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A long and deep recession, possibly a depression is being forecast across
a broad front. But the real picture is different. Governments and central banks
are not only committed to doing all in their power to resurrect growth and
give their different economies 'traction' but have begun the vigorous implementation
of reflation. They will do "whatever it takes" to get growth and confidence
re-established globally. In essence, the crisis appeared quickly and devastatingly
out of greedy lending by banks loaning to uncreditworthy individuals on a broad
front. It has to be rectified just as quickly because banks control the lifeblood
of liquidity in the economy and they will place their financial health well
before that of the broad economy and their customers. They have been saved
by central banks to date, but it is resumption of growth and confidence,
not healthy banks, that must be achieved first. In the major economic blocs
of the world actions are underway, to differing degrees, to force the banks
to lend or be bypassed, so that the damage they can inflict on growth, through
congealed debt and their instruments, is neutralized. The banks have made it
opaquely clear, that they will not lend in such a way as to rectify the underlying
crises of a dropping housing market and its 'ripple' effects on consumer spending.
Governments do see banks as an obstacle to the resuscitation of growth and
confidence, so their powerful influence over the state of the economy has to
be reduced considerably before this can be done. And it has to be done before
any semblance of recovery can be achieved again. The longer the process takes
the more difficult and lengthy the solution will be.
Just take a look at the world's three main economic bloc's efforts at stimulating
growth again:-
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China said
it would spend an estimated $586 billion over the next two years, roughly
7% of its gross domestic product each year, to construct new railways,
subways and airports and to rebuild communities devastated by the May 2008
earthquake in the southwest. Their reasoning is as follows, "Over the past
two months, the global financial crisis has been intensifying daily," the
State Council said. "In expanding investment, we must be fast and heavy-handed." But
in China, much of the capital for infrastructure improvements comes not
from central and local governments, but from state banks and state-owned
companies that are told to expand more rapidly. China maintains far more
control over investment trends than the U.S. does, so they can unleash
investments to counter a sharp downturn. The Chinese government said the
stimulus would cover 10 areas, including low-income housing, electricity,
water, rural infrastructure and projects aimed at environmental protection
and technological innovation, all of which could incite consumer spending
and bolster the economy. The State Council said the new spending would
begin immediately, with $18 billion scheduled for the last quarter of this
year. In addition, China has already announced a drastic increase of the
minimum purchasing price for wheat from next year, by as much as 15.3%.
There is also going to be a substantial increase of the purchasing prices
for rice, said the National Development and Reform Commission. In the meantime,
they also announced plans to stabilize prices for fertilizers and other
agricultural means of production, to ensure that the grain price increase
will not be eaten away by input making the price increases real income
gains for farmers. This will shore up domestic demand and head off any
social unrest in the rapidly growing economy. The government there sees
its task to harness all sides of the economy to produce growth while they
pull their 1.4 billion people out of poverty. Their recent history confirms
their ability to succeed!
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In Europe, with a more Socialist environment than the U.S.A., [meaning
greater central government control over the economy], we believe that after
bailing out so many European banks, a very heavy pressure will be put on
banks to vigorously lend down to street level again. President Sarkozy's
threat to seize banks that don't lend gives meat to this forecast. In Britain,
nationalization lies ahead of suffering banks and the end of senior executive
careers, if they don't lend freely. Despite the lack of the same effective
management [ignoring politics and commerce and other capitalist principles]
of the economy in Europe as in China, governments will act in the same
way as the Chinese are, eventually, to make growth and confidence happen
again. They are committed to this, at last. So 2009 will be the year
of reflation in the face of deflation.
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In the U.S.A., such synthesis of national institutions in fighting
deflation is unlikely as the cooperation of banking, commerce, etc to focus
on the underlying economic crisis would barge into so many valued principles
fought for, over time. However, we have no doubt that the intransigence
of such principles in the face of a decaying economy will produce overwhelming
pressures on the system to revitalize the consumer and restore his spending.
The government has now seen the banks follow the "profit and prudence" principles
after their bailouts and their holding back on lending to safeguard themselves,
first. Secretary Paulson has now faced off with them and redirected efforts
to make government provided financial relief go direct to the consumer.
But he is only at the beginning of this process, which must be across the
entire spectrum of consumers, not simply a portion of clients of the largest
mortgage providers, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Indeed, the slow nature
of this solution as it wends its way through political and financial obstacles,
could produce a near revolutionary climate, until sufficient action is
taken to re-finance the economy from consumer upwards. After all, day-by-day,
solid U.S. citizens are being impoverished by the financial sector problems,
not their own. As slow as the pace of support becomes, the more degenerative
impact it will have on uncertainty and confidence. We have no doubt that
2009 will be remembered as the year of reflation in the face of deflation.
Already, house-owning households are likely to receive direct financial
aid, if their mortgages are more than 38% of income. If this is applied
to all U.S. households in this position we fully expect to see hope lead
to confidence, then spending, then growth. These and the suggested support
of the consumer on car finance and credit cards will re-kindle spending
and the economy. Such moves must convince the U.S. consumer and stop him
thinking like a victim. [In the Depression of the early thirties the U.S.
used, as part of its battery of tactics, paying people to dig holes and
fill them in again, just to get money flowing from ground level up]. This
can be implemented in the next few months and impact on the broad economy
by the end of the first half of 2009, if applied properly, as government
implies it wants to. If it is, then the first 100 days of President Obama
will indeed be a honeymoon.
The importance of growth
Mr.
Ben Bernanke and the governments of the U.S., the Eurozone and China have recognized
in no uncertain way that confidence must be regained before growth gains traction
and becomes self-sustaining. It appears that they have got the message now
and will do whatever it takes to ensure the credit crisis is replaced
by confidence in credit. That the banks should suffer for their indiscreet
past behavior is just, for a lender should carry the same risk as a borrower.
Inflation and gold and silver prices.
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Reflation is vigorously being implemented across the globe, but inevitably
it will come with inflation. It is impossible to say just how much money
needs to be printed to counter deflation, but for sure it will be more
than needed and will keep flowing until the financial sun is shining again.
2009 will probably not see inflation rise to dangerous levels, because
of its absorption by deflation. But as the money fills deflationary holes,
it will spread far and wide and eat into the value of debt, so bringing
relief to troubled debtors in addition to direct governmental support.
This will be found to be politically acceptable and will delay, if not
remove, the pernicious impact of bad debt that we are seeing now. Growth
and confidence are considerably more important problems than inflation.
Banks have been given debt relief already and so will the consumer, because
that is the only solution to the credit crunch. It will be accompanied
by the cheapening of money, leading to far higher gold and silver prices
than we are even contemplating now. As this is slowly realized by an ever-widening
audience across the globe, gold will re-enter the mainstream of investments
as an anchor to monetary values if only at individual levels. Thereafter
institutions and perhaps central banks, will appreciate it fully?
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Governments have to act very fast to stop the confidence-eating impact
of deflation from becoming a way of life, just as borrowing was, over the
last thirty years. Consequently expect global stimulation to be put in
place before the end of the first quarter of 2009. In that time we fully
expect forced selling of all assets to slow to a trickle. Thereafter a
positive tone will benefit gold and silver in the long-term, as well as
short-term.
Let's be clear though, there is no historic precedent to what we are about
to see.
We expect gold to thrive in an atmosphere of hope, against a threatening
backdrop, with the gold price realistically discounting the diminishing buying
power of paper currencies.
Gold Forecaster regularly covers all fundamental and Technical aspects
of the gold price in the weekly newsletter. To subscribe, please visit www.GoldForecaster.com.
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Julian D. W. Phillips
Gold-Authentic Money
"Global
Watch: The Gold Forecaster" covers the global gold market. It specializes
in Central Bank Sales and details, the Indian Bullion market [supported by
a leading Indian Bullion professional], the South African markets [+ Gold
shares shares] plus the currencies of gold producers [ Euro, U.S. $, Yen,
C$, A$, and the South African Rand]. Its aim is to synthesise all the influential
gold price factors across the globe, so as to truly understand the global
reasons behind the gold price. FIND
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