by qwanta » Wed 16 Jan 2008, 11:04:41
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MC2', 'P')rovide evidence of CBs "creating" money at a rate of 10-15 % per year. Not happening; in fact, money is being displaced (and not replaced) through credit and financial asset destruction.
That's what you get with deflation.
You can get this data from the Economist:


But the US statistics are notoriously inaccurate. The Shadow Statistics site provides a better estimate:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')rading in foreign exchange is akin to judging a reverse beauty contest, trying to pick the least ugly currency, amid an array of inflated paper confetti. If the Euro is strong against the US dollar, it’s only because the ECB is inflating its money supply at a slightly slower rate than the Fed. Since Ben “B-52” Bernanke got his hands on the money printing presses 18-months ago,
the growth rate of the US M3 money supply has doubled to 16%, the fastest in 41-years.
(...)
Since the beginning of this year, the growth rate of the US MZM money supply has expanded from 5.5% to an annuaized 13% in December, greasing the skids under the US dollar index, which tumbled to a 20-year low last month. In turn, the weaker dollar jettisoned US crude oil prices towards $100 /barrel. Oil prices have stabilized around $90 per barrel, after wiping out the Iranian war premium, and are bolstered by depleting US commercial oil supplies at 297 million barrels, a 3-year low.
The explosive growth of the US money supply might hit 20%, on par with India and South Africa, in response to the Fed’s rate cutting campaign since mid-August. Most remarkably, the Fed is considering further rate cuts, even after US wholesale prices soared 3.2% in November, the biggest jump in 34-years, to an annualized gain of 7.7%, led by the essentials of life - food and energy. US consumer prices were 4.3% higher in the 12-months to November, the most since June 2006.
I'm not sure what planet you're living on, but please put your money where your mouth is and short gold, then check back in a few months and give us a laugh. (and yes, gold does go through 10-20% corrections every year, but in the long run it is in a bull market)