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Surviving A Coming USD
Collapse
By Christopher Laird
November 09, 2008 "Gold
Eagle" -- Now that the US election is over, we get to think
about the Future. And, no matter how you look at it, the entire
world, the West particularly, is in for tough sledding financially.
First, we will continue to battle an emerging economic slowdown.
Then, later, we will be battling world currency instability – we
already have signs of this now.
Even though gold and commodities have taken a big hit because of a
general liquidation in everything, there is one thing none of us
should lose sight of, and that is what happens when the USD finally
lets go.
Why the USD is presently rallying
Just because the USD happens to be rallying now (with weekly
fluctuations) does not mean that its fate is not bleak. There are
many reasons the USD is rallying right now. They include flight to
cash in general during market liquidations in all areas, but also
cash hoarding because businesses cannot roll over the short term
credit they use to do payrolls and ongoing operations. Then we have
the usual end of year cash surge for businesses and financial
institutions. Then of course there is flight to the USD for safety,
and then finally, other countries currencies are adjusting to the
slowing world economy, and the once hot foreign markets are cooling
and there is lots of money moving out of the ‘emerging’ markets.
But, we are going to be facing two particular problems in 09 that
none of us is really used to, that we really have never seen. The
world is going to have a severe recession bordering on an economic
depression. Essentially no one alive today knows what that is like.
Only the oldest of us have lived through that experience.
But then, on top of that, at some point later the USD will finally
collapse. This is not something way way out there in the future.
This issue is becoming a near term threat.
What has held the USD up and why that’s going to change
The primary reason the USD has held up so well in the last decades,
in spite of ever worsening US trade and budget deficits that add to
over $1 trillion a year combined, is that the US was an export
economy’s dream customer. Because the US was such a good customer to
the world, they bought our US Treasury bonds, and lent trillions in
other ways to the US consumer. As long as the US consumer could
carry that process out, our trade partners could make bank on the US
and USD.
However, once the US consumer is tapped out, and cannot effectively
make a return on investment of our trade partners, the rationale for
the continuation of the USD goes away. All that remains after that
is a budget busted US Federal government. At that point, why would
our trade partners continue to buy all the US treasury bonds and
such, and debase their currencies, if the US cannot be such a good
customer anymore? At that point, the USD will rapidly fall into a
devaluation crisis.
None of us in the US has ever dealt with the twin threats coming our
way in the next few years. The first is a real economic depression.
The second will be the demise of the US dollar, or at the very
least, its severe devaluation like 70% or more (at first).
I would like to point out that in the last great depression in the
US in the 1930’s, we did not have a combination of a currency crisis
with the economic crisis. The USD, although it fell compared to
gold, held up well. Deflation increased the value of anything called
cash, including gold.
This time, the outcome will be different. This time, the US faces an
economic depression AND a currency crisis soon after. How far off is
this?
Well, first, we are already well into the beginning of the economic
depression. The damage done to the world credit and financial
markets has been stunning since August 07. Over $35 trillion of
value has been lost in the world financial markets. That has spilled
over into the real economy now, and we will start to see bigger and
bigger layoff notices. Economic demand will decline and we won’t see
any mere one year recession, like all the pundits say ‘we foresee 5
quarters of economic decline in the US…’
This time we are talking on the scale of 5 years of economic decline
and unemployment getting over 20%. The Great Depression lasted ten
years, and the US had well over 25% unemployment. US economic
production was halved!
The China situation
The rest of the world fared worse. And, we hear that China has this
great economic growth, still on the order of 8% a year, a number any
nation would kill for. But, China needs to ADD 15 million jobs a
year merely to keep up with population growth, having 1.3 billion
people!
So, this 8% growth in China is mandatory, not merely a luxury since
China still has 800 million peasants in the rural areas all
clamoring to move to the cities for better pay. Even at the lowest
levels, Chinese city pay is three times the basic rural income which
is starvation wages.
And then consider that there are 130 million undocumented Chinese
who flocked to the cities for work (not residents of the city) who
have nowhere to go now that their export dependent economy is
slowing rapidly. The recipe here is for a revolution in China if
they cannot keep 800 plus million people working… and this is just
beginning to happen. And this issue is widely known to scare the
hell out of the Chinese government.
But, to avoid a revolution, they MUST have 8% economic growth
indefinitely? That is not going to happen. The party is about over
in China.
The point here of emphasizing China’s demographics is that, without
big exports to the West, they cannot sustain stability economically
or politically. They are the poster child to what happens when the
export economies slow drastically when the US export markets slow
significantly.
Not going to stop economic contraction this time
But, getting back to the issue of economic depression and the USD.
The whole point here is that the world economic engine is grinding
to a halt and there is no way to stop it. The US Fed and other
central banks have found out they cannot reflate the world economies
this time, like they did after 2001 and 911 and the Tech bubble.
This time reflation efforts are failing. Things are slowing down too
fast this time, and that is combined with the imploding credit
markets in every nation of the world.
Without credit, the world economies contract badly. Everything is
credit based. Businesses need it to merely do daily operations, and
people need it for purchases. The only other way is to have cash and
pay as you go. The world economy is not structured to operate that
way (things don’t have to be credit based but our world economy is
inextricably addicted to it, and credit collapse equates to a world
economic depression if the credit does not come back right soon).
And the credit is NOT coming back. Sure, we hear that Libor rates (interbank
borrowing rates that is the lifeblood of financial institutions for
short term funding needs) have improved. But, these lenders are not
lending it out, they are merely covering their own needs and
hoarding cash, just like businesses are being forced to since the
short term credit markets are still frozen, and there is little
chance of that improving for a good while.
So what does all this mean for the USD?
Now, what all this means for the USD is that, as the world loses its
economic engine and goes into an economic depression, the highly
abused USD will lose its reason to stay strong.
At some point all the US trade partners of the world will find the
US is abusing the currency too much. With all the bailouts now, that
starts to become more certain. Then, as an economic depression makes
its way, the US fiscal deficits, which are already $1 trillion a
year, will cause flight from the USD. At some point, our trade
partners will simply stop buying the US Treasury notes/bills. This
is going to happen, friends.
Then, the USD goes to hell fast. Now when is this? Well, a few years
ago I wrote several articles which stated that, when the US consumer
reached a point of not being able to give our trade partners a
return on their massive subsidies to the US government and buy our
bonds, then the USD game is over.
The only reason the USD has managed to avoid a huge devaluation, and
even a currency crisis, is because since 1945 after WW2 ended, every
time the US economy contracted the US was able to grow out of it.
Or, in many cases the US was able to lower interest rates (meaning
borrow out of it) and stimulate the economy.
Now, that stimulation process is broken, to say the least. Lower
interest rates are not working this time. This time, we are not
going to stimulate out of an economic depression. This time we get a
depression. Why?
Because, we have two irresolvable problems to avoid a depression
this time. This time, we are in the same situation generally as what
happened in 1929, and then the ensuing world deflation.
The Two insoluble problems that will lead to a depression and
ultimately the final USD collapse
Deleveraging cannot be stopped, there is too much
The USD is only supported by a healthy world economy and is
subsidized
The world is deleveraging in totality and we have a breaking world
finance bubble. I estimate that way over $1000 trillion of world
financial markets alone are deleveraging. That number is calculated
by adding up all the leverage out there, and the biggest one is the
derivatives of all types that are really only big HUGE leveraged
bets. They are nothing more than that. The BIS states that world
derivatives alone are over $1 quadrillion worth – that’s 1000
trillion.
Even if central banks move heaven and earth with their now $7
trillion of infusions to every market imaginable now, that’s a drop
in the bucket compared to what’s out there. So, the deleveraging
will continue relentlessly this time.
Why did that happen? Quite simply, the Western consumers got tapped
out. They borrowed more than they can sustain a return on. So, for
example, we see the housing bubble collapse and then all the
mortgage bonds collapse, and then all the banks collapse – get the
idea? Then all the credit disappears everywhere and we get an
assured economic depression. And that will lead to 20% unemployment
or worse in the entire world – mark my words.
The overall picture is that the world economic/credit bubble since
1945 has just burst before our eyes since August 07. That is one
huge bubble.
And, as they say, for every Ying there is a corresponding Yang, or
more simply, what goes up must come down. And it’s coming down hard.
And… we haven’t seen nothing yet either. The down has a long way to
go; we are merely in the first stages. And, boy is the world already
suffering.
So then, follow along here, the next victim of this emerging
depression will be the USD. As I said, the only thing keeping the
USD afloat with the massive fiscal deficits has been an ever
spending US consumer who bought trillions of dollars worth of
exports. When they get tapped out there is no reason for our trade
partners to keep that up is there? The USD subsidies (primarily our
trade partners buying US bonds of all types) will end this time
around (this economic cycle).
How can we get out of this mess?
Well, first I have to say I don’t think we will avoid a long,
possibly ten years, depression. But there are some ways it might be
avoided.
First, if the US abrogated the $60 trillion of promises to Social
Security and Medicare, maybe that would save the USD. But that won’t
happen. Probably, what the US will do is just pay it all, but with
worthless dollars.
The second thing that might get the world out of this impending
economic depression and a collapse of the USD later would be to
forgive all debts. Possibly that would wipe out the USD too anyway.
But that would set the stage for a huge world economic recovery.
The trouble with debt forgiveness is it never seems to happen.
Believe me, I am not talking hogwash about debt forgiveness. The
Bible, for example, talks about how every 7 years and every 70 years
there is to be total debt forgiveness. It’s called the Jubilee. The
idea is a legitimate concept that can work and has worked.
You don’t think that’s viable? Well it can work because all that
happens is that the lenders who offer credit have to factor in
either payment in full or forgiveness over a 7 year period. This can
be done and would actually result in the biggest sustained world
economic boom ever imagined.
The thing that causes world economic depressions are debt and
financial bubbles. The two go together.
But, getting back to the fate of the USD. The problem is, the
lenders won’t forgive debt or make it amortize in a short time. They
insist on ever bigger debts. They do things like making the
bankruptcy laws far more stringent (recently done in the US). And
thus, they guarantee that the world consumers ultimately will get
tapped out (just a matter of time) and then a world bubble collapse
and economic depression.
The interesting thing that happens is that there is ultimately dept
repudiation in depressions anyway. Which leads us to the USD’s fate
in coming years.
I don’t think we will have to wait for 30 years to see Social
Security and Medicare to bankrupt the US. What will happen sooner is
that, as the US enters economic depression this time, the return on
investment for our trade partners will disappear. The US won’t keep
our trade parnters’ hundreds of millions employed, and they will
then stop buying US Treasury bonds. And then the USD devalues 70% in
a year. Maybe going to zero soon after that. The US is then
bankrupted.
When can this happen? Possibly mid way into the next US economic
depression (not recession). And, since I think we are now entering
the beginning of a US depression, then if it lasts ten years, that
means we have about 4 years to go for the USD to finally give up the
ghost.
Yes, I mean that. We have maybe 4 years left, maybe even only 2
years for the USD to remain anything at all.
What can you do about all this?
Well, aside from dealing with the certain political and social chaos
and those dangers when the USD collapses, you need to move your
money into a combination of other currencies and also into paid off
real things. It’s conceivable that some stocks in real things like
mines would do well too. But stocks and financial products in
general, like annuities, will be destroyed in value because, in an
economic depression, companies either go out of business or shrink.
And in a currency crisis (USD) that Social Security check, that bank
CD, that Treasury bond, that insurance annuity becomes worthless.
Sorry, but that is the reality.
So, to escape losing all your income and losing all your wealth in a
currency crisis, you have to have money in other currencies, and
also in paid off real things that are still there after the currency
is destroyed. Obviously, gold and precious metals figure in here.
The falling prices right now are quite beside the point. What really
matters is what happens in the next 4 or so years to the USD. That’s
the BIG issue.
The reason why gold and such are dropping now is because of the
general financial and commodity deleveraging. When that bottoms,
then gold will still be there. The only thing is, when this world
deleveraging bottoms, I don’t think much else will still be there.
The problem is how to survive it.
We have anticipated many significant market moves in the last year,
such as imminent drops in world stock markets within days of them
happening, and big swings in the gold markets within days of them
occurring. We have also made a number of good calls on big currency
swings, such as with the USD, the Euro and the Yen.
We invite you to stop by our site and have a look.
Copyright 2008
Christopher Laird
Editor in Chief
www.PrudentSquirrel.com |