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Unfortunately one of the few things
still made in America
is inflation. In fact, it now ranks as our greatest export.
A significant by-product of the current global economic system, wherein
Americans spend money they do not earn to buy foreign products that they do
not make, is that trillions of dollars are now parked in foreign banks just
looking for somewhere to go.
In a healthy trade relationship, a nation pays for its imports with equal
exports that result from real productivity that pumps up demand. In contrast,
the current U.S. import
boom has been created by the artificial demand of inflation, in which
increased money supply has put more dollars in the hands of U.S.
consumers. Normally, such growth in money supply would result in more
substantial increases in domestic consumer prices. However for a number of
reasons, the United States
has been able to partially dodge this bullet. In short, we have exported our
inflation abroad.
Our foreign creditors basically have two choices as how to dispose of their
excess dollars. They can use them to buy U.S. financial assets, such as
bonds, stocks or real estate, or they can exchange them for other currencies
or commodities, such as gold or oil. If they choose the former, foreign
central banks are off the hook, as those dollars find their way back to the U.S. economy
without any additional money creation. However, as foreigners are
increasingly choosing the latter, foreign central banks have been
“forced” to print money like it’s going out of style.
In years past, foreign investors were happy to hold strong U.S. dollars,
which they either saved as a store of value, or used to purchase mighty Wall
Street stocks and bonds. However, when the dollar began its epic swan dive,
and U.S.
investments began to grossly underperform non-U.S.
alternatives, private investors dumped their dollars en masse by exchanging
them for local currencies. The unwanted dollars then became the property and
problem of foreign central banks.
If central banks did not buy these dollars, foreign citizens would have been
forced to sell their surplus dollars on the open market. To prevent this from
happening these banks have become the buyers of first and last resort. However,
to sop up all of the excess supply, central banks must create more of their
own, resulting in rapidly expanding money supplies. As much as Wall Street
and government economists pretend otherwise, the expansion of money supply is
the essential definition of inflation. The real reason that prices are rising
in China
is that so many yuan are being printed to buy up
all these surplus dollars.
For much of the past decade foreign central banks invested their swelling
U.S. dollar reserves in U.S.
debt instruments, such as treasuries and mortgage backed securities. Not
incidentally, these purchases helped sustain our housing and credit bubbles. But
as a result of increasingly poor returns, sovereign wealth funds have
recently been created to buy tangible assets instead, such as large portions
of Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley. Thus far these investments have
performed poorly (note the 50% decline in the value of the China’s
stake in Blackstone). However, my guess is that such losses are of little
concern, as the Chinese understand that any active use of their dollars,
regardless of short-term performance, is seen as a positive because ultimately their unused dollars might be
practically worthless!
It is no accident that those regions experiencing the highest inflation are
those with currencies pegged to the dollar. The formerly strong dollar
provided a compelling rationale for nations with weaker currencies to
maintain currency pegs. The linkage provided badly needed discipline to their
central banks and created confidence in their currencies. However, it makes
no sense at all for a nation with a strong currency to peg to a weaker one. It
is analogous to an honor student cheating on his
exam by copying the answers from the worst student in the class.
Many economic analysts have noted that rising prices in China are now
resulting in higher import prices for Americans. Ironically, many have
concluded that this is evidence of China
exporting inflation to the U.S.
rather than China
merely returning the inflation to its original source.
Initially, the strong productivity growth of these export nations worked to
lower consumer prices and masked the inflationary impact of rapid money
supply growth. However, with prices now exploding throughout Asia and the Middle East, governments can no longer ignore the
inflation problem. China
has recently imposed price controls to deal with rapid increases in consumer
prices. However, as this merely attempts to mask the symptoms of inflation
rather than addressing its root cause,
this policy will prove as ineffective as it did in the United States
in the 1970’s. Once all of these misguided cures fail, Asia and the Gulf nations will swallow the only
medicine that will work. They will completely pull the plug on their dollar
pegs. When they do it will not just be the dollar, but the entire American
economy that goes down the drain.
The manner in which this massive bundle of funds will be disposed will have a
gargantuan impact on the trajectory of the world economy. Unfortunately for America, the
decisions are out of our hands, but the ramifications will largely be ours to
bear.
Peter D.
Schiff
President/Chief Global Strategist
Euro Pacific Capital, Inc.
20271 Acacia Street, #200 Newport Beach, CA
92660
Toll-free:
888-377-3722 / Direct:
203-972-9300 Fax: 949-863-7100
www.europac.net
pschiff@europac.net
For a more in depth analysis of
the tenuous position of the American economy, the housing and mortgage
markets, and 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 take action to
protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before it’s too
late. Protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before
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reliable, but its accuracy cannot be guaranteed. It is not intended to
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