Mapping the ‘Recovery’… err… Money Printing
This is a nice little animation about the current fiscal crisis and how central banks around the world are printing money and how governments everywhere are trying to solve a debt problem with more debt:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrFX28Xq9Jw&feature=player_embedded
Enjoy!
The Money Printers
This weekend, I started Currency Wars: The Making of the Next Global Crisis by James Rickards. Rickards is an investment banker and is tied into the U.S. financial and defense circles so he is well positioned to understand the international monetary and financial system. It is a good read (so far) but one section really opened my eyes to not only the interconnectedness of it all but how the world financial system is a self-perpetuating mise-en-abyme of debt creation.
This is the scenario:
As part of its strategy to spur growth and especially employment (made altogether more urgent after the Tiananmen uprising in 1989), China embarked on a program whereby its abundant labour could be made available to the world. As part of this, it pegged its currency to the U.S. dollar. As of 1997, the yuan was pegged at 8.28 to the dollar and China’s GDP growth more than doubled in the 1990s.
Meanwhile, in the U.S. financial deregluation and ultra low interests rates fuelled bubblenomics. The tech bubble bursting and, later, 911 and the ensuing war on terror… coupled with Chinese growth… kept the U.S. Federal Reserve scared enough to keep rates at these low rates. As Rickards adds, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan “Greenspan’s low rates… were also a kind of intravenous drug to Wall Street.” (104) ‘Helicopter Ben’ Bernake arrived at the Fed (first as a governor but then as Greenspan’s replacement), underlining the deflation-fighting low interest rates with a plan for the printing of money to monetize government deficits. The stage was set for the housing bubble and the grand printing of money involving the U.S. Treasury, the Federal Reserve System, Wall Street and Congress. Oh yeah, and let’s not forget China and the many Western corporations taking advantage of extremely poorly paid Chinese workers (as well as the non-existent labour and environmental laws), because here is where it all gets so very interesting:
When a Chinese exporter ships goods abroad and earns dollars or euros, it must hand over those currencies to the People’s Bank of China in exchange for yuan at a rate fixed by the bank. When an exporter needs some dollars or euros to buy foreign materilas or other imports, it can get them, but the PBOC makes only enough dollars or euros available to pay for the imports and no more; the rest is kept by the bank.
The process of absorbing all the surplus dollars… produced a number of unintended consequences. The first problem was that the PBOC did not just take the surplus dollars, but rather purchased them with newly printed yuan. This meant that as the Fed printed dollars and those dollars ended up in China to purchase goods, the PBOC had to print yuan to soak up the suplus. In effect, China had outsourced its monetary policy to the Fed, and as the Fed printed more, the PBOC also printed more in order to maintain the pegged exchange rate.
The second problem was what to do with the newly acquired dollar. The PBOC needed to invest its reserves somewhere… preferring highly liquid government securities issued by the United States Treasury. (106)
And this doesn’t even get at the internal debt financing happening inside China as part of its economic expansion and domestic building spree, nor does really include the Euro Zone. Truly, the global financial system is out of control.
Where Greece’s Money Actually Goes
This is just an update to a previous post indicating where Greece’s debt comes from… at least in part. And, again, it is not (or not only) lazy Greek tax-evaders that contributes to the country’s debt but the ‘need’ for Greek tax-payers to support Greek and Western banks (through loans/debt) so that they can support French, German, and U.S. arms manufacturers. I mean, how else is Germany, France or the U.S. going to maintain the illusion that they have robust economies? Sadly, Western nations could not survive without the Ponzischem-o-nomics of governments, the financial sector, and arms manufacturing.
See Zero Hedge’s article and the German original at Zeit Online.
peace.
The U.S. Debt Limit; Just More of the Same
Building upon the last post, here is interesting news about the U.S. debt limit:
Obama to Seek $1.2 Trillion Increase in U.S. Debt Limit Dec. 30
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-27/obama-to-seek-1-2-trillion-increase-in-u-s-debt-limit-dec-30.html
My favourite line in the article is this:
“Obama may have little difficulty financing a fourth consecutive year of $1 trillion budget deficits after the U.S. government received record demand for its bonds in 2011, pushing longer-maturity Treasuries to their best performance since 1995.”
It’s just so matter-of-fact. The way that governments in the early 21st century pay for its services is simply by selling high-performing debt (translation: by selling the future wealth of its citizens).
I can’t wait to see what happens in three days time.
Peace
.
