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April 17, 2009 Gold - Confidence and Inflation |
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"You can fool all of the people some of the time and some of the people all of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time, but you can give it a good go and discredit the rest who won't be fooled!" If it doesn't go like that maybe it should? The issue of Money. Isn't that what the issue of $1 trillion on top of the $12 trillion already issued as guarantees, 'quantitative easing' and the like [equivalent to the entire production of the U.S. in one year] really is? Just think of it, where is the money coming from? What collateral is being given, what repayment terms. It is simply another tranche of the huge mountain of I.O.U.'s already given, but this time to lift the lesser developed nations out of a potential Depression. Confidence restored? Will the present issues of mountains of money restore confidence? Only to some extent and that with such caution, that a retreat into fear can be sparked in just a day to a week. After all, confidence in the banking system has been badly mauled in the last 18 months and presently still stands on the edge of a precipice. Can fear produce confidence? We don't advocate this path at all, but there has to be a policy of saving what can be saved and letting go of that which cannot be saved and savers will be the victims as their wealth is erased. [That is unless they switch to precious metal now and shield themselves from inflation? We do expect to see this happen, but sad to say, most investors just don't know gold and silver] Until the powers that be accept that the system is structurally faulty and rectify this, the path ahead will not be just. Such a course will produce convincing benefits. The consumer would see the burden of debt drop as inflation pushed his income up and that sufficient for him to repay debt quicker. Institutional debt would face the same outcome enabling the system to produce a larger after-tax, cash flow and lowering of debt ratios. Yes, it would be tough on those who live on past savings, unless they hold these in the unprintable precious metals. Unfortunately the dangers are so vivid that this may well be taken as collateral damage, as was the case in the past. In the sixties through the eighties debt re-scheduling was used in the same way to the point where such bad debt was written off and ceased to be a threat to the banks. A similar path can be followed speeded up by inflation. Toxic assets will have to be "contained" until that process is well underway, emasculating such toxicity. As inflation scythes it way through debt [and the mountains of debt we now see with the lenders of last resort have never been seen before] so confidence [likely misplaced] will be restored as the threats hanging over the consumer diminish. So the printing of money serves a dual role.
The consumer driven growth has been found to be wanting. It engendered a "Live now, Pay later" attitude, which has now become "lived once, now paying". And in the current environment the consumer doesn't harbor dreams of wealth beyond his means, he is in survival mode. How can one get the system right without the traumas that usually attend system reformation? Only if the short-term answers have produced an environment that takes away the traumas at the lowest common denominator of consumer, the blue collar worker level. In the Depression he was revived through infrastructural spending where he would simply be paid to work, even if that work produced few goods. In China the government has instituted massive infrastructural projects to keep workers busy and paid. This process must be on-going until confidence is restored, but across the entire world! Effective Reformation? But there is little will to change the current system into anything that produces that sort of result. The focus is now on to get our consumer driven system with its financial empires, restored to what it was. This implies it will remain vulnerable to what it has already experienced. Change investing? We cannot emphasize enough the dangers of the inflation that lies ahead! Gold and Silver have yet to have their day! Gold Forecaster regularly covers all fundamental and Technical aspects of the gold price in the weekly newsletter. To subscribe, please visit www.GoldForecaster.com. Our Special Subscription offer is about to lapse, so SUBSCRIBE Now!
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Julian D. W. Phillips
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