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How The Destruction Of The Dollar Threatens The Global Economy

Business

The following book excerpt is adapted from Chapter One of Money: How The Destruction of the Dollar Threatens The Global Economy – and What We Can Do About It, by Steve Forbes and Elizabeth Ames

The failure to understand money is shared by all nations and transcends politics and parties. The destructive monetary expansion undertaken during the Democratic administration of Barack Obama by then Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke began in a Republican administration under Bernanke’s predecessor, Alan Greenspan. Republican Richard Nixon’s historic ending of the gold standard was a response to forces set in motion by the weak dollar policy of Democrat Lyndon Johnson.

For more than 40 years, one policy mistake has followed the next.  Each one has made things worse. The most glaring recent example is the early 2000s, when the Fed’s loose money policies led to the momentous worldwide panic and global recession that began in 2008. The remedy for that disaster? Quantitative easing—the large monetary expansion in history.

One of the reasons that QE has been such a failure was a distortionary bond-buying strategy that was part of QE known as “Operation Twist.” The Fed traditionally expands the monetary base by buying short-term Treasuries from financial institutions.  Banks then turn around and make short-term loans to those businesses that are the economy’s main job creators. But QE’s Operation Twist focused on buying long-term Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities. This meant that instead of going to the entrepreneurial job creators, loans went primarily to large corporations and to the government itself.

Supporters insisted that Operation Twist’s lowering of long-term rates would stimulate the economy by encouraging people to buy homes and make business investments. In reality this credit allocating is cronyism, an all-too-frequent consequence of fiat money.  Fed-created inflation results in underserved windfalls to some while others struggle.

Unstable Money:  Odorless and Colorless

Unstable money is a little bit like carbon monoxide:  it’s odorless and colorless.  Most people don’t realize the damage it’s doing until it’s very nearly too late.  A fundamental principle is that when money is weakened, people seek to preserve their wealth by investing in commodities and hard assets. Prices of things like housing, food, and fuel start to rise, and we are often slow to realize what’s happening. For example, few connected the housing bubble of the mid-2000s with the Fed’s weak dollar.  All they knew was that loans were cheap. Many rushed to buy homes in a housing market in which it seemed prices could only go up. When the Fed finally raised rates, the market collapsed.

The weak dollar was not the only factor, but there would have been no bubble without the Fed’s flooding of the subprime mortgage market with cheap dollars.  Yet to this day the housing meltdown and the events that followed are misconstrued as the products of regulatory failure and of greed. Or they are blamed on affordable housing laws and the role of government-created mortgage enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The latter two factors definitely played a role.  Yet the push for affordable housing existed in the 1990s, and we didn’t get such a housing mania. Why did it happen in the 2000s and not in the previous decade?

The answer is that the 1990s was not a period of loose money. The housing bubble inflated after Alan Greenspan lowered interest rates to stimulate the economy after the 2001 – 2002 recession. Greenspan kept rates too low for too long. The bursting of the subprime bubble put in motion a collapse of dominoes that started with the U.S. financial sector and European banks and led to the sovereign debt crisis in Europe, the Greek bankruptcy crisis, and the banking disasters in Iceland and Cyprus.

Other Problems Caused by the Weak Dollar

Many may not realize it, but the weakening of the dollar is at the heart of many other problems today:

High Food and Fuel Prices

As with the subprime bubble, the oil price rises of the mid-2000s (as well as the 1970s) were widely blamed on greed.  Yet here, too, no one bothers to ask why oil companies suddenly became greedier starting in the 2000s.  Oil prices averaged a little over $21 a barrel from the mid-1980s until the early part of the last decade when there was a stronger dollar, compared with around $95 a barrel these days.  Rising commodity prices spurred by the declining dollar have also driven up the cost of food. Many shoppers have noticed that the prices of beef and chicken have reached record highs. This is especially devastating to developing countries where food takes up a greater portion of people’s incomes.  Since the Fed and other central banks began their monetary expansion in the mid-2000s, high food prices wrongly blamed on climate shocks and rising demand have caused riots in countries from Haiti to Bangladesh to Egypt.

Declining Mobility, Great Inequality, and the Destruction of Personal Wealth

The destruction of the dollar is a key reason that two incomes are now necessary for a middle-class family that lived on one income in the 1950s and 1960s. To see why, one need only look at the numbers from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. What a dollar could buy in 1971 costs $5.78 in 2014.  In other words, you need almost six times more money today than you did 40 years ago to buy the equivalent goods and services. Say you had a 2014 dollar and traveled back in time to 1971. That dollar would be worth, according to the CPI calculator, a mere 17 cents. What has this meant for salaries?  According to statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau, a man in his thirties or forties who earned $54,163 in 1972 today earns around $45,224 in inflation adjusted dollars –a 17% cut in pay. Women have entered the workforce in much larger numbers since then, and women’s incomes have made up the difference for families. As Mark Gimein of Bloomberg.com points out, “The bottom line is that as two-income families have replaced single-earner ones, the median family has barely moved forward. And the single-earner family has fallen behind.”

Increased Volatility and Currency Crises

The 2014 currency turmoil in emerging countries is just the latest in a succession of needless crises that have occurred over the past several decades as a consequence of unstable money. Today’s huge and often-violent global markets, in which a nation’s currency can come under attack, did not exist before the dollar was taken off the gold standard. They are a direct response to the risks created by floating exchange rates. The crises for most of the Bretton Woods era were mild and infrequent. It was the refusal of the United States to abide by the restrictions of the system that brought it down.

The weak dollar has also been the cause of banking crises that have been blamed on the U.S. system of fractional reserve banking. Traditionally, banks have made their money by lending out deposits while keeping reserves to cover normal withdrawals and loan losses.  The rule of thumb is that banks have $1 of reserves for every $10 of deposits.  In the past, fractional reserve banking has been criticized for making these institutions unnecessarily fragile and jeopardizing the entire economy. Indeed, history is replete with examples of banks that made bad loans and went bust.  Historically, the real problems have been bad banking regulations.  In the post-Bretton Woods era, however, the cause has most often been unstable money. Misdirected lending is characteristic of the asset bubbles that result when prices are distorted by inflation. This has been true of past booms in oil, housing, agriculture, and other traditional havens for weak money.

The Weak Recovery

This bears repeating:  the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing, the biggest monetary stimulus ever, has produced the weakest recovery from a major downturn in American history.  QE’s Operation Twist has not been the only constraint on loans to small and new businesses.  Regulators have also compounded the problem by pressuring banks to reduce lending to riskier customers, which by definition are smaller enterprises.

In 2014 the Wall Street Journal reported that this credit drought had caused many small businesses, from restaurants to nail salons, to turn in desperation to nonbank lenders—from short-term capital firms to hedge funds—that provide loans at breathtakingly high rates of interest. Interest rates for short-term loans can exceed 50%.  Little wonder there are still so many empty storefronts during this period of supposed recovery.  Monetary instability encourages a vicious cycle of stagnation: the damage it causes is usually blamed on financial sector greed. The scapegoating and finger-pointing bring regulatory constraints that strangle growth and capital creation.  That has long been the case in countries with chronic monetary instability, such as Argentina.  Increased regulation is now hobbling capital creation in the United States as well as in Europe, where there is growing regulatory emphasis on preventing “systemic risk.”  Regulators, the Wall Street Journal noted, “are increasingly telling banks which lines of business they can operate in and cautioning them to steer clear of certain areas or face potential supervisory or enforcement action.”

In Europe, this disturbing trend toward “macroprudential regulation” is turning central banks into financial regulators with sweeping arbitrary powers. The problem is that entrepreneurial success stories like Apple, Google, and Home Depot—fast-growing companies that provide the lion’s share of growth and job creation—all began as “risky” investments. Not surprisingly, we’re now seeing growing public discomfort with this increasing control by central banks. A 2013 Rasmussen poll found that an astounding 74% of American adults are in favor of auditing the Federal Reserve, and a substantial number think the chairman of the Fed has too much power.

Slower Long-Term Growth and Higher Unemployment

Even taking into account the economic boom during the relatively stable money years of the mid-1980s to late 1990s, overall the U.S. economy has grown more slowly during the last 40 years than in previous decades. From the end of World War II to the late 1960s, when the U.S. dollar had a fixed standard of value, the economy grew at an average annual rate of nearly 4%.  Since that time it has grown at an average rate of around 3%.  Forbes.com contributor Louis Woodhill explains that this 1% drop means a lot. Had the economy continued to grow at pre-1971 levels, gross domestic product (GDP) in the late 2000s would have been 56% higher than it actually was.  What does that mean?  Woodhill writes: “Our economy would have been more than three times as big as China’s, rather than just over twice as large. And, at the same level of spending, the federal government would have run a $0.5 trillion budget surplus, instead of a $1.3 trillion deficit.”  And what if the United States had never had a stable dollar? If America had grown for all of its history at the lowest post-Bretton Woods rate, its economy would be about one-quarter of the size of China’s.  The United States would have ended up much smaller, less affluent, and less powerful.

Unemployment has also been higher as a consequence of the declining dollar. During the World War II gold standard era, from 1947 to 1970, unemployment averaged less than 5%. Even with the economy’s ups and downs, it never rose above 7%.  Since Nixon gave us the fiat dollar it has averaged over 6%:  it averaged 8.5% in 1975, almost 10% in 1982, and around 8% since 2008. The rate would have been higher had millions not left the workforce. The rest of the world has also suffered from slower growth, in addition to higher inflation, since the end of the Bretton Woods system. After the 1970s, world economic growth has been a full percentage point lower; inflation, 1.5% higher.

Larger Government with Higher Debt

By enabling endless monetary expansion, the post-Bretton Woods system of fiat money has helped propel the unchecked growth of government. In 1971 the total U.S. federal debt stood at $436 billion.  Today it is more than $17 trillion. It’s no coincidence that the federal debt has doubled since 2008, the same year that the Fed started implementing QE.

The Keynesian and monetarist bureaucrats who today set the monetary policies of the Fed and other central banks are like pre-Copernican astronomers who subscribed to the notion that the sun revolved around the earth. They are convinced that government can successfully direct the economy by raising and lowering the value of money. Yet, over and over again, history, and recent events, has shown that they are wrong.

What they don’t understand is that money does not “create” economic activity. Money is simply a tool that measures value, like a ruler measures length and a clock measures time. Just as changing the number of inches in a foot will not increase the building of houses or anything else, lowering the value of money will not create more wealth. The only way we will ever get a real recovery is through a return to trustworthy, sound money.  And the best way to achieve that is with a gold standard:  a dollar linked to gold.

zerohedge



16 Comments on "How The Destruction Of The Dollar Threatens The Global Economy"

  1. Makati1 on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 7:09 am 

    Well, if gold is the answer, the US doesn’t have any. Or at least none of their own. I suspect that Nixon slammed the gold window shut in 71 because Fort Knox was empty. That is why no audit has been preformed since then. The vaults are bare.

    Whereas, many Asian countries are buying up all they can get. I just saw an article where China may have as much as 15,000 tons inside their borders. Some in the hands of their citizens, whom they have been telling to buy gold, and making it easy to do so. Some in government vaults. At today’s gold price, that is $624,000,000,000.00 in what has been money for thousands of years and always will be. Yes, the dollar’s days are numbered.

  2. paulo1 on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 9:07 am 

    re statement; “overall the U.S. economy has grown more slowly during the last 40 years than in previous decades. From the end of World War II to the late 1960s, when the U.S. dollar had a fixed standard of value, the economy grew at an average annual rate of nearly 4%. Since that time it has grown at an average rate of around 3%.”

    It wouldn’t have had anything to do with the world’s manufacturing system destroyed by the war with the exception of the intact US system, untouched by conflict? Nah. Or the fact that returning to peace time spurred a growth in housing and product purchase. Nah…According to these guys it is because the dollars was fixed to gold.

    My rooster crows, the sun comes, therefore……

    Paulo

  3. Davy on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 9:51 am 

    Paulo, why does this site not post pro American sites that are not idiots of the DC/Wall Street mafia? There are plenty that deal with US issues that are fair, balanced, and scientific. It is either anti-American or American exceptionalist/cornucopian idiots. Is the US was as bad as portrayed here on PO we would be a continent wide collapsed Zimbabwe.

  4. bobinget on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 9:51 am 

    With Steve Forbes and his fellow travelers as cheerleaders, never participants, we have had almost one continuous war, hot and cold, since 1947. If this was another country there would be little doubt about their politics of growth.

    A posted note:

    If you strongly believe in ‘a life in the here-after’, you could take comfort when taking another’s life.

    another from the Onion:

    Obama: Iraqi Airstrikes Not Slippery Slope to More Humanitarian Interventions.

  5. Davy on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 10:05 am 

    Bob, we are in a de facto descent. Expect an environment of interventions for all the other global multipolar powers in the future. It is the natural result of a decaying BAU. We have multiple many and varied predicaments that have coalesced into a Mega-Predicament. The way TPTB handle many problems today is the old fashion use of forces. As decent quickens expect the ability to project force to greatly diminish as BAU/globalism comes apart at the seams or we commit global suicide.

  6. Makati1 on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 10:08 am 

    Davy, name one site that is fair about the US and NOT US owned/controlled.

    Take a good look around and you will see that the US IS looking more and more like Zimbabwe every day. Take away the 47+ million SNAP cards and see what happens. Take away the unemployment insurance and see what happens. Take away welfare and see what happens. Zimbabwe would look good in comparison.

    And ALL of those will soon disappear.

  7. noobtube on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 10:43 am 

    Why is everyone picking on Zimbabwe? Why is Africa always portrayed as bad, which meanns of course, Europe and the United States are good?

    From what I understand, Zimbabwe has NEVER invaded anyone…

    nor committed genocide
    nor enslaved anyone
    not dropped bombs on women and children nor polluted its lands and streams
    nor irradiated its lands
    nor engaged in live human testing
    nor have chemical or biological weapons AND used them on the innocent
    nor broken treaties with other groups
    nor GMO’d its foods
    nor imposed its corporations on other countries
    nor used its banks to oppress other lands

    Zimbabawe is an example of a successful way to deal with neighbors, unlike the United States and Europe which have been centuries-long failures at getting along with the rest of the world.

    The losers are the Americans and the Europeans (with their world wars, genocides, and fixation on getting rich and destruction) and we are seeing that play out day-by-day.

  8. Davy on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 10:53 am 

    Noob, might want to google human rights violations in Zimbabwe. You are showing your usual lack of sophistication and education. This I would expect out of a propagandist ideologue. Go back to you radical Islamic websites were you can join the primitives in their gory enjoyments. Beside Noobster my point was about failed states comparisons not human rights. Is English your third language because often I see you miss the jist of the discussions.

  9. JuanP on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 11:14 am 

    Increasing energy costs and prices, CC, resource depletion, limits of any kind, overpopulation, diminishing returns, etc. totally ignored.
    Some people just have no frigging idea what’s going on.

  10. noobtube on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 11:23 am 

    And, who claims there are human rights violations in Zimbabwe?

    Is it Africans, or once again, the United States and Europe.

    As I said before, the United States and Europe are always screaming about how bad Africa is, while the Europeans and Americans rob the people, steal from the people, flood the continent with guns and other weapons, overthrow Democratically-elected governments, impose Apartheid/Jim Crow/segregation, and elevate themselves over the people who actually belong there.

    I have never seen an African nation where Americans and Europeans didn’t act like they owned the place or expected special treatment over the people who live there.

    Americans use Africans as props, steal their children, impose “vaccinations” to spread diseases (AIDS, Ebola, Cancers), scream about “human rights” to topple governments, and whine about “free markets” to destroy, indebt, and pollute the lands.

    When have Europeans or Americans ever said or done anything good for Africa?

    It’s funny when South Africans complain about the Europeans there because they are always whining about how bad it is there, but yet, refuse to leave.

    If Africa is so bad, why don’t the Americans and Europeans get out of there? They are certainly not wanted.

  11. Davy on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 11:45 am 

    Noob, should I kill myself since I am American? I mean according to you Americans are evil and would be better off dead.

  12. Makati1 on Sat, 9th Aug 2014 8:56 pm 

    noobtube, you are spot on. Africa would have progressed into the 1st world if it had not been plundered, for centuries, by the West. Without the rest of the world to supply the West, it would be another Bangladesh by now.

  13. Arthur on Sun, 10th Aug 2014 5:24 am 

    Very sympathetic thoughts, Makati, but the world is a little different. Have a look at the global average IQ map:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:AverageIQ-Map-World.png

    The average IQ in Africa is 65-70.

    Murray and Herrnstein pointed out in their controversial “The Bell Curve” that in order for a society to be able carry a beginning of an industrial civilization, you need an average IQ of 90. Turkey is the only big Islamic country that hardly meets that condition. Africa will never meet that condition. The map also shows that China has all the IQ potential to become the worlds unrivaled new superpower, unless the Euros world wide get their act together, crush the Lobby and unite. The map also shows that North-America is gradually sinking away into third world status thanks to mass immigration from the third world, thanks to the Israel lobby. Peak USA was in 1969, when still 90% white America was able to put a man on the moon (with a little help from the German enigineering masterminds from Peenemunde, uhh Huntsville/Alabama). America will never put a man on the moon again, likely never even put a man in orbit, other than through hiking with a Russian spacecraft.

    I know these are forbidden thoughts in the present day racial communist state USA, so please go ahead and call me a racist. But I did not invent the undeniable facts, so, shrug. Enjoy becoming the next Brasil, if you can avoid a major confrontation between ethnic groups, like is the norm everywhere else in the world (I think you can’). Noobtube has already announced he wants to exterminate white people, like Makati’s family, left behind in the US. And he is by far not the only one. Happy racial integration, and remember folks, diversity is our strenght! This message was offered to you for free by the SPLC and ADL.

    Seriously folks, you are going to need to Europeans once again if you want to escape the coming hell hole 3rd world USA.

  14. Makati1 on Sun, 10th Aug 2014 8:21 am 

    Dream on Arthur. Europe is going down the economic drain. If the US has it’s way, you will all be joining the 3rd world soon. That is, IF they don’t push Putin too far and we get to experience a nuclear winter.

    The Euro has to be crushed along with the ruble and yuan. It is getting too powerful. And too many EU countries are ignoring the rants from Washington.

    As for Africa, what other source do you have besides this one from a UK racist?

  15. Arthur on Sun, 10th Aug 2014 8:35 am 

    “If the US has it’s way, you will all be joining the 3rd world soon”

    True, but Washington won’t have it’s way.

    “The Euro has to be crushed along with the ruble and yuan. It is getting too powerful.”

    Oops, crushed by who? What happened to your own predictions that the ‘charmin dollar’ is going to be dumped by the BRICS.

    “As for Africa, what other source do you have besides this one from a UK racist?”

    I have data from the Irish racist Lynn, and two other American racists Murray and Herrnstein. Unfortunately I have never seen any data that contradicts their findings. I wish it were different and that Africa would be like Asia, that can compete with the West. I am pretty sure that you don’t have any data to the contrary. Please prove me wrong

  16. Davy on Sun, 10th Aug 2014 9:06 am 

    Art, genetics tells us there is little difference between the races. I tend to see this as cultural conditioning not genetics. I am not an expert but I am well read on the subject having a passion for early human history pre-agricultural man. I especially enjoy Native American pre-devil European white man history.

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