Then Germany couldn't pay and kept asking for better terms.
This was OK with the US but not with bankrupt England or France. So
they demanded full payments and Germany defaulted. This triggered the
Great Depression. Even though the US was now the world's largest
manufacturing power, our currency was mostly for home use so the
British had to keep the pound strong. Trying to do this made things
worse.
And so it is today: our empire won't retreat from its distant borders
but these same borders are bankrupting us for we never recovered from
the Vietnam War, we literally papered over the mess which remained and
continues to poison our nation. The military/industrial complex is not
making us rich, it is making us poorer. And the paper being laid over
all this is the same paper the Germans used in 1924 to paper over their
own bankruptcy: printed money.
When an empire does what we are doing today, society falls apart. And
if this happens, there is no easy way out. Individuals can avoid the
worst by avoiding debts but outside of that simple thing, there is no
other answer. Of course, the true answer is a strong working class that
believes in unity and not underselling each other. Alas, the USA has a
long and tragic history of slavery. And the legacy of this culture
divides the nation and half loves slavery and enables wretched working
conditions and thinks the road to wealth is via cheap labor.
Germany has an advantage here: their recent attempt at slavery, the
Nazi empire, was a total disaster and they don't want a repeat. I only
wish the USA felt the same way. For no nation gets very rich for very
long if the working class is poor and can't work their way into the
middle class.
Question: Would you explain what is meant by “reserve currency” and how
it serves the greater political interests of the United States? Do you
think that preserving “dollar hegemony” was an important part of the
decision to go to war with Iraq?
Elaine Meinel Supkis: It may sound trite but thinking about great
banking matters as if it is one's own bank account no matter how small,
works. Namely, it is dangerous for anyone to live life where everything
is juggled and there isn't a penny to spare. Then something bad happens
and boom. You go bankrupt. This is why savings accounts matter and why
inflation is so deadly. No one in their right mind keeps a savings
account because it can't grow, it shrinks!
The Federal Reserve was set up to maintain a reserve funds that
supposedly wouldn't be touched by politicians. But alas, this is a
fiction. Just like your own bank account, if one is married and sharing
an account and one party keeps raiding it and spending it on guns and
cars or fur coats or whatever, it runs out of funds and then something
bad happens like a hurricane hits, and the cupboard is bare.
In the case of empires, a way to gage solvency is, how big is their own
reserves compared to the size of these same currency reserves held by
potentially hostile rivals? In the case of the USA, we send dollars out
as fast as we can print them. If too many people getting this flood of
money, around $800 billion a year now!!!!!! If they don't keep a big
chunk in bank vaults, the value of the dollar drops. So they keep it in
reserve, in case of a 'rainy day'. Like 9/11.
And if we think of these funds as boats, then China has Noah's Ark,
Japan has an aircraft carrier, Europe has a holiday cruise liner,
Russia has a very fancy yacht and the USA has a rowboat made out of an
old bathtub. That is leaking.
China has $1.3 trillion in its reserves and is therefore, King of the
Mountain. Japan has $900 billion and is no longer holding new currency
so all the red ink in trade is no longer staying away, it is floating
back home to here, as inflation. Europe has about $600 billion and
Russia, $330 billion. The USA has only $66 billion and the numbers
released today by the Federal Reserve shows that number is DROPPING.
Yikes.
Question: President Bush has said that he intends to make his tax cuts
“permanent” even though they have produced enormous deficits. At the
same time the Federal Reserve has kept interest rates below the real
rate of inflation and increased the money supply to approximately 10%
per annum. Are these policies designed to maintain a healthy economy
with a potential for strong growth or are they the means for
transferring wealth from working people to the “very rich”?
Elaine Meinel Supkis: How do they 'transfer' wealth? Through unfair
taxes. Under Reagan, American workers, worried about the eventual baby
boomer retirement event horizon, decided to double taxes on Social
Security. This pile of money was instantly, less than a year later,
leaped upon and devoured by our corrupt government. They insantly gave
unfair tax cuts to the upper incomes and basically used SS excess funds
to pay for the government.
This worked OK until Bush took over. He and the GOP have run up debts
so high, they added half a trillion a year in red ink and over the last
six years, this is nearly $3 trillion and our national debt stands at
nearly $9 trillion. During the last major money crisis, the 1972
collapse of the Bretton Woods concord, we had a national debt of not
even $1 trillion. We have not had 900% inflation so I would say, this
debt that the GOP rang up consisted of taking taxes out of the hides of
the working class and handing it on a golden platter to the rich who,
incidentally, buy bonds.
But no more! Today, the chief buyer of bonds is the Treasury itself. Next is China!
Question: Will you explain how the inflationary policies of the Federal
Reserve are causing the stock market to soar and what the potential
dangers are for the global economic system?
Elaine Meinel Supkis: Oh, that is so simple! In 2003, interest rates
were dropped to 1% despite inflation of +5%. Instantly, the value of
all assets shot upwards as bankers moved money along as fast as
possible since the Fed undercut their own interest rates! So mortgages
were below the rate of inflation. But this didn't make enough money so
banks and other entities offered loans to bad risks who had to pay a
higher rate. As inflation rages, they need to give loans to worse and
worse customers who pay over 11% interest!
Alas, the fly in this ointment is exactly that: risky customers can't
pay back loans! They go bankrupt and everyone acts like a good little
domino and over they fall, one after another. Right now,the crashing
sound of dominoes falling is like the hissing of waves on a distant
shore but it is rapidly approaching. We can certainly hear it coming.
Question: Last week, reports showed that US manufacturing unexpectedly
rose in March. However, the Financial Times said that, “The rise in the
ISM index is impossible to square with either the regional surveys
released over the past few weeks or our medium-term yield-driven model.
We think it is quite likely that in their next iterations the ISM will
drop sharply.” Do you think the government is deliberately falsifying
data on manufacturing to make the economy look stronger than it really
is? Could they be doing this in areas as well, such as money supply,
inflation, employment, and GDP?
Elaine Meinel Supkis: Do alligators bite? Of course, they lie all the
time. Some things were sacred and they didn't lie about them. The M3
data that shows how much money the Fed prints as well as how much is in
circulation, etc, just last year, they announced, 'No one is really
interested in these numbers and they are too hard to compile.' Like a
drunken, gambling spouse declaring there is no need to balance the
check books or look into the bank accounts, so it is here. Many people
yelled about the M3 numbers being suppressed but to no avail, of course.
Onwards! Since they are lying about basic bank accounting, they have to
lie about everything else or people will figure out, something smells
rotten in Denmark, DC.
They redrew the rules for figuring out inflation so it no longer tracks
inflation. This is so they can cheat retirees and have fake interest
rates and thus, steal from granny and gramps and starve school children
while lining their own pockets.
Question: Do you believe that the extraordinary “police-state” measures
enacted by the Bush administration (Patriot Act, Military Commissions
Act, repeal of habeas corpus, NSA “surveillance” of American citizens
without court order) are intended to address the threat of terrorism or
the social disorder that may arise in response to an economic collapse?
E.M.S.: They planned this for a long, long time. Do note that the 'war
on drugs' was launched as we lost the Vietnam War. Thanks to inflation
and a collapsing currency as well as a sudden hike in oil prices due to
the US hitting the Hubbert Oil Peak here in 1972, there was great
unrest. I saw some of this right up close. Once, when the lights went
out in NYC during a thunderstorm of all things, riots and looting
spread like wildfire. My community was nearly burned to the ground and
all the businesses destroyed.
This, the rulers fear a lot. But no number of police can stop it if it
happens. I have seen up close when a whole city revolts. More than
once, including in Europe in 1968. The new, right wing French President
will learn this the hard way next year. There will be riots and
insurrections there.
Question: Can you explain – in simple “layman’s” terms – the effect of
Japan’s low interest “carry trade” on the U.S. stock market? Is this
practice inflating the value of securities in foreign markets? What are
the risks? How is it affecting the euro?
E.M.S.: Europe lends money for more than 5% interest. So does the USA
now although the financiers are getting worried about this and are
egging on the Fed to lower rates back down to 1%. This is pure
insanity. Japan has near zero inflation because they have decided to
utterly destroy the purchasing power of the people in Japan who are
living worse and worse off if they are below the top 20%. Many are now
homeless. It is pathetic.
The world's #2 economic power that holds the world's #2 FOREX reserves
can't give pay raises to anyone earning below $10 an hour because this
will 'cause inflation' and so they get to live on the street and
starve. Great. Anyone can eliminate inflation by enslaving the workers.
Then they get cut out of the profits entirely and can't buy things and
thus, can't cause inflation!
This is the plan being readied for us! We get to live in shanties while
the rich live in palaces. And we won't buy anything while they have a
zillion servants earning practically nothing. Sort of like England,
circa 1914.
Bush and his gangsters hosted the Queen of England who loves him
because he is making her very rich via Carlyle. And the royals of
England didn't care if they starved their subjects who lived like
savages under the rule of the royals. We are sliding backwards, not
moving forwards here.
Question: Consumer spending is 70% of US- GDP, and yet, workers wages
have not kept pace with the real rate of inflation. This has led to
increased borrowing on the part of the American consumer. Now that
housing prices have flattened out; consumers can no longer draw on
their home equity for their spending. This has resulted in a huge spike
in credit card spending. For example, “first-quarter profits at
MasterCard surged 70% to a record $214.9 million following a 19% jump
in transactions.” (Peter Schiff) As the weary American consumer is
forced to curtail his spending, GDP will shrink and foreign investment
will dry up. Are we likely to see “capital flight” from American
markets or are foreign investors still confident in America’s
resilience?
E.M.S.: In most places, housing prices are falling by 30%! All the
people who responded to ads about getting cheap loans are now
discovering they can't use their homes as ATM machines and simply
re-finance over and over again. The house is supposed to be an asset:
if you have to sell it to pay bills or move because of a job situation,
if the debt is greater than the selling price, you go bankrupt. And
this is happening all over the place now. And it will impact on buying.
Last year, Americans took out half a trillion in extra loans on the
house! The surge in MasterCard (gads, Snidely Whiplash!) charges is
because banks are no longer giving loans to people who are too deep in
debt. The money that flowed there is flowing into the stock market just
like it always does during the first half of an inflationary binge.
The second half is when the stocks collapse like they did in 1974. Then
we see a 5 year bear market. Housing markets ALWAYS take 5+ years to
recover from a bubble. But this last bubble launched by 1% Fed interest
rates will take 20 years to recovery in most places.
Question: You have stated in your blog that the Federal Reserve is
“buying back its own debt”. Would you explain how this works and
whether it is intended to confuse the public about the real value of
their currency?
(In your blog you say: “The US is the fulcrum for world trade. As the
yen goes down (the yuan is so low, even as it gains, it is very
minimal), the euro goes up. This is crushing the dollar because the US
is printing money like mad to keep commerce flowing at home since it is
bleeding red ink in trade and in government spending. Most of the bonds
issued by our own government are bought by our own government. The only
entity to buy much of that on the open market today is China. Japan is
selling its hoard of US bonds.)
E.M.S.: Yes, aside from forcing Social Security to buy government
bonds, the Treasury sells them to the Feds. This is Peter selling to
Paul who then gives it back to Peter only it shrinks in value during
this time. The Fed and Treasury can play this game to infinity. The
only country to nearly reach that upper limit was Germany in 1924. They
added more and more zeros to the money they printed every hour, day and
night until they ran out of room on the bills. Literally! Then they
simply cancelled the money! Bang. It was gone. Forever.
If no one stops us, we will do this just the same way.
Question: Wall Street reacts with wild enthusiasm every time two
mega-corporations merge. These mergers always seems to generate
boatloads of new credit from maximizing leverage and “creative
financing”.. You say in your blog that this is “also a sign of
impending collapse. For every pfennig of this is debt-loaded and is
seeking a stable currency and high interest rates.” What do you think
are the hidden dangers of these mergers?
E.M.S.: That happened in Germany, too. Everyone merged as money moved
faster and faster and inflated more and more. Bubbles inflate because
currency inflates. They are one and the same. And mergers are caused by
money bubbles.
Question: What do you think the real rate of inflation is?
E.M.S.: Inflation is around 10% now. How do we know? The Federal
Reserve just demanded banks hold 10% of their currency rather than rush
it out the door. This reserve ratio is always a good indicator of
inflation. In China, it was raised to 11% last week. Japan sets theirs
at 0%, of course. They are insane.
Question: Is there a chance that the dollar could collapse?
E.M.S.: I hate to say this but I have a whole book of dead currencies
my family has collected this last 180 years. From 1848 to today, in the
USA, Germany, China, Japan, etc. Many 'pay the holder in gold' bonds.
All worth something as historic documents but all ended up being
worthless. Hope springs ever eternal and bad money is like winter: it
always is around the corner.
Question: In 1966, Alan Greenspan wrote an article called “Gold and
Economic Freedom” in which he described the events leading up to the
stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression. In his essay he
says:
“When business in the United States underwent a mild contraction in
1927, the Federal Reserve created more paper reserves in the hope of
forestalling any possible bank reserve shortage. More disastrous,
however, was the Federal Reserve's attempt to assist Great Britain who
had been losing gold to us because the Bank of England refused to allow
interest rates to rise when market forces dictated (it was politically
unpalatable). The reasoning of the authorities involved was as follows:
if the Federal Reserve pumped excessive paper reserves into American
banks, interest rates in the United States would fall to a level
comparable with those in Great Britain; this would act to stop
Britain's gold loss and avoid the political embarrassment of having to
raise interest rates.
The "Fed" succeeded; it stopped the gold loss, but it nearly destroyed
the economies of the world, in the process. The excess credit which the
Fed pumped into the economy spilled over into the stock
market-triggering a fantastic speculative boom. Belatedly, Federal
Reserve officials attempted to sop up the excess reserves and finally
succeeded in braking the boom. But it was too late: by 1929 the
speculative imbalances had become so overwhelming that the attempt
precipitated a sharp retrenching and a consequent demoralizing of
business confidence. As a result, the American economy collapsed. Great
Britain fared even worse, and rather than absorb the full consequences
of her previous folly, she abandoned the gold standard completely in
1931, tearing asunder what remained of the fabric of confidence and
inducing a world-wide series of bank failures. The world economies
plunged into the Great Depression of the 1930's.”
Hasn’t the Federal Reserve created similar “speculative imbalances”
today through its increases in the money supply, its low interest
rates, and the massive liquidity it pumped into the housing bubble?
And, haven’t the deregulatory policies of the Fed exacerbated our
current account deficit – forcing US exports to compete with countries
that artificially lower the prices of their manufactured goods by
manipulating their currencies?
If the economic policies of the Federal Reserve and the Bush
administration are deliberate, than how can we say that the destruction
of the dollar and the subsequent crushing of the American middle class
are accidental?
Greenspan’s essay proves that he fully understood the implications of
“excess credit” and “excessive paper reserves” and yet he persisted
with the same destructive policies for 6 years. So – Is the housing
bubble merely the “unintended consequence” of the Fed's policies or is
it the clearly calculated goal?
E.M.S.: Hahaha. The preacher telling us how to avoid the evils of drug
abuse and hanging out with prostitutes comes to mind, doesn't it? The
very moralists warning us about our sins are usually the worst sinners.
I'll never forget Congress praising Greenspan and telling him they
should stuff him and use him as a scarecrow for this would mean no one
would ever question him about finances! Well, I say, hang him high. He
is a criminal. He destroyed our economic might. Treason, it is! And all
those people who betrayed us in order to make a mighty empire on our
backs and bank accounts should be held accountable! There is no excuse
for this mess! It was fixable. But alas, too many people are making too
much money off of it the way it is now and they won't stop no matter
what. Just like their latest imperial wars: endless.
I wish I could say something happy here but history is a bitch who laughs at us all. We should listen to her.
Elaine Meinel Supkis (Bio) – Born at Yerkes Observatory, grew up on
many observatory mountains and secret government testing grounds, burr
under the saddle of the Real Rulers of America since childhood, family
black sheep with three bags of wool, pulled down more than one
politician in life, winner of the "Struck by Lightning Indoors" award
for most hits in lifetime, three direct and seven glancing blows. Now
living on a mountain with horses and cats and dogs and chickens and a
husband. Yikes.
http://elainemeinelsupkis.typepad.com/daily_news/