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For international investment expert Doug
Casey, there's more than a recession on the horizon... he recommends
battening down now for the rough seas ahead... with some special information
about making sure your investments can weather the coming storms.
I believe in the existence of the business cycle. That's partly because almost
everything in life is cyclical, which has been recognized at least since the
tale about Joseph and the seven fat years and seven lean years. The Austrian
school of economic thinking explains why the business cycle keeps coming around
and does so without relying on a soothsayer to interpret your dreams. I urge
you to read the appropriate chapters in either Crisis Investing for the
Rest of the 90's or Strategic Investing for a full explanation.
But, in a nutshell, government intervention in the economy - through taxes,
regulation and, most importantly, currency inflation - causes distortions and
misallocations of capital that must eventually be unwound. The distortions
degrade the general standard of living, and the economy goes into a recession
(call that an incomplete cleansing). Or it goes into a depression - wherein
the entire sickly structure comes unglued.
The last real depression took place in the 1930s. The economy very nearly
went over the edge again in the early '70s and again in the early '80s. Both
times massive re-inflation of the currency papered the problems over (but at
a cost). Meanwhile, most importantly, continuing technological innovation and
increased savings (motivated by the fear of bad times) led to recovery. Since
then we've had 25 years of what Herman Kahn predicted would be "The Long Boom."
Unfortunately, much, much more severe taxes, regulations, and inflation have
caused much, much more severe distortions in the economy - especially over
the last 15 years. And the boom was financed largely by debt, which made everybody
feel and act much wealthier than they really were. It's as though you borrowed
a million dollars and spent it all on wine, song and high living. For a while,
you'd have a high standard of living and perhaps have a lot of fun. But eventually,
when you either paid the money back with interest or were forced into bankruptcy,
your standard of living would take a painful drop. The U.S., in particular,
has been living far above its means, burning up its own capital and trillions
more borrowed from abroad.
This isn't news to readers of International Speculator or even the
intelligent layman who follows the news. Oddly enough, there's one glaringly
obvious thing that is not in the news today at all. That's the fact that interest
rates - nominal rates too, but especially "real," after-inflation rates - are
close to their lowest levels in history. And in today's extraordinarily risky
environment, they're artificially low. This, and the reasons for it, should
be headlines.
All over the world, but especially in the U.S., currencies are being inflated
radically; M3 is rising at about 18% per year. Without exception, interest
rates eventually reflect inflation. Therefore interest rates are going to rise
radically. Governments are currently suppressing rates by lending money cheaply
and promiscuously, to keep both borrowers and commercial lenders from going
under. But rates are soon going to explode -especially long-term rates. My
guess is that we'll see at least the levels of the early '80s, which would
mean 15%+ for long-term Treasury bonds. And I'll say that's coming within a
couple or three years at the outside.
The government wants low rates, obviously, because low rates make it a lot
easier for homeowners to pay their mortgages, among other things. But they
forget that low rates also discourage saving - which is the one thing that
can actually bring down real rates. Officialdom is between a rock and a hard
place, and they're choosing to inflate the currency, hoping to stave off an
epidemic of bankruptcy among consumers who borrowed and among the financial
institutions that did the lending. The effort will fail and both groups will
go bankrupt, simply because the whole society has been living above its means.
That will result in large-scale commercial bankruptcies and unemployment.
Higher interest rates will absolutely hammer the economy.
It seems to me a near certainty that we're about to enter something I have
long called "The Greater Depression." I suspect it will be inflationary (in
the direction of what Germany underwent in the early '20s, or Zimbabwe today),
rather than what the U.S. had in the '30s. I should somehow trademark the term "Greater
Depression," except that I'm sure Boobus americanus would then blame
me for it.
Here I'd like to pinpoint my prime candidate for the Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire, since it almost seems America has been reading pages from their
playbook since day one. Many reasons have been evoked for the fall: moral turpitude,
immigration, barbarian invasion, Christianity, lead pipes, etc., etc. My candidate
is economic stagnation brought on by taxes, regulation and inflation. I'd love
to discuss that assertion in detail, but that's not what this article is about.
What should you do?
Reduce your standard of living now (while the situation is still under control),
greatly increase your savings (in gold, which is real money) and rig for greatly
changed patterns of production, consumption, employment and business for a
considerable time. The hurricane that's just starting to hit the economy will
both trigger and worsen problems in other areas. Starting with politics, because
nearly everyone today believes the ridiculous notion that the government should
guide the economy.
Doug Casey is a best-selling author and chairman of Casey Research,
LLC., publishers of a variety of subscription-based advisories for independent-minded
investors. The above article is an extract from the International Speculator,
now in its 28th year.
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Doug Casey,
Casey
Research, LLC.
Information
contained herein is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its
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