Not in any circumstances, but where necessary, and where conducted properly by purchasing bonds outside the banking system (not the same as Bernanke “creditism”).
The dangers of tipping into a debt compound trap – as described by Irving Fisher in Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depresssions in 1933 – outweigh the risk of an expanded money stock catching fire and setting off an inflation surge later. Debt deflation is a toxic process that can and does destroy societies as well as economies. You do not trifle with it.
But deliberately creating inflation “consistent” with the Fed’s mandate – implicitly to erode debt – is another matter. Nor can this be justified at this particular juncture. M3 has been leveling out. M2 has begun to rise briskly. The velocity of money has picked up. The M1 monetary mulitplier has jumped.
We have a very odd world. The IMF has doubled its global growth forecast to 4.5pc this year, and authorities everywhere have ruled out a serious risk of a double dip recession.
Yet at the same time the Bank of Japan has embarked on unsterilised currency intervention, which amounts to stimulus, and both the Fed and the Bank of England are signalling fresh QE.
You can’t have it both ways. If the US is not in deep trouble, the Fed should not be thinking of extra QE. It should step back and let the economy heal itself, if necessary enduring several years of poor growth to purge excess leverage.
Yes, U6 unemployment is 16.7pc. But as dissenters at the Minneapolis Fed remind us, you cannot solve a structural unemployment crisis with loose money.
Fed is trying to conjure away the hangover from the last binge (which Greenspan/Bernanke caused, let us not forget), as if to vindicate its prior claim that you can always clean up painlessly after asset bubbles.
Are the Chinese right? Are the Americans and the British now so decadent that they will refuse to take their punishment, opting to default on their debts by stealth?
Sooner or later we may learn what the Fed’s hawkish bloc of Fisher, Lacker, Plosser, Hoenig, Warsh, and Kocherlakota really think about this latest lurch into monetary la la land, with all that it implies for moral hazard and debt contracts.
If I have written harsh words about these heroic resisters, I apologise for that too.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/8026324/Gold-is-the-final-refuge-against-universal-currency-debasement.html
Gold is the final refuge against universal currency debasement
States accounting for two-thirds of the global economy are either holding down their exchange rates by direct intervention or steering currencies lower in an attempt to shift problems on to somebody else, each with their own plausible justification. Nothing like this has been seen since the 1930s.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
26 Sep 2010
“We live in an amazing world. Everybody has big budget deficits and big easy money but somehow the world as a whole cannot fully employ itself,” said former Fed chair Paul Volcker in Chris Whalen’s new book Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream.
“It is a serious question. We are no longer talking about a single country having a big depression but the entire world.”
The US and Britain are debasing coinage to alleviate the pain of debt-busts, and to revive their export industries: China is debasing to off-load its manufacturing overcapacity on to the rest of the world, though it has a trade surplus with the US of $20bn (£12.6bn) a month.
Premier Wen Jiabao confesses that China’s ability to maintain social order depends on a suppressed currency. A 20pc revaluation would be unbearable. “I can’t imagine how many Chinese factories will go bankrupt, how many Chinese workers will lose their jobs,” he said.
Plead he might, but tempers in Washington are rising. Congress will vote next week on the Currency Reform for Fair Trade Act, intended to make it much harder for the Commerce Department to avoid imposing “remedial tariffs” on Chinese goods deemed to be receiving “benefit” from an unduly weak currency.
Japan has intervened to stop the strong yen tipping the country into a deflation death spiral, though it too has a trade surplus. There is suspicion in Tokyo that Beijing’s record purchase of Japanese debt in June, July, and August was not entirely friendly, intended to secure yuan-yen advantage and perhaps to damage Japan’s industry at a time of escalating strategic tensions in the Pacific region.
Brazil dived into the markets on Friday to weaken the real. The Swiss have been doing it for months, accumulating reserves equal to 40pc of GDP in a forlorn attempt to stem capital flight from Euroland. Like the Chinese and Japanese, they too are battling to stop the rest of the world taking away their structural surplus.
The exception is Germany, which protects its surplus ($179bn, or 5.2pc of GDP) by means of an undervalued exchange rate within EMU. The global game of pass the unemployment parcel has to end somewhere. It ends in Greece, Portugal, Spain, Ireland, parts of Eastern Europe, and will end in France and Italy too, at least until their democracies object.
It is no mystery why so many states around the world are trying to steal a march on others by debasement, or to stop debasers stealing a march on them. The three pillars of global demand at the height of the credit bubble in 2007 were – by deficits – the US ($793bn), Spain ($126bn), UK ($87bn). These have shrunk to $431bn, $75bn, and $33bn respectively as we sinners tighten our belts in the aftermath of debt bubbles.. The Brazils and Indias of the world are replacing some of this half trillion lost juice, but not all.
East Asia’s surplus states seem structurally incapable of compensating for austerity in the West, whether because of the Confucian saving ethic, or the habits of mercantilist practice, or in China’s case by the lack of a welfare net. Their export models rely on the willingness of Anglo-PIGS to bankrupt themselves.
So we have an early 1930s world where surplus states are hoarding money, instead of recycling it. A solution of sorts in the Great Depression was for each deficit country to devalue, breaking out of the trap (then enforced by the Gold Standard). This turned the deflation tables on the surplus powers – France and the US from 1929-1931 – forcing them to reflate as well (the US in 1933) or collapse (France in 1936). Contrary to myth, beggar-thy-neighbour policy was the global cure.
A variant of this may now occur. If China continues to hold down its currency, the country will import excess US liquidity, overheat, and lose wage competitiveness. This is the default cure if all else fails, and I believe it is well under way.
The latest Fed minutes are remarkable. They add a new doctrine, that a fresh monetary blitz – or QE2 – will be used to stop inflation falling much below 1.5pc. Surely the Fed has not become so reckless that it really aims to use emergency measures to create inflation, rather preventing deflation? This must be a cover-story. Ben Bernanke’s real purpose – as he aired in his November 2002 speech on deflation – is to weaken the dollar.
If so, he has succeeded. The Swiss franc smashed through parity last week as investors digested the message. But the swissie is an over-rated refuge. The franc cannot go much further without destabilizing Switzerland itself.
Gold has no such limits. It hit $1300 an ounce last week, still well shy of the $2,200-2,400 range reached in the late Medieval era of the 14th and 15th Centuries.
This is not to say that gold has any particular "intrinsic value"’. It is subject to supply and demand like everything else. It crashed after the gold discoveries of Spain’s Conquistadores in the New World, and slid further after finds in Australia and South Africa. It ultimately lost 90pc of its value – hitting rock-bottom a decade ago when central banks succumbed to fiat hubris and began to sell their bullion. Gold hit a millennium-low on the day that Gordon Brown auctioned the first tranche of Britain’s gold. It has risen five-fold since then.
We have a new world order where China and India are buying gold on every dip, where the West faces an ageing crisis, and where the sovereign states of the US, Japan, and most of Western Europe have public debt trajectories near or beyond the point of no return.
The managers of all four reserve currencies are playing fast and loose: the Fed is clipping the dollar; the Bank of England is clipping sterling; the European Central Bank is buying the bonds of EMU debtors to stave off insolvency, something it vowed never to do just months ago; and the Bank of Japan has just carried out two trillion yen of “unsterilized” intervention.
Of course, gold can go higher.
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New Cybersecurity Bill Gives Obama 'Power To Shut Down Companies'

Businesses who don't follow government orders would be suspended for at least 90 days with no congressional oversight

Paul Joseph Watson- Prison Planet.com
Tuesday, September 28, 2010


An amalgamated cybersecurity bill that lawmakers hope to pass before the end of the year includes new powers which would allow President Obama to shut down not only entire areas of the Internet, but also businesses and industries that fail to comply with government orders following the declaration of a national emergency – increasing fears that the legislation will be abused as a political tool.


This could help to cool down your urge to invest in Brazil:

From The Vatic Project:
Vatic Note:   We appreciate the continual news and specific information about the wrong doing in Brazil by these leaders, however, I am asking for links to these bits of information and I am doing a notice to our readers that we are waiting on the evidence of these accusations. Until then please keep in mind when deciding to accept this, that we are telling you this is not documented in this article.  That does not mean its not true, its just not confirmed by independant means.  It stands for now as rumor and must be viewed as that until we can get more evidence.   In the meantime, it does not surprise me if proven true,  IF BRAZIL leaders have allowed the international bankers into their country to control their debt, currency and financial life. Then its likely all this is true, since  this is exactly what they did to us.  Nancy Pelosi's husband had benefited greatly from his connection to his wife and her connection to the zionists controlling the banking and industries in our country as well.  He net worth is at $225 million if not more since we last read about it.  If true, it is recommended that the people begin now to do something about it before it gets as it did here in the US where its too late to undo the damage they have created in destroying our nation.   Best take control back as soon as you can and kick those damn international bankers out as soon as you can.
Lula & Dilma: Marxist Criminals Rape Brazil 
Press Exposes Rampant Graft 
-Lula Tries to Censor Media 
http://www.henrymakow.com/lula_censorship.html
September 24, 2010, by Marcos
(San Paolo Corespondent

Lula, in his union days)
What people don't understand is that Marxist parties don't want to play the democratic game. The want power, and once power is achieved, they will never leave the throne. Their goal is total control of society.

It is possible that since Hitler's burning of books in the public square, the world has not seen such a surreal situation: a protest inside the Journalists' Union FOR the censorship of the press.

Yes, you read it right. Lula's Workers party and some of their lapdog organizations are defending what they call "social control" of the media. Social control for them, is the creation of Soviets, comprised in their entirety of Communist groups, which would decide what to publish.

This comes in direct response to Media exposure of Party misdeeds. Contrary to the law, Lula is campaigning for his chosen successor, Dilma Roisseff, at state expense. Instead of acting as an impartial magistrate, he is engaged in insulting the opposition and declaring that Brazil history started when he took control. He has been fined several times.

The largest magazine in the country, Veja, has proved that Dilma's right hand and personal friend, Erenice Guerra, below left, has used the the Chief of Staff office (Erenice followed Dilma in the position) to sell privileges and contracts with the government.

Erenice's son created a bogus company to lobby and charges 6% for contracts that were approved with the help of his mother influence. We are talking about deals of R$ 9 BILLION (US$ 5 Bi).
Further investigation showed that many members of Erenice family were hired by the government to do nothing or were involved in other scandals. It is unbelievable, but Erenice will be followed in the Chief of Staff position by another woman who was involved in a huge scandal when her husband was a mayor and took bribes from bus companies. Later, he denounced the scheme and was found dead. The family says he was murdered by the Party. Nothing has been proved.

This is not the first time. Lula's son, who used to be a humble zoo keeper, created a bogus TV production company and was awarded with R$ 10 million in contracts from a state company. He is now a multi-millionaire.

Lula, cynically said that his son is a genius, like a Ronaldinho (from soccer). The corruption news came on top of another scandal, where Party militants were digging into fiscal data from the adversaries.

Because the press has (finally) realized that they are in a bad position, they probably forced their Marxist editors to print the truth. It is a case of too little, too late.

This week, the Party told the MST, the Landless (Fake) Peasants Movement, a terrorist branch of the party that invades lands and kills farmers, to make a blockade in several of the major roads that give access to Sao Paulo.

The goal is to destabilize a state that is not yet in their control and where they will lose big time. They hate the fact that Sao Paulo has drastically reduced crime and that people here just don't buy the populist lies of Lula. They have done this many other times, especially using the Teacher's Union, coming to a point of seriously hurting a governor who was suffering from terminal cancer and stopping classes for the children for months on end.
WHY LULA'S PARTY IS UNSTOPPABLE
1) They have a populist demagogue leader. Most people don't have a clue. Lula is surfing on the reforms of the former administration, which ended 20 years of high inflation. He and his party were against these reforms, but now he takes credit for them. He is also benefiting from a long term commodity boom which helped the economy. The former administration created the food stamps program: Lula can be seen in youtube making a statement against it, when he was in the opposition.

Now, he says he was the one who created it. Lula is portrayed in the international press as a humble worker who made it. This couldn't be further to the truth. In fact, he worked in the plant for a couple of years. After that, he became an union leader and never worked again. Dilma follows his footsteps. She has also never worked in the private sector, and was always held a sinecure created for her by a leftist politician. Her only real work experience has been as a little shop owner, which went bankrupt in one year. This is the next President of Brazil.
2) They have mobilized everywhere. Need a credit card statement to bash an opponent? A bank employee will give you one. Need the tax return of an adversary? A public servant will give it to you. And so it goes. They have hijacked the universities (Brazil now doesn't have one school among the best 200), the newspaper newsrooms, the state companies. The Unions now get one day of salary of every worker, even the non unionized, and are not obliged to tell where the money goes (Lula pushed a law for it). The common citizen doesn't have the time and money to leave work to go to a political meeting, but the Party has thousands of professional agitators, and can easily pack 100 buses with their Nazi brown shirts within one day of notice.
3) They have bought off the capitalists. The Party uses the BNDS, (federal bank) to borrow money from the banks at 12% and lend it to business owners at 3 to 5%. In the process, they make the banks happy and also get all the support they need from large companies. It is a fascist economy. This (US$ 100 BI this year) has tripled the internal public debt, but it gave a boost in the economy in times of election.
4) Because of the military government, and 30 years of brainwashing, people are afraid to sound conservative, and there is virtually no opposition. It is the victory of Antonio Gramsci's strategy of social and cultural infiltration. Gramsci is a Marxist author who makes Machiavellli look like a kindergarten teacher. Only leftist writers get reviews in the papers, only leftist movie makers get funds for production, etc. The Ministry of Culture has just chosen the movie with Lula's (fake) biography, a piece of propaganda that flopped at the theaters, to represent Brazil in the Oscars. I will not be surprised if it wins.
Unfortunately, the scandals have only scratched the surface of Dilma's candidacy. It seems we will have the first terrorist, bank robbing, murderer president of Brazil. People don't know that the last thing these Communists want is to help the poor.

In fact, they have destroyed Brazil's education system, and illiteracy is higher than when Lula took power. The ranking of Brazilian students in the world has dropped. Basic sanitation (sewerage) is in the same level. Health service is a disaster. 50,000 Brazilians die violent deaths, most because of drugs and guns that are brought into Brazil by the Colombian terrorist organization FARC, a friend and ally of the Party for decades.

What people don't understand is that Marxist parties don't want to play the democratic game. The want power, and once power is achieved, they will never leave the throne. Their goal is total control of society. There is no alternation of power with Marxists. There are also no ethics, since this end justifies any means. They lie, they murder, and yet they feel good about it, because they do it for a "cause". Like diabolical maniacs, they really don't know what they will do once they get there, but get there they will.



The article is reproduced in accordance with Section 107 of title 17 of the Copyright Law of the United States relating to fair-use and is for the purposes of criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. 

The Donkey in the China Shop

A must read by Dr. Antal Fekete  (my emphasis)
The Daily BellSeptember 28, 2010 


Obama and Congressional Democrats Trying to Blackmail China


President Obama has just issued a blackmail to Prime Minister Wen Jiabao of China: "You immediately revalue the yuan or else..." According to an article of David E. Senger in The New York Times dated September 23, 2010, the two leaders met at the United Nations in New York and spent most of their two-hour session in a spare conference room, usually used by members of the Security Council, to discuss the currency issue. The session ended by Obama's issuing an ultimatum that is bound to be followed by trade war. Surely, this is a most unseemly use to which the sacred grounds of the Security Council, dedicated as it is to the maintenance of peace and prevention of war, have ever been put.


It is most undiplomatic, not to say arrogant, for a head of government to engage another in a in a tête-à-tête confrontation, to discuss technical currency problems that should first properly be sorted out at a lower level by experts. In a total lack of courtesy to be shown to a guest, Obama is threatening him with action on the part of Congressional Democrats, to railroad legislation through before the midterm elections that would put huge punitive tariffs on Chinese goods, thus plunging the world into trade war. Every one of those Congressional Democrats is a complete ignoramus where complex currency issues are concerned. The only thing they can do is parrot Keynesianand Friedmanite bunk.


The reason given for Obama's most unusual procedure is that he and his Congressional cohorts are "protecting U.S. interests: American jobs and American competitiveness". Of course, Obama would never pay the blackmail if China wanted to force upon the U.S. an unpalatable dollar-policy, e.g., demand that the dollar be immediately put back on a gold standard on the theory that the present dispute would not have arisen if the dollar were gold redeemable as it had been before Nixon's default. Obama has grossly overplayed a very weak hand. The U.S. has never been in a weaker bargaining position. All the trump cards are in the Chinese hand.


None of the arguments used by Obama in his impolite and immodest lecturing of the Chinese Prime Minister holds water. Exactly the same stratagem was applied against Japan in the 1980's. At that time the U.S. wanted Japan to let the yen float upwards "in order to help restore America's competitiveness". Japan meekly obliged, and the result was: bankrupting the Japanese financial system while America became even more uncompetitive.


That episode has been completely misrepresented by the American media and mainstream economists. To restore balance, here is the other side of the argument. Japan had a huge pile of U.S. Treasury paper as a result of several decades of trade surpluses — fruits of Japanese thrift and good husbandry. As the yen was floating upwards, Japan took enormous losses on its holdings of U.S. paper, since its gold value was no longer guaranteed after Nixon's default of 1971. For an American eye these losses were invisible, because Americans blithely assumed that everybody would carry his books in dollar units. But the Japanese carry them in yen units. As the yen was floating upwards from a little over 25 cents to over $1 per 100 yen, the Japanese were forced to take a loss on their savings to the tune of over 75 cents on every dollar of American debt held. The whole maneuver of floating the yen upwards was designed to avoid the shame attached to an exercise in default of sovereign debt, in order to save American face at Japan's expense. Such a drastic and open-ended loss of wealth would bankrupt even the strongest country financially. Japan today is in the throes of a depression, thanks to the U.S.' slapping its debt abatement on her economy. Thrift and industry were penalized, prodigality and financial irresponsibility rewarded.


But the worst was still to come. When the Japanese wanted to pay some of their overseas accounts by drawing on the remnants of their savings held in dollars, they were shocked. The money wasn't there. American money-doctors rushed in and talked Japan into embracing deficit-spending. Up to that point Japan had practically no government debt. Why should they? They could afford to pay cash. By contrast, today, Japan is one of the worst cases of government over-indebtedness, a result of "good" advice dispensed by the American money doctors.


The Chinese government is not in the habit of running its business on the basis of unbalanced budgets and deficit spending. Looking at the Japanese experience, no wonder that China does not want to be sucked into the black hole of bottomless government debts in which the U.S. and the Japanese governments are drowning.


Obama's argument, concocted for domestic consumption, is that upward-floating of the yuan would help restore American competitiveness and would put Americans back to work. However, the saga of the Japanese yen does not confirm this optimistic prediction. A side-effect of letting the yen float upwards under American duress was the devaluation of the dollar vis-à-vis the yen. As a consequence, Japanese producers have made further gains in competitiveness over that of their American competitors. With their stronger currency they could easily outbid American producers in world markets when shopping around for ingredients that go into production for exports. As a result, Japan's trade gap with America widened further. The imbecile theory of Milton Friedman, that a weaker currency is duty bound to make for gains in the country's exports, has never worked — except in the reverseWhatever dubious advantage a weaker currency may have initially evaporates as soon as stockpiled imports are drawn down and used up. Ever after, the weaker currency has to face higher bills for imports. The terms of trade of the country resorting to devaluation deteriorates: the same quantity of exports will buy a smaller quantity of imports. To devalue one's own currency is akin to self-mutilation of the champion before the race. The only thing it guarantees is failure. The champion must hand victory over to his adversary without running.


The charge that the Chinese artificially hold their currency weak is a red herring. The real strength of currencies is measured by the reserves held against them, and by the competitiveness of the export industry supporting them. By these measures the yuan is a strong currency, indeed, far stronger than the dollar. Torturing logic in calling the strong weak and the weak strong will not take Obama very far.
The real reason for the unprecedented blackmail of Obama has nothing to do with these false charges. It has all the more to do with the unpaid and unpayable debt of the U.S. The size of this debt beats all records in history, and cries out for debt-abatement or default. The blackmail was issued in desperation. The U.S. is like the biblical prodigal son who has blown his patrimony. He does not want to admit that he has acted foolishly. He does not want to repent. He just pushes the blame on others. But the moment of truth will arrive when the fact of prodigality must be admitted, and repentance must replace finger-pointing.


For a balanced view of the American-Chinese dispute one has to see clearly that if China caved in to American pressure, as did Japan before her, then China would agree to the embezzlement of her savings held by America, bankers to the world. China is a proud country and will never allow herself to be humiliated and short-changed in this way.


Obama, the Congressional Democrats, and their Keynesian/Friedmanite mentors should face up to the fact that they have overstayed their welcome as financial managers of the U.S. and the world. Pseudo-theorizing on the non-existent benefits of currency devaluation has grown threadbare. Blackmailing surplus countries and slapping the losses on them — while the orgy continues in the deficit country — is a counter-productive strategy. It is bound to fail, as it already has. It may force China to fix the value of the yuan, not in U.S. dollars but in gold ounces. That will be the last nail in the coffin of the once mighty U.S. dollar, to make it ready to join the Continental, the assignat, the Reichsmark, and the Zimbabwe dollar in the cemetery of worthless fiat currencies.


Maybe in November the American people will send representatives to Congress who will rally around Congressman Ron Paul of Texas, the only American leader with a viable plan to save the American government from the ultimate humiliation of publicly recognized bankruptcy.


America can lose nothing, and can gain everything by playing the gold card first. The prodigal son, repentant, could return to his father, symbolized by the American Constitution, who is ready to forgive and embrace him. Not only will the opening the U.S. Mint to gold, as demanded by the Constitution, restore the government to fiscal sanity and financial health; it will also bring confidence back to the international monetary system.
It will also help avoid trade wars, and prevent another wave of uncontrollable unemployment from engulfing the world.


Reference: Position paper of professorfekete #3, July 4, 2010, Floating Exchange Rates: Scheme to Embezzle the Dollar Balances of Surplus Countries, www.professorfekete.com.
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RelatedWeapons and Movies: The Consequences of Globalization

LBMA And Comex Under Gold And Silver Attack


Finally, some solid news that all the weird reporting by Comex – their no logical shifts of silver to unknown receivers or getting silver to Comex warehouses from unknown, were for a reason.
And this reason is…

…big private speculators (owning millions and/or probably billions of USD), are playing in gold and silver paper markets with one goal – to make even more money by demanding physical gold and silver.
Knowing well now that both Comex and LBMA have 100x more paper derivatives than physical gold and silver, will put a short squeeze on these metal exchanges and maybe even destroying them cause of their fraudulent activities.
What regulators on these exchanges don’t want to do, in order to stop this fraud, it will be done by private money.


Popout


As reported by Jim Willie, big private speculators have started putting pain in gold and silver market to banksters in July 2010.
And this month’s Comex reports are showing especially silver leaving to unknown from Comex dealers and Comex dealers taking now weekly silver leases from Comex customers.


And in last 2 business days Comex dealers took from Comex customers 2 gold leases in a row – total of 376,282 ounces of PHYSICAL gold.
This alone plus info about QE2 in Nov 2010 should make small explosion in price of gold and silver but as every paper product – it can be manipulated by issuing 100x more paper than available physical silver and gold.
But such paper manipulation can’t hold out for too long and now with big speculators in play, watch out for prices to spike out by the end of 2010.
Leave paper trading to banksters and big speculators!
Stick to owning physical silver and gold -  if you can, add more to your physical stack.
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Related: Central Banks No Longer Selling Gold
2010 Gold Buffalo Bullion Coins Sold Out


Ron Paul's Bill to Audit the Fed, A Red-Alert Threat to the Regime

Michael Hudson - Where is the World Economy Headed?

By MICHAEL HUDSON
CounterPunch, 9.20.2010

Challenging the Model of the North

Where is the World Economy Headed?

Last Thursday Michael Hudson addressed the Council of Economic Advisors to the President of Brazil (CDES) . He offered an unsparing description of how the global economy is being shaped and exploited by Northern bankers. Then he outlined the ways in which Brazil and other major "BRIC" economies - Russia, Chinas, India - can steer an independent path and thus preserve  and improve their nations' condition . CounterPunch is delighted to feature here Dr Hudson's very striking address. AC/JSC
Brasilia
Toward what goal is the world economy steering?
That obviously depends on who is doing the steering. It almost always has been the most powerful nations that organize the world in ways that transfer income and property to themselves. From the Roman Empire through modern Europe such transfers took mainly the form of military seizure and tribute. The Norman conquerors endowed themselves as a landed aristocracy extracting rent, as did the Nordic conquerors of France and other countries. Europe later took resources by colonial conquest, increasingly via local client oligarchies.
Today, financial maneuvering and debt leverage play the role that military conquest did in times past. Its aim is still to control land, basic infrastructure and the economic surplus - and also to gain control of national savings, commercial banking and central bank policy. This financial conquest is achieved peacefully and even voluntarily rather than militarily. But the aim is the same: to make subject populations pay - as debtors and as dependent junior trade partners. Indebted "host economies" are in a similar position to that of defeated countries. Their economic surplus is transferred abroad financially, while locally, debtors lose sovereignty over their own financial, economic and tax policy. Public infrastructure is sold off to foreign buyers, on credit and therefore paying interest and fees that are expensed as tax-deductible and paid to foreigners.

The Washington Consensus applauds this pro-rentier policy. Its neoliberal ideology holds that the most efficient path to wealth is to shift economic planning out of the hands of government into those of bankers and money managers in charge of privatizing and financializing the economy. Almost without anyone noticing, this view is replacing the classical law of nations based on the idea of sovereignty over debt and financial policy, tariff and tax policy. Ideology itself has become an economic weapon. Indebted governments have been told since 1980 to sell off their public infrastructure to foreign investors. Extractive "tollbooth" charges (economic rent) replace moderate or subsidized public user fees, making economies less competitive and painting them even more into a debt corner as the surplus is transferred abroad, largely tax-free.

What the world is experiencing in the face of today's globalism is a crisis in the character of nationhood and economic sovereignty. Bankers in the North look upon any economic surplus - real estate rent, corporate cash flow or even the government's taxing power or ability to sell off public enterprises - as a source of revenue to pay interest on debts. The result is a more debt-leveraged economy - in all countries. Foreign investment, bank lending, the privatization of public infrastructure and currency speculation is now viewed from this bankers'-eye perspective.

There is one great exception to relinquishing national policy to foreign control: the United States itself is by far the world's largest debtor economy. While mobilizing creditor power to force other debtors to privatize their public sectors and acquiesce in a one-sided U.S. trade protectionism, the United States is the only nation able to issue its own currency (Treasury debt) and international bank credit without limit, at a lower interest rate than any other country, and even without any foreseeable means to pay.

This double standard has transformed the character of international finance and the meaning of capital inflows. Money no longer is an asset in the form of gold or silver bullion reflecting what has been produced by labor. Money is credit, and hence finds its counterpart in debt on the liabilities side of the balance sheet. Since the United States suspended gold convertibility of the dollar in 1971, international money - the savings of central banks - has taken the form mainly of U.S. Treasury debt, that is, loans to the United States to finance its twin balance-of-payments and budget deficits (both of which are largely military in character). Meanwhile, domestic commercial bank credit takes the form of private debt - mortgage debt, corporate debt (increasingly for debt leveraged takeovers), and even loans for speculation on financial derivatives and currency gambles.

Little bank credit has gone to finance tangible capital investment. Most such investment has been paid for out of retained business earnings, not bank loans. And as banks and brokerage houses have financed corporate takeovers, the new buyers or raiders have had to divert corporate cash flow to paying back their creditors rather than expanding production. This is how the U.S. and other economies have become financialized and post-industrialized. Their experience should serve as an object lesson for what Brazil and other countries need to avoid.

U.S. bank lending has been the major dynamic fueling a global inflation of real estate, stock and bond prices, bolstered over the past decade by European bank lending. Dollar credit (like yen credit after 1990) is created "freely" without the constraint that used to occur when capital outflows forced central banks either to raise national interest rates or lose their gold stocks. In fact, any economy today can create its own domestic credit on its own computer keyboards - those of its central bank and commercial banks. Under today's conditions, foreign loans do not provide resources that host countries cannot create for themselves. The effect of foreign credit converted into domestic currency is merely to siphon off interest and economic rent.

It is not widely recognized that most commercial bank loans merely attach debt to existing assets (above all, real estate and infrastructure) rather than being invested in creating new means of production, or to employ labor, or even to earn a profit. Banks prefer to lend against assets already in place - real estate, or entire companies. So most bank loans are used to bid up of prices for assets, especially those whose prices are expected to rise by enough to pay the interest on the loan.

The fact that bankers can create interest-bearing debt on computer keyboards with little cost of production poses the question of whether to leave this free lunch (economic rent) in private hands or treat money creation as a public "institutional" good. Classical economists urged that such rent-yielding privileges be regulated to keep prices and incomes in line with necessary costs of production. The surest way to do this was to keep monopolies in the public domain to provide basic services at minimum cost or for free while land taxes and user fees could serve as the main source of public revenue. This principle has been flagrantly violated by the practice of erecting privatized "tollbooths" that extract rent revenue without a corresponding cost of production. This has been done in a way that benefits only a select few.

The unchecked explosion of global credit and debt - and hence, pressure to sell off natural monopolies in the public domain - is largely a result of the credit explosion unleashed after gold convertibility ended in 1971. The ensuing U.S. Treasury-bill standard left foreign central banks with no vehicle in which to hold their international reserves except loans to the U.S. Treasury. This gives the U.S. balance-of-payments deficit a free ride, which translates into a military free ride. After the Korean War forced the dollar into deficit status in 1951, overseas military spending throughout the 1950s and '60s equaled the entire U.S. payments deficit. The private sector was almost exactly in balance during these decades, while U.S. "foreign aid" actually generated a balance-of-payments surplus, as a result of aid tied to U.S. exports rather than to the needs of aid-recipient countries.

While other countries running trade and payments deficits must increase their interest rates to stabilize their currencies, the United States has lowered its interest rates. This has increased the "capitalization rate" of its real estate rents and corporate earnings, enabling banks to lend more against higher-priced collateral. Property is worth whatever banks will lend against it, so the U.S. economy has been able to use the dollar standard's free ride to load itself down with an unprecedented debt overhead - an overhead that traditionally has been suffered only by countries fighting wars abroad or burdened with reparations payments. This is the Treasury-bill standard's self-destructive blowback.

It is an object lesson for Brazil to avoid. Your nation today is receiving balance-of-payments inflows as foreign banks and investors create credit to lend against your real estate, natural resources and industry. Their aim is to obtain your economic surplus in the form of interest payments and remitted earnings, turning you into a rentier tollbooth economy.

Why would you need these "capital inflows" that extract interest, rents and profits as a return for electronic "keyboard credit" that you can create yourself? In today's world, no nation needs credit from abroad for domestic-currency spending at home. Brazil should avoid letting foreign creditors capitalize its economic surplus into debt service and other payments.

The way to avoid this fate was outlined from the French Physiocrats and Adam Smith through John Stuart Mill and Progressive Era reformers: by ending the special privileges bequeathed by Europe's military conquests (privatization of land rent), and by collecting "free lunch" rentier income as the tax base to save it from being privatized and capitalized into bank loans. Taxing land and resource rent lowers the cost of living and doing business not only by removing the tax burden on labor and industry, but by holding down housing and real estate prices, because whatever the tax collector relinquishes is available to be pledged to carry bank loans to bid up property prices.

In the 19th century the American System of political economy was based on the perception that highly paid labor is more productive labor, such that well-educated, well-fed and well-clothed labor undersells "pauper" labor. The key to international competitiveness is thus to raise wages and living standards, not lower them. This is especially the case for Brazil, given its need to raise labor productivity by better education, health and social support systems if it is to thrive in the 21st century. And if it is to raise capital investment and living standards free of debt service and higher housing prices, it needs to prevent the economy's surplus from being turned into a "free lunch" in the form of land rent, resource rent and monopoly rent - and to save this economic surplus from bankers seeking to capitalize it into debt payments. This is best achieved by taxing away the potential rentier charges that turn the surplus into unnecessary overhead.
But because the wealth of nations is now calculated from the banker's perspective, surplus income is viewed as potentially available to capitalize into debt service. Rather than using the surplus to invest in capital formation and public infrastructure, the distinguishing characteristic of our time is financialization - the capitalization of the economic surplus (corporate cash flow, real estate rent and other economic rent, and personal income over and above basic living costs) into interest payments for bank loans.

This is the business plan of bank marketing departments and is a far cry from what Adam Smith wrote about in The Wealth of Nations. Loan officers see any net flow of income as potentially available to be pledged as interest payment. Their dream is to see the entire surplus capitalized into debt service to carry loans. Net real estate rent, corporate cash flow (ebitda: earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization), personal income above basic spending needs, and net government tax revenues can be capitalized into as much as banks will lend. And the more credit they lend, the higher prices are bid up for real estate, stocks and bonds.

So bank lending is applauded for making economies richer, even as families and businesses are loaded down with more and more debt. And the easier debt leveraging becomes, the more asset prices rise. Lower interest rates, lower down payments, more stretched-out amortization periods, and even fraudulent "devil may care" lending thus increase the "capitalization rate" of real estate and business revenue. This is applauded as "wealth creation" - which turns out to be debt-leveraged asset-price inflation and can infect an entire economy.

The limit of this policy is reached when the entire surplus is turned into debt service. At this point the economy is fully financialized. Income spent to pay debts is not available for new investment or consumption spending, so the "real" economy is debt-shackled and must shrink.
The financial takeoff thus ends in a crash. That is what the world is seeing today, at least outside of Brazil and its fellow BRIC countries. For these economies, the question is whether they will follow the same financialization path.

The World Bank and IMF are Not Reformable
A document put out by the Council of Economic Advisors to the President (CDES)  speaks of "reforming" the IMF, World Bank and even the United Nations. I don't believe that this hope is realistic. As I analyzed in Super Imperialism (1972 and 2002), the World Bank and IMF are committed to a basically destructive economic philosophy.

In the case of agricultural development, the World Bank is authorized only to make foreign-currency loans aimed at increasing exports. Its lending accordingly has been for roads and export infrastructure, not to develop the local economy. The effect has been to shift agricultural patterns away from feeding domestic populations with domestic grain crops, to exporting plantation crops. The latter's global oversupply has lowered Third World terms of trade while enabling the United States and Europe to become major grain exporters.

This trade pattern benefits the industrial grain-exporting core while driving the periphery into food and debt dependency - for which "interdependence" has become a bureaucratic euphemism. I note that this happy-face word - interdependence - appears in the first sentence of this meeting's brochure. It implies acquiescence in globalization, as if it is desirable in itself as mutually beneficial to all parties. But in today's world, interdependence implies three modes of dependency: (1) food dependency, (2) military dependency, and (3) debt dependency. The Washington Consensus promoted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and U.S. bilateral aid reinforces these three modes of dependency, bolstering U.S. financial and military hegemony.
The drain of payments to creditors and absentee investors forces countries to balance their budgets by selling off their public domain. Credit rating agencies threaten to downgrade counties that do not "play ball" by giving up their commanding heights on the cheap. Lower bond ratings would make these countries pay much higher interest. This system traps them into letting privatizers extract economic rent.

From about 1950 to 1980, World Bank and commercial bank consortia lent governments money to put these assets in place. Now that these loans are paid off, banks are lending all over again to private buyers of these assets. The new owners erect tollbooths on this hitherto public infrastructure - and "expense" their revenue in the form of tax-deductible interest, underwriting charges, high management fees and other largely fictitious "costs of production." Globalized accounting orthodoxy enables foreign investors to transfer their receipt of user fees and other economic rent out of the country, tax-free. This drives the host economies further into balance-of-payments deficit, leading to even more sell-offs at even steeper distress-price discounts.
In times past, population provided a military advantage, as well as supplying labor for production. But finance wields dominant control today. The lead nations are willing to see Brazil and other BRIC countries grow and export enough labor-intensive goods and raw materials to pay their growing debts. What rentier interests want is the economic surplus, in the form of debt service (interest, amortization and fees) and monopoly rents in the form of tollbooth charges for the roads and other public infrastructure that is being privatized. They add insult to injury by also demanding that governments refrain from taxing these takings, by permitting interest and other technologically unnecessary charges such as depreciation to be tax-deductible. An illusion of non-profit (and hence, non-taxable) business also is given by going along with the accounting pretense of fictitiously low transfer prices for exports.
Corporate accountants quantify these stratagems with an eye to leaving little net income to be reported and taxed. Under this false map of economic reality, seemingly empirical statistics serve mainly to preserve the deceptive neoliberal economic theory behind them.

To keep their monopoly of money creation, creditor nations demand that governments not use their central banks to do what central banks all over the world originally were founded to do: finance public budget deficits by monetizing them to become the national credit base. The pretense is that it would be inflationary for central banks to finance their government's budget deficits. But it is no more inflationary than permitting central banks to create credit on their own keyboards!

The European Central Bank insists that governments borrow only from commercial banks and other private-sector creditors - and even that foreign bank branches in host countries can denominate loans in the currency used by the head office or other foreign currencies. Swedish branch banks in Latvia and Austrian bank branches in Hungary thus make loans denominated in Euros. Creditor-nation banks thus can invade and conquer by creating their own local electronic credit, violating the prime directive of wise financial management: never denominate debts in hard foreign currency, when your income is in soft domestic currency.

The demand that countries "balance their budgets" is a euphemism for selling off the public domain and slashing pensions and public spending on education, medical care and other basic preconditions for raising labor productivity. Such austerity demands the opposite of the Keynesian policies followed by the United States itself. Economies subjected to the Washington Consensus fall further and further behind, making the global economy more polarized and unstable. The collapse of the "Baltic Tigers" and other post-Soviet economies where neoliberal planners had a free hand stands as an object lesson for how self-destructive these policies are for nations that submit to them.

What turns out to be ironic is that the tax philosophy favoring debt leveraging rather than equity investment is destroying the creditor core economies as well as the financialized periphery. That is the blowback that Europe and North America are now experiencing. They have let free credit creation subject their own economies to debt deflation - the same dysfunctional policies that impaired Third World development from the 1960s onward!

It is to prevent the resulting shrinkage of the "real" economy - and indeed, debt peonage - that European labor unions are mounting a general strike on September 28, 2010, against austerity plans that would roll back living standards. The move by the BRIC countries to create an alternative financial system and trade and development philosophy for themselves is a kindred reaction against the neo-rentier counter-Enlightenment that is determined to undermine classical economic reform.

The Importance of Economic Ideology to Make a New Beginning
The most important factor in the economic strength of Brazil and its fellow BRIC countries is that you are not yet as debt-ridden as North America and Europe. Your advantages do indeed include your population and natural resources, but you have had these all along. What makes you so attractive to the North is that you are the remnant of the global economy that has not yet buckled under their debt burden. Your economic surplus is not yet pledged to pay debt service, so bankers eye you as not yet "loaned up."

Your main economic problem is how to protect yourself from the proliferation of credit and debt that has dragged down the North like an invading army, along with the privatization of natural monopolies and financial privileges. Your solution must be to follow an alternative to the regressive financial and tax ideology promoted by today's international institutions.
What is needed today is not just a "global governance revision" but an outright break from the past. Revision tends to be merely marginal, not the structural change that is called for.

When building a new foundation, it is easier to replace old institutions and start afresh than to try to modify bad institutions and retrain personnel who are committed to entrenched, dysfunctional past policies. An outstanding example of this is U.S. policy after its Civil War. To develop the logic for their economic program, the Republican Party at that time (not today's neoliberal Republicans!) founded land-grant state colleges and endowed business schools to teach the protectionist and technology-based alternative to the British free trade doctrine being taught at the most prestigious colleges such as Harvard, Yale and Princeton. The result was the doctrine that would propel the United States to world leadership by means of protective tariffs, a national bank and public infrastructure investment.

We have before us  four objectives for discussion:
(1) Globalization and labor markets under today's push for austerity. Under the euphemism of "balanced budgets," fiscal austerity aims to prevent countries from using their economic surplus to raise living standards. This policy is self-destructive. Austerity prevents productivity from being raised, stifling domestic markets by "freeing" government revenue for paying debt service, bailouts and other transfer payments or subsidies to the finance, insurance and real estate (FIRE) sector at home and abroad.

(2) New development indicators are indeed needed to replace the GDP accounting format with a better map of the economy. Accounting categories reflect economic theory. Classical doctrine divided economies into two parts: (A) the production-and-consumption sector that textbooks usually refer to as the "real" economy, and (B) the extractive FIRE sector (finance, insurance and real estate), which today's mainstream analysis and GDP accounts define as producing "output" equal in value to what FIRE rentiers charge. So what used to be viewed as overhead is now treated as output, as if it were a necessary part of economic activity.

This accounting format rejects the classical definition of economic rent as the excess of market price extracted over and above the necessary costs of production. The result is merely a map of the economy as seen by a predatory bankers'-eye view of the world - a view of how they play only a productive role, as if all credit and debt leveraging were productive rather than extractive.
Obviously, this view fails to reflect today's economic problem or how industrial economies are being post-industrialized and financialized. "The devil wins at the point where he convinces the world that he does not really exist," quipped Charles Baudelaire. Providing privatized services, including bank credit, health insurance and other "tollbooth"-type fees at a price in excess of these necessary costs should be treated as transfer payments, not as output.

The GDP accounting format and national balance sheet analysis are asymmetrical in undervaluing land and other natural resources relative to capital and rent imputations. The pretense is that buildings grow in value even while being depreciated. Meanwhile, free market ideology deters governments from calculating the economic cost of recovering the exhaustion of mineral and subsoil wealth and forests from private exploitation. A depletion allowance is given to private investors for making holes in the ground and cutting down forests. It would be more economically fair for them to make payments to reimburse the national economy that is losing this patrimony or suffering environmental cleanup charges.

Free traders have opposed including such calculations for national depletion, cleanup or other restoration charges in national accounts. Taking them into account would reduce the gains-from-trade calculations with which neoliberal trade theory indoctrinates students and public officials. This ideological prejudice makes current practice doctrinaire, not empirical science.
The international economy needs an accounting format to calculate the national ability to pay foreign debts. In 1929 the Young Plan averted global financial breakdown by finally limiting Germany's reparations payments for World War I in the context of calculating how much foreign exchange Germany could earn (and pay) in the normal course of trade, as distinct from simply borrowing new money or selling off assets. Trying to pay by taking on more debt or selling assets is not to be viewed as a normal ability to carry debt in equilibrium.

In such circumstances the debts should be deemed to have gone bad and be written down. The alternative is the kind of asset stripping that Iceland and Latvia are now suffering, and that Third World countries suffered in the late 1970s and '80s. This is the road to debt peonage, shrinking the economy and spurring emigration of the labor force as well as capital flight, benefiting the few at home and abroad.

These shortcomings prevent the GDP format from being a good guide for public policy-making. The two above problems - austerity policy and the current pro-rentier map of the economy - have promoted a bankers'-eye view of the world advocating

(3) An unsustainable development policy. Debts growing at exponential rates ("the magic of compound interest") are not sustainable. Trying to pay them makes economies less competitive and impoverishes populations, leading to defaults both in domestic and foreign currency, and hence to social unrest.

In terms of international balance, the cost of labor is inflated by payments owed to the FIRE sector. By contrast, when trade theory was elaborated by British free traders, American protectionists and other economists in the 19th century, it was spending on food and other consumer goods that provided the basis for labor cost comparisons among nations. Today's U.S. trade deficit, for example stems largely from the fact that homeowners typically pay up to 40 per cent of their income for mortgage debt service and other carrying charges, 15 per cent for other debt (credit card interest and fees, auto loans, student loans, etc.), 11 per cent for FICA wage withholding for Social Security and Medicare, and about 10 to 15 per cent in other taxes (income and excise taxes). So debt-leveraged real estate and consumption are aggravated by forced saving set-asides in the form of "pension fund capitalism" run by money managers. And this brings us to the topic of

(4) Global governance. Who shall set the rules? And in whose interest are they to be set? When discussing austerity in (1) above, we need to ask, "austerity for whom?" Will mortgages and other debts be written down to the ability to pay? If they are, banks and the wealthiest 10 per cent of the population will have to lose some of the financial advantage that enable them to reduce the bottom 90 per cent to a state of debt peonage. But if debts are not written down, the result will be debt deflation that can destroy entire economies. Homeowners and businesses have to use their income to pay their bankers, not spend on goods and services. So employment and national output will continue to shrink. The corrosive role of debt is the major choice facing countries today, and hence the focus of rival plans for global governance.

Summary
It seems obvious that financial reform is needed - and this requires fiscal reform as well. The fact that whatever the tax collector relinquishes is available ("free") to be pledged to creditors as interest makes the fiscal problem part and parcel of this financial problem. The economic rent that governments relinquish is "free" to be captured by the banks, which capitalize untaxed revenue into bank loans. This is how economies load themselves down with debt. Lower taxes on rent leave more revenue available to pay interest on loans made to enable borrowers to bid up prices. Meanwhile, cutting taxes on unearned income obliges the government to make up the gap by taxing labor and tangible industrial investment more, raising their supply price, or borrowing from the banks at interest.

Today's budget deficits thus have gone hand in hand with over-indebted economies, and with a regressive tax shift that burdens productive labor and industry. The tax systems of nearly all countries today favor debt financing - and hence, asset-price inflation - by permitting interest and financial fees to be tax-deductible, while dividends and earnings must be paid after taxes. This un-taxing of land and rent-extracting monopolies goes against the logic of Saint-Simon and other 19th-century reformers who sought to free markets from debt overhead, not to free bankers and financiers from regulation and taxation.

Today's financialized world is paying a steep price for its rentier-sponsored reaction against classical economics. This reaction distracted attention from the fact that economies suffer a rising "free lunch" of what J. S. Mill called unearned income and unearned increments in the form of higher land rent and land prices. Rent extraction is the business plan of privatizers of public infrastructure and natural monopolies - and of their financial backers seeking to provide buyout loans. The tragedy of our epoch is that most credit is extended to buy rent-extracting opportunities, not for productive capital formation. Banks prefer to lend against property already in place - real estate or companies - than to finance tangible new capital formation. This poses the threat of globalization taking a corrosive form, ending in debt deflation, privatization and a rentier tollbooth economy rather than becoming a system of mutual gain.

The neoliberal motto of Margaret Thatcher, "There is No Alternative" (TINA), ignores the alternative advocated by two hundred years of classical economists. The original liberals - from Adam Smith and the Physiocrats through John Stuart Mill and even Winston Churchill - urged that the tax system be based on the economic rent of land so as to keep down the price of housing (and hence labor's cost of living). The Progressive Era followed this principle by aiming to keep natural monopolies such as transportation, communication and even banks (or at least, free credit creation) in the public domain. But the post-1980 world has encouraged private owners to buy them on credit and extract economic rent, thereby shifting the tax burden onto labor, industry and agriculture - while concentrating wealth, first on credit and then via the enormous recent public bailouts of this failed financial debt pyramiding and deregulation.

This is what is shrinking the Northern economies today as they suffer from economic polarization between creditors and debtors, property owners and an increasingly insecure labor force - insecure because it is so deeply in debt that losing a job or being fired threatens loss of one's home and solvency.

Austerity and economic shrinkage are not necessary. There is an alternative. Given the bankers'-eye view of the world promoted by the IMF, World Bank and most mainstream economists, your task must be to stay free of globalization in today's financialized form. Your counter is simple enough: Do not permit outsiders to buy your assets and drive up your currency's exchange rate with "computer keyboard" credit that you do not need. Commercial banking requires careful public regulation, with the government itself controlling money-creation, leaving banks to act as intermediaries. The aim of financial regulatory policy should be to make sure that Brazil's economic surplus is invested in production to raise living standards rather than relinquishing money creation to foreign and domestic financial interests aiming mainly at currency speculation, interest and rent extraction.

You face a danger from mounting global pressure backing policies to slash your living standards, capital investment and infrastructure spending in order to pay exponentially growing private and public debts. Unless debts are written off, or at least reduced to the reasonable ability to pay, economies throughout the world will suffer waves of foreclosure, financial polarization between creditors and debtors, and ultimately social collapse.

At issue is the concept of free markets. Are they to be free from monopoly and special privilege, or free for the occupying financial invaders and speculators? The reform of classical political economy in the 18th and 19th centuries was to keep "free lunch" rent from rising land and raw materials prices, financial credit creation and related monopolies in the public domain.

Looking back on history, we can see how the economies created by the conquerors of Europe and its subsequent colonies were based on war making and looting, seizure of the land, taxation, royal war debts - and, by the 17th century, the creation of Crown monopolies to sell off to raise the money to pay off these debts. (The South Sea and Mississippi Companies in the 1710s are the culminating examples of this practice.) This led to high-cost, debt-ridden economies in Britain and France. It was against such wasteful - and technologically unnecessary - overhead that classical economics was developed as a reform program. The main aim was to make these nations more competitive by freeing their markets from rent and monopolies, and from taxes levied mainly on labor and industry for unproductive spending on wars and empire building. A kindred aim was to reform the financial system to replace debt financing with equity investment. And increasing reform pressure grew for public subsidy of basic infrastructure, especially outside of Britain.

Neoliberals advocate the opposite policy. They define a free market as one that is free for rentiers to extract economic rent and interest. The effect is to turn the public domain into a field of tollbooths for roads and other basic infrastructure charging entry prices and user fees that are loaded with built-in financial charges, exorbitant salaries and rake-offs that raise the economy's cost of living and doing business.

So we are brought back to how privatizing the public domain and financializing the economy is akin to military defeat. To defend themselves, the BRIC countries need to isolate themselves from global debt creation. The "dialogue" your conference calls for with regard to rules for "new global governance" is unlikely to reach a consensus under today's conditions where the United States and EU, the World Bank and IMF are urging austerity. They are calling for a sacrifice of labor's Social Security and pension savings in order to extract payment for the debt overhang that has been allowed to develop.
Debt leveraging and asset-price inflation have been encouraged by the past generation's fiscal ideology giving tax favoritism for interest and capital gains. This pro-rentier tax favoritism was the opposite of classical free-market reforms and was bound to fail. Yet its sponsors have the audacity to claim Adam Smith, J. S. Mill and their followers as the patron saints of neoliberalism. Classical political economy endorsed a broadening array of public services and social support outside of the market. The United States subsidized its industrial takeoff by realizing that roads, public health and other basic services should be provided freely rather than burdened with intrusive toll charges. Neoliberal ideology asserts that such public investment and regulation is the "road to serfdom" and proposes in its place what may best be thought of as the real road to debt peonage - tax favoritism for debt leverage followed by debt deflation and austerity.

A century ago, even fifty years ago, most of the world was embarking on a program of public infrastructure investment, including central bank or treasury credit for government spending. This was the classical policy program to free economies from the rentier overhead that now is proliferating in much of the world. It is this financial, real estate and monopoly overhead that is pricing Northern Hemisphere labor and industry out of world markets - and leading its investors to look south for more to plunder.
Fortunately, Brazil and its fellow BRIC members have an opportunity to create the classical 19th-century version of free markets, checks and balances that has failed in the North.

Michael Hudson is a former Wall Street economist. A Distinguished Research Professor at University of Missouri, Kansas City (UMKC), he is the author of many books, including Super Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire (new ed., Pluto Press, 2002) and Trade, Development and Foreign Debt: A History of Theories of Polarization v. Convergence in the World Economy. He can be reached via his website, mh@michael-hudson.com


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Gold Will Win in Global Currencies' Race to the Bottom

The Bank of England Now Joins Central Bank Insanity, Intervenes

The Bank of England (BoE) has just intervened in the FX markets, sending the Pound lower to the tune of 80 points. The BoE believes that further monetary easing should be undertaken in the form of Gilt and corporate debt purchases… Welcome to the club England!

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