The word "millionaire" first
made its American print debut in an obituary for Pierre Lorillard II in 1843
when he died leaving behind a fortune of over $1,000,000. He wasn't of course
the wealthiest man of his time but then again a million dollars was a stratospheric
figure for the average man. Since then, inflation has bestowed the title of
millionaire on countless more individuals. In recent years most of them lived
in Zimbabwe.
But
what makes a millionaire?
In
1843 the average price of gold was $18.93 in US dollar terms. A person having
a million dollars could therefore buy 52,826 oz of gold. Even in 1929, a
million dollars could still buy 48,473 oz.
On
Friday, the price of gold closed at $1,359.80. With a million dollars you
could therefore buy only 735 oz or 1.5% of what you could buy in 1929. In
other words the dollar has lost 98.5% of its value since 1929 in comparison
to gold. I think this is why US currency has the words, "In God we
Trust" printed on it because to trust in the printed dollar would be
lunacy.
An
alternative exercise would be to calculate who the real millionaires are in
2010. Taking the 1929 amount of 48,473 oz as the mark of a true millionaire,
we find that only someone with at least $65,913,585 can be considered for the
title.
Do
you want to try your luck with silver? Well in 1929 the average price of
silver was 48.8c. Therefore a million dollars would buy you 2,049,180oz. The
closing price of silver on Friday was $24.75 which would require you to have
$50,717,205 to be considered the equivalent of a 1929 silver millionaire. The
dollar has lost therefore about 98% of its value since 1929 in silver terms.
Interestingly
enough, James Turk announced the other day that silver would go to $30 within
just a few weeks. This would push up the amount to $61,475,400 for anybody
wishing to be considered a true silver millionaire in 1929 terms. This would
somewhat align the movements in silver and gold prices.
The
reality is that the world of fiat currencies, combined with Fed induced
inflation, has created countless millionaires who in reality are deluded both
about their wealth and the system.
Pulitzer
Prize-winning tax reporter David Cay Johnston recently reported that the
number of Americans earning over $50 million a year fell to 74 in 2009.
Interestingly enough these 74 individuals earned an average of $519 million
per annum.
The
frightening statistic is that these 74 people made as much as the 19 million
lowest-paid people in America, who constitute one in every eight workers. To
put that in simple terms, each of these millionaires made 256,756 times more
than one of these workers.
Please
note that I am not espousing the politics of envy or redistribution. In fact
inequality is central to economic dynamism and development for all participants.
If the system somehow was able to achieve equality it would also destroy
itself as there would be no incentive to produce, save or innovate. Communist
regimes are a stark reminder of this.
What
we must realise however is that excesses well beyond the mean have been
allowed to develop that have rendered the present system impotent and fragile
in the face of disaster. Money printing and lending en masse is nothing more
than "monetary Viagra" that does not increase the virility or
potency of the system.
As Brian Bloom wrote back in November 2009:
"Yes,
the equity markets can continue to rise from here. But the manufacturers of
Viagra caution against the use of their product by heart patients. The US
economy has a weak heart. Too much monetary Viagra can cause it to drop down
dead from heart failure."
Currency
wars, quantitative easing, stimulus checks, zero interest rates, lopsided
free trade, etc are poor quality policies/strategies that are destined to not
only fail but also to increase the size of the final explosion/implosion.
The
year opened with an investor needing 9.29 oz of gold to buy the Dow. On
Friday an investor needed only 8.17oz. Despite this, the doubt about gold
still continues in spite of the run up over the last 11 years and its 5000
year pedigree.
The
U.S. public pension schemes, its stock market, its banks, its residential and
commercial property are all D Grade. By the way even the nation's
professional engineers have given US infrastructure a D Grade. The education
system must also be D Grade given that total student loans account for more
than the total amount of credit card debt. Education is supposed to set you
free. In the USA it enslaves you. In the western world a man's home is
considered his castle. Now it is considered his dungeon. The USA's factories
have been sold overseas and its workers sold out. Now everything is for sale
or lease, whether it be a highway or a parking meter.
The
motto "Yes We Can" is not an Obama slogan. It has been the slogan
of successive US governments who have pursued policies that could not be
accommodated or sustained within a longer term economic context. "Yes We
Can" is simply a shortened version of "Yes we can make our children
pay for it all." But will they? I somehow doubt it. The honeymoon for
the US economy, its dollar and its taxpayer is over.
Professor
Kotlikoff estimates that the US government has a $202 trillion fiscal gap.
That my dear readers is not a gap....it's a black hole from which no one can
emerge. To that fiscal gap one might want to add the tremendous fiscal gap in
personal finances both on the balance sheet and the income statement.
What
is certain is that expectations of future government payments and services
will not materialize in full given the unfunded nature of the system to date
and for the foreseeable future. Is it any wonder that people seek wealth
preservation in gold and silver?
The
critics of gold always like to remind us that all of the gold ever mined is
still in existence except for what may have been lost in ship wrecks. Well
that's true, but what is also indisputably true is that all of the paper
money ever produced has or will bite the dust. The critics tell us that gold
pays no interest yet this is what makes gold so attractive. A bank deposit
makes interest which is subject to taxes and inflation year after year. Gold
and silver retain "value" which is subject only to tax at a time of
your choosing if you decide to sell.
Some
call gold a "fear metal" and that to an extent is true. I say it's
a sure bet against guaranteed government insanity. Gold and silver will in
the long run turn paper millionaires into paper billionaires. They will not
however compound in real value (save over short periods of time of upheaval
as in the last 10 years) for the simple reason that no asset class can in
relative terms outstrip all other asset classes ad infinitum. If it were
possible then we would have the ridiculous situation of one oz of gold being
passed along for the last 2000 years now being worth a house or a farm or
much more.
Gold
will however continue to increase in relative value for quite some time as
society flushes out excesses in the system. Remember, gold and silver is not
only about what you might gain but more so about what you might avoid losing.
In the current climate much has been lost and much more is to be lost. Gold
and silver are the great fulcrums that silently watch a see-sawing society go
from one extreme to another.
The
economic, political and social pots of this world are simmering ominously. To
the people who wish to avoid the cannibals' pots in banking and government, I
say "buy a little gold and silver and be patient."
Yes,
dear readers, there are many definitions of "millionaire" but
remember that the only true millionaire is the person who is content with
what he has.
Peter Souleles
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