|
|
When it comes to our personal finances, we understand how and
why a poor credit rating and history influence the way we’re treated in
the market place. Max out your credit card and businesses and banks will
turn you away. But when a government runs up the sort of tab that
plunges a country’s currency into a crisis, economists take to talking
in tongues.
“It’s driven by the fact that U.S. data is continuing to
deteriorate,” one expert prattled, according to
WND. Others habitually frame effects as causes: The housing bubble
is to blame. Financial reporter Diane Francis of the neoconservative
National Post has concocted a currency conspiracy. "There is a Currency
Cold War being waged by Russia, Iran and various allies such as
Venezuela,” she fulminated.
Back on terra firma dollars are being dumped.
Consumers generally dump stuff they don’t want. The global currency
market isn’t exempt from the immutable laws of supply and demand.
Another immutable economic truism is that, if profitable, people will do
business with those they dislike. Markets, money markets too, reflect a
bias toward profit. If the dollar were good for it, it would still be
king of all currencies, irrespective of how the world feels about the
US.
For the first time since 1976, the Canadian dollar is worth
more than the US dollar. The Australian dollar is predicted to soon reach
parity with ours. And the euro is at an impressive $1.4283. According to
His Holiness Alan Greenspan, a third of all foreign exchange reserves
are now held in euros.
Foreigners—governments and individuals—simply don’t have
faith in the American currency. Back-to-front thinking ignores that the
dollar’s depreciation preceded its dumping.
The devaluation of the
dollar is Dubya’s doing. The slide began in early 2002, confirms the
Cato Institute’s James A. Dorn, commensurate with the debt Bush began to
amass, when 9/11 fell into his lap. The national debt—the total amount
of money owed by the government—is now well over $9 trillion. It
increases on average by $1.50 billion per day, by the
Debt
Clock’s math. Every American (bar politicians, illegal immigrants,
and other tax consumers) is on the hook to the tune of
$29,893.82.
When they’re not borrowing to feed their appetite for our
assets, Bush and his brigands press the Federal Reserve and the printing
press into service. Day and night they flood the market with paper money
unbacked by gold or real assets. (You gotta “fund” those unwinnable
wars, the laptop bombardiers scold.) This increase in the money supply
is inflation.
Republican Party partisans swell the chorus—and state the
obvious—by warning us that Democrats will raise taxes. As horrible as a
tax hike would be, it is nothing compared to what Dubya’s dilution of
the dollar has done to American assets.
Inflation is a hidden tax. We’re being taxed
surreptitiously in lieu of the debt. More fiat paper money in the system
means that every unit depreciates. “Any substantial increase in the
quantity of money,” explained Henry Hazlitt, in Economics in One
Lesson, “will reduce the purchasing power of each individual
monetary unit—in other words, that will lead to an increase in commodity
prices.”
Depreciation of the dollar spells higher prices and hardship
for those of us who are removed from power and from the new money.
Unlike present-day Republican Party boosters, Ronald Reagan
understood this: “The truth is that inflation is caused by government,”
he observed. “It's caused by government spending more than it takes in,
and it will go away just as soon as government stops doing that.”
The fate of the dollar is in the grubby paws of the
parasitic class, not Russia, Iran, Venezuela, or even China. The
much-maligned Chinese act as our creditors by funding our debt. But
rather than indict the real currency counterfeiters—and compel them to stop
stealing America’s future—Americans make China a repository of their
anger. Consequently, a Demopublican contingent of protectionists (and
vote procurers) demanded not long ago that Bush muscle China to change
its monetary policy.
Again, that’ll hurt ordinary Americans, not politicians or
parties to the Military-Media-Industrial-Congressional-Complex.
(Economist Robert Higgs has pegged all “defense-related” spending alone
at “approximately $1 trillion per year.”) China’s artificial devaluation
of the yuan benefits the American consumer, who, consequently, enjoys
cheap goods. Uncompetitive American
rent-seekers (and a few rabid pet owners) are the only ones
complaining about cheap Chinese goods.
Given the debasing of the greenback, hastened by Ben
Bernanke’s lowering of the interest rates, dollar-denominated assets are
no longer as attractive to our foreign creditors. Their yields are
declining as well. Hording dollars could very well contribute to
inflation in China, forcing it to act out of national self-interest and
discard dollars.
The upside? China will get both barrels for what Dubya
has done
to the dollar.
©2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
October 5
|
|