by Sixstrings » Tue 21 Sep 2010, 21:36:21
Lengthy piece on Zerohedge, copy and pasted the highlights:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he recent intervention by the BOJ has quickly become the most contentious decision in global economic circles, with many wondering now that the world economy is off on a course of radical currency devaluation, who will be next, and how far will this game continue? If Albert Edwards, whose latest piece rhetorically asks (and answers)
"what do devaluation, high unemployment, inequality and food prices spell? C-H-A-O-S" is correct, this could be the beginning of a rapid descent in which central banks around the world are all forced to use the nuclear option: ceaseless FX devaluation, but one coupled with an endless increase in the money supply a process which can only have one outcome - that predicted recently by Eric Sprott when he said that
"we are now paying for the funeral of Keynesian theory." However, the biggest threat is that
this most recent invocation of the nuclear option is coming at a time when the world is least prepared to handle it - social imbalances are at unprecedented levels, and if, as many predict, the price of key food products is about to surge (courtesy precisely of these failed central bank policies) to a point where the great unwashed end up on the wrong side of hungry, from there, to armed conflict, the line is very, very thin.
(snip)
Looking at history, the one most prominent example of coordinated devaluation was during the Great Depression, which was accompanied by the confiscation of gold. Arguably, back then it kinda, sorta worked in principle (for other reasons) if not in theory, with the argument being that devaluation can prevent deflation.
(snip)
So for all those who have been wondering if Mike Krieger, and recently Nic Lenoir's anger at visualizing precisely the scenario where the Fed's ongoing disastrous policies result in social and/or global war are overblown, the answer is no.
We are getting to the point where absent a dramatic intervention in the Fed's all or nothing gamble on preserving Keynesianism will almost certainly result in armed conflict.http://www.zerohedge.com/article/albert-edwards-terminal-competitive-devaluation-nuclear-option-and-how-feds-policies-may-staI haven't kept up with the news quite as much lately. I gather from this piece that the Japanese central bank did something to devalue their currency? According to Zerohedge, Japan was maneuvered into this position by China since China can't openly devalue on its own without upsetting the US.
I gather the "nuclear option" he's talking about is the global race to the bottom, an economic war of devaluing currencies.
As for what all this means, I'm seeing a consensus forming in the various things I read. Before hyperinflation hits, we'll have nasty stagflation -- wherein the things people
need inflate in price (such as food, fuel, medical care, etc.), and luxuries
deflate in price (second homes, plasma TV's, iEverytings, etc.).
We're heading for a period where it will be cheaper to buy apps on the iPad store than to feed oneself. And if we continue to follow the pattern of the last Depression, then government confiscation of gold is inevitable.