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It never ceases to amaze how televised media reports on the U.S. economy are
almost exclusively about shopping. Such reports almost always feature images
of sales clerks frantically stocking shelves and long lines of consumers swiping
their credit cards. In contrast, reports about the economy of Japan or China
typically include footage of smoke stacks billowing, production lines moving,
robots assembling, and people actually making things. Doesn't it ever occur
to anyone producing these segments just how ridiculous this is?
Despite the implications that Americans and Asians are simply relying on different
types of fuel to fire their respective economic engines, production and consumption
are by no means interchangeable. Production is the means, consumption is the
end. A society can no more consume its way to prosperity than an individual
can. However, just as an individual can consume himself into bankruptcy, so
too can a nation.
Americans are not producing wealth, but merely consuming the wealth produced
by others. When Americans go shopping this Christmas season (primarily spending
borrowed money on imported goods), classic economic theory holds that the principal
benefit goes not to the U.S. but to those who supply the goods. In exchange
for their production, they receive interest and dividend paying assets (dollars,
bonds, stocks, etc), which should provide future wealth. Americans in return
accumulate depreciating consumer goods and piles of external liabilities that
must be serviced and repaid. So Americans squander the wealth of their parents
while their vendors amass it for their children.
However, the classic economic theory may not actually be in play as the liabilities
our "trading" partners are now accumulating will likely be repaid in currency
with severely diminished purchasing power. Trade normally involves the exchange
of real stuff for real stuff. As illustrated by our yawning trade deficits,
we now have a system where real stuff is simply exchanged for currency, which
in effect represent IOU's for future stuff. However, rather than being a source
for future spending, the currency must be horded indefinitely. As the Chinese
and Japanese clearly understand, any attempt to use their vast amount of dollar
reserves would cause their theoretical value to collapse. Therefore they continue
to accumulate more rather than to admit the extent of their prior folly.
There are many in economic circles who subscribe to the "it's our currency
but it's your problem" philosophy. They maintain that China and Japan are compelled
by mutually assured destruction to perpetuate the current system. However,
they are only half right. There will be destruction for sure, but it will hardly
be mutual. While the American economy will surely suffer, foreign economies,
perhaps with a few initial hiccups, will actually prosper. Americans will soon
learn that they can keep shopping only as long as foreigners continue to support
the dollar. When that stops, these sanguine economists are in for a rude awakening.
Think about it this way. Imagine an America where we could only consume those
goods we produced domestically, and where individuals, corporations and governments
could only borrow from domestic pools of savings. Then imagine the rest of
the world flooded with all those extra consumer goods and savings that were
formerly showered on Americans. Rather than it being "our currency their problem," it's
more like "their factories, their savings, their goods," and one huge problem
for us when we have to make do without them.
The sad reality is that it is foreign producers that will eventually have
the last laugh. Sure we will screw them by repudiating our debts through inflation,
but in the end they will enjoy all of the abundance of their productive capacity
and we will suffer the wide-spread shortages that result from our lack of it.
Their standards of living will soar just as ours plunge.
Don't cry over depreciating dollars. Laugh your way to prosperity instead.
Protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before it's too late.
Discover the best way to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com,
download my free research report on the powerful case for investing in foreign
equities available at www.researchreportone.com,
and subscribe to my free, on-line investment newsletter at http://www.europac.net/newsletter/newsletter.asp.
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Peter Schiff C.E.O. and Chief Global
Strategist
Euro Pacific Capital, Inc.
Mr.
Schiff is one of the few non-biased investment advisors (not committed solely
to the short side of the market) to have correctly called the current bear
market before it began and to have positioned his clients accordingly. As a
result of his accurate forecasts on the U.S. stock market, commodities, gold
and the dollar, he is becoming increasingly more renowned. He has been quoted
in many of the nations leading newspapers, including The Wall Street Journal,
Barron's, Investor's Business Daily, The Financial Times, The New York Times,
The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune, The Dallas
Morning News, The Miami Herald, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
The Arizona Republic, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and the Christian Science
Monitor, and has appeared on CNBC, CNNfn., and Bloomberg. In addition,
his views are frequently quoted locally in the Orange County Register.
Mr. Schiff began his investment career as a financial consultant
with Shearson Lehman Brothers, after having earned a degree in finance and
accounting from U.C. Berkley in 1987. A financial professional for seventeen
years he joined Euro Pacific in 1996 and has served as its President since
January 2000. An expert on money, economic theory, and international investing,
he is a highly recommended broker by many of the nation's financial newsletters
and advisory services.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Euro Pacific
Capital, Inc.
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