Page added on September 15, 2012
Ready or not, QE3 is here, and the long-term effects of this reckless money printing by the Federal Reserve are going to be absolutely nightmarish. The Federal Reserve is hoping that buying $40 billion worth of mortgage-backed securities per month will spur more lending and more economic activity.

But that didn’t happen with either QE1 or QE2. Both times the banks just sat on most of the extra money. As I pointed out the other day, U.S. banks are already sitting on $1.6 trillion in excess reserves. So will pumping them up with more cash suddenly make them decide to start lending? Of course not. In addition, QE3 is not likely to produce many additional jobs. As I showed in a previous article, the employment level did not jump up as a result of either QE1 or QE2. So why will this time be different? But what did happen under both QE1 and QE2 is that a lot of the money ended up pumping up the financial markets. So once again we should see stock prices go up (at least in the short-term) and commodities such as gold, silver, food and oil should also rise. But that also means that average American families will be paying more for the basic necessities that they buy on a regular basis. The most dangerous aspect of QE3, however, is what it is going to do to the U.S. dollar. Most of the rest of the world uses the U.S. dollar to conduct international trade, and by choosing to recklessly print money Ben Bernanke is severely damaging international confidence in our currency. If at some point the rest of the world rejects the dollar and no longer wants to use it as a reserve currency we are going to be facing a crisis unlike anything we have ever seen before. The real debate about QE3 should not be about whether or not it will help the economy a little bit in the short-term. Rather, everyone should be talking about the long-term implications and about how QE3 is going to accelerate the destruction of the dollar.
The following are 10 shocking quotes about what QE3 is going to do to America….
#1 Ron Paul
“It means we are weakening the dollar. We are trying to liquidate our debt through inflation. The consequence of what the Fed is doing is a lot more than just CPI. It has to do with malinvestment and people doing the wrong things at the wrong time. Believe me, there is plenty of that. The one thing that Bernanke has not achieved and it frustrates him, I can tell—is he gets no economic growth. He doesn’t do anything with the unemployment numbers. I think the country should have panicked over what the Fed is saying that we have lost control and the only thing we have left is massively creating new money out of thin air, which has not worked before, and is not going to work this time.”
#2 Peter Schiff, CEO Of Euro Pacific Capital
“This is a disastrous monetary policy; it’s kamikaze monetary policy”
#3 Michael Pento, The Founder Of Pento Portfolio Strategies
“This is the nuclear option for them. This is a never-ending weapon that is being fired at the middle class”
#4 Donald Trump
“People like me will benefit from this.”
“Quantitative easing—a fancy term for the Federal Reserve buying securities from predefined financial institutions, such as their investments in federal debt or mortgages—is fundamentally a regressive redistribution program that has been boosting wealth for those already engaged in the financial sector or those who already own homes, but passing little along to the rest of the economy. It is a primary driver of income inequality formed by crony capitalism. And it is hurting prospects for economic growth down the road by promoting malinvestments in the economy.”
#6 John Williams Of Shadowstats.com
“That’s absolutely nonsense. The Fed is just propping up the banks.”
#7 Marc Faber
“I happen to believe that eventually we will have a systemic crisis and everything will collapse. But the question is really between here and then. Will everything collapse with Dow Jones 20,000 or 50,000 or 10 million? Mr. Bernanke is a money printer and, believe me, if Mr. Romney wins the election the next Fed chairman will also be a money printer. And so it will go on. The Europeans will print money. The Chinese will print money. Everybody will print money and the purchasing power of paper money will go down.”
#8 Mesirow Financial Chief Economist Diane Swonk
“I think this will end up being a trillion-dollar commitment by the Fed”
#9 Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke
“I want to be clear — While I think we can make a meaningful and significant contribution to reducing this problem, we can’t solve it. We don’t have tools that are strong enough to solve the unemployment problem”
#10 Credit Rating Agency Egan-Jones
“[T]he FED’s QE3 will stoke the stock market and commodity prices, but in our opinion will hurt the US economy and, by extension, credit quality. Issuing additional currency and depressing interest rates via the purchasing of MBS does little to raise the real GDP of the US, but does reduce the value of the dollar (because of the increase in money supply), and in turn increase the cost of commodities (see the recent rise in the prices of energy, gold, and other commodities). The increased cost of commodities will pressure profitability of businesses, and increase the costs of consumers thereby reducing consumer purchasing power. Hence, in our opinion QE3 will be detrimental to credit quality for the US….”
We have reached a major turning point in the financial history of the United States.
It would be hard to overstate how much damage that QE3 could potentially do to our financial system. If the rest of the world decides at some point that they no longer have confidence in our dollars and our debt then we are finished.
Sadly, the mainstream media does not seem to understand this, and most Americans gleefully believe whatever the mainstream media tells them.
10 Comments on "10 Shocking Quotes About What QE3 Is Going To Do To America"
ohanian on Sat, 15th Sep 2012 12:43 pm
Helicopter Ben. You’re my hero! I always wanted to visit American, now my money will buy more of your money. Thank you Helicopter Ben.
BillT on Sat, 15th Sep 2012 1:29 pm
How does one get rid of the middle class without seeming to? Easy! Get everyone deeply in debt while slowly shrinking their buying power with inflation.
Then massage the numbers so that inflation is reported as being a small number that most think is harmless. Even a 3% inflation means that your income loses 25% of it’s buying power every 16 years.
Then ship the good paying jobs out of the country and push millions onto the street so that they lose their homes.
Lock the interest rate at zero so there is no income from savings and computerize trading in stocks so they cannot win there either.
Sit back and wait. Bingo! The Middle Class become serfs and the Masters take over. Globalization means that wages and living standards are levels all over the globe for the 99.9%
Arthur on Sat, 15th Sep 2012 1:39 pm
A little bit of inflation is not that bad, but at a certain level sellers of products start to distrust any inflating currency as they are forced to get rid of it as soon as possible before it loses too much value. And the chairdance begins. But we should not forget that the current rulers of the US have no interest per se in keeping the dollar alive for all eternity as they want a world empire. Combined with a nice limited nuclear WW3, that is going to ‘end all wars’, after the war the dollar is going to be swapped for a formal world currency, not just de facto world currency as the dollar still is. This is the long term plan, in place for ages, since the dawn of modernity, hand in hand with the Reformation and the rise of Anglosphere and world trade. In my opinion, the existence of nukes is going to be used as an argument for world government as an alternative for MAD. But in order for the world to be convinced, first a number of cities have to be evaporated. And the argument is compelling indeed, and as a consequence I do think that in the long term some form of global order is indeed inevitable. The only question is who is going to be the architect of such a world order, the See Powers (Anglosphere) or the Heartland (Eurasia)? Once/if Europe changes horses, that question will be settled once and for all.
SilentRunning on Sat, 15th Sep 2012 3:08 pm
I keep being amazed by things that the Fed are doing today that 20 years ago would have been laughed off as utterly ridiculous.
It makes me wonder what is in store for QE4, QE5, QE6 …….
Ken Nohe on Sat, 15th Sep 2012 3:21 pm
There will be no QE4 or QE5, because QE3 is unlimited. I agree with Marc Faber, the DJ will reach 50,000 then nobody will care anymore. A little like the Maya pyramids, the Wall Street towers will start growing weeds. Let’s hope there is something left outside “the economy”.
Hubbertsfreak on Sat, 15th Sep 2012 3:28 pm
Launching QE3 following the worst drought in 50 years cannot be good for food prices. The four horsemen are saddling up.
MrEnergyCzar on Sun, 16th Sep 2012 3:08 am
When will China stop buying our Bonds?
MrEnergyCzar
Newfie on Sun, 16th Sep 2012 3:11 am
The era of growth is over. Cheap oil is what fuels economic growth. The cheap oil is gone. The economy cannot grow on $100 a barrel oil. Ben Bernanke cannot bring back cheap oil. QE3 will fail. The party is over.
Arthur on Sun, 16th Sep 2012 11:38 am
The future of the western world can be seen today in Greece. That country is bankrupt and the state can no longer provide for the poor. The predictable result: poor Greeks start to organize on grass root level and set up structures that resemble those of the state. People loaded on trucks to work on the fields for their own benefit, on barter bases (work exchanged for a part of the harvest). Soup kitchens, clothing exchange, markets (for Greeks only), hostile attitude against illegal immigrants. You can like it or not, but this is the future everywhere in world in decline.
BillT on Sun, 16th Sep 2012 1:11 pm
The Us has been consuming 30%+ of the world’s resources for so long that they cannot conceive of living on their share which is about 4%. But, they soon will…