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This week I watched Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke charm the rain soaked graduating
class of Harvard, my Alma Mater. As he spoke, I was reminded of an anecdote
that President Franklin Roosevelt was alleged to have made during the commencement
speech he gave at Harvard in 1936. Amidst a similar downpour, Roosevelt apparently
said, "Well, Harvard sure knows how to soak the rich!" Fittingly, Bernanke
graduated from Harvard in 1975, and his current policies are doing just that.
The Fed Chairman sought to reassure the new graduates, and the nation at large,
that the current economic situation is much rosier than the one presented to
his graduating class more than 30 years ago. Among the factors that he listed
that will prevent a replay of the 70's is the more sophisticated and positive
influence of the Fed itself. Apparently, self doubt is not one of his burdens.
In the 1970s unemployment reached 9 percent, inflation 10 percent, and oil
rose by almost four times in just five years. Despite a similar fourfold increase
in oil since 2003, Bernanke maintains that inflation has averaged only 3.5
percent over the past four quarters. So while the price of oil has followed
a similar trajectory, he asks us to believe that our current inflation rate
is only one third of the rate in the 1970's?
But even at 3.5 percent, Bernanke said inflation is a significant concern
to the Fed. Wall Street cheerleaders seized upon this remark immediately as
an indication that the Fed was serious about a stronger dollar and curbing
inflation. Other than the hard looks and the rumpled brow that Bernanke was
able to muster at the speech itself, I am not sure where this seriousness is
manifest.
So much for the "hoopla", but what of reality?
There will be much debate over what was behind the increased verbal engagement
that both the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve put on display this
week. From what I gather, the economic authorities have begun a coordinated
campaign to try to reduce inflationary expectations, and in so doing, hold
the lid on actual inflation. Although this is a fool's errand, the Fed Chairman
opened with a compelling gambit. In his Harvard speech Bernanke sought to magnify
the myth that inflation is of concern to the Fed. In reality, inflation is
his one and only weapon and ally.
In my opinion, for more than a decade the Federal Reserve has operated under
the principle that a naturally corrective recession is politically unacceptable.
As a result, they have shown an inclination to pump in massive amounts of liquidity
at the first sign of economic distress. In so doing they have not only tolerated
inflation, but purposely created it.
In pursuing this liquidity campaign, the Fed has been careful to cover its
tracks. To disguise the underlying increase in money supply (which is direct
evidence of inflation), M3 was withdrawn from publication earlier in this decade.
So much for open government! Next, the inflation figures were systematically
doctored or "cooked" to deliver a politically acceptable number. However, as
prices rise across the board, this official number is increasingly disregarded.
Recently, even well know establishment figures such as Bill Gross of PIMCO
have said that inflation figures "were not reflecting" Main Street prices.
Some observers feel the U.S. "real" inflation is now running well above the
relatively benign official figures of around 2 to 4 percent, and is trending
closer to the 10 percent levels seen in the 1970s. If you believe this, as
I do, then the statistics would show that the American economy is currently
contracting and is in recession.
It is therefore likely that the Fed is actually facing stagflation, with "real" financial
inflation running at over 10 percent and economic contraction at the same time.
However, as long as the statistics don't report this truth, the Fed has done
its job, at least as far as it is concerned.
The key question is whether the recession could get worse and even threaten
such a severe depression that even the best statisticians could not conceal
it. A key determinate is likely to be the depth of the mortgage crisis.
Last week, Case-Shiller announced findings that the value of residential housing
in America had decreased in value by some 14.3 percent over the past year.
Applying that figure to the official total ($23 trillion) value of the U.S.
housing stock, gives a reduced dollar value of some $3.3 trillion, or the equivalent
of 23 percent of the massive $14 trillion U.S. economy, as measured by GDP.
In other words American consumers have seen a paper reduction in their aggregate
wealth equal to almost a quarter of U.S. annual economic production! It is
quite a staggering figure and must cause our government very considerable concern.
For now at least, Bernanke can get away with his pleasantries.
Meanwhile, we should all realize that the U.S. dollar is destined to continue
along its long-term decline line. We should expect the Fed to add strong anti-inflation
talk to their strong dollar talk, while actively following policies that will
have the opposite effect.
In summary, Bernanke was heralding a liquidity spree that will surely soak
anyone with wealth either denominated or generated in U.S. dollars!
For a more in depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers
they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read
Peter Schiff's book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse." Click here to
order a copy today.
More importantly, don't wait for reality to set in. Protect your wealth and
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