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The Casey Files
A quick chat about trade deficits seems timely. Starting with the notion that
they are inflationary, right?
Well, technically, they don't have to be. That's because, in the absence of
government intervention, all a trade deficit should mean is that the people
of one country are willing to trade their money for something on offer by the
people of another country.
In the 1800s, the U.S. ran big deficits and did quite well because our country
was full of opportunity and promise, so foreigners invested here, more than
we invested there.
The problem comes when a government, say China, steps into the picture and
deliberately suppresses its currency to attract businesses to certain sectors
of its economy -- for instance, city dwellers. That causes an aberration, the
result being a lot of U.S. dollars shipping out to China in exchange for all
manner of consumer goods... dollars that the Chinese have then turned around
and invested in U.S. Treasuries.
More on that momentarily.
It's All Political... and Politics Are Fickle
The massive deficits with China are unstable because, rather than being the
result of open trade, they are based largely on political decisions made by
a handful of people in the Chinese government.
In time, those people -- or their successors -- may decide that there is more
advantage to spending the dollars. Or they will be forced to do it. Say, to
appease other segments of the economy now penalized by the higher cost of foreign
goods. Or they might have to spend the dollars to pay the cost of a war or
to bail the country out of a financial crisis.
Regardless of the reason, at some point the political advantage of spending
those dollars, rather than hoarding them -- which the Japanese did to their
detriment in recent decades -- will reach a tipping point after which those
greenbacks will come flooding back to the market, devastating the value of
the dollar on foreign exchange markets.
The dollar has already, since 2002, lost about 26% of its value. Of course,
a good deal of the pain that depreciation has caused to the wallets of foreigners
has been offset by the interest they earned on their Treasuries. But treading
water is one thing, and standing by while your pile of cash starts to go up
in the flames of a monetary crisis is another.
Viewed from another angle, over time it isn't the trade deficit that is inflationary.
Rather, the trade deficit is effectively a subsidy provided to the U.S. by
China ... a subsidy that comes from the Chinese having used the river of dollars
provided by U.S. consumers to buy the unbacked paper of the U.S. government.
That has allowed U.S. interest rates to remain artificially low and forestalled
inflation in the U.S. It is as if China is building up a big bank of inflation
points. Sooner or later, they are going to spend those inflation points.
Make no mistake, we are in uncharted water; it is unprecedented that the claims
represented by the fiat currency of one government -- that of the U.S. -- have
been accumulated in such massive quantities for the reserves of other governments.
And we're not just talking China but virtually the world. And the world is
getting nervous.
To quote Thai Finance Minister Chalongphob Sussangkarn in his recent address
to the annual meeting of the Asian Development Bank in Kyoto:
"Should the financial markets lose confidence in the U.S. dollar, huge capital
outflows from the U.S. could lead to a rapid depreciation of the U.S. dollar,
and thus dramatic appreciation of other currencies."
The whole matter of trade deficits is, unfortunately for investors not paying
attention, just one of far too many aerosol cans now roasting in the fire.
When they start exploding, you'll want to be safely hiding behind a wall of
gold and silver.
In the final analysis, every day gold goes up and gold goes down, with the
movements based on any number of inputs. To avoid being panicked one way or
the other, a long-term perspective is required to see these fluctuations in
their proper perspective. And, despite all the jagged fits and starts these
past few years, and all the nay saying along the way, three years ago, gold
was trading for $393 an ounce... 40% lower than it is today.
And the better gold shares have offered exponentially higher returns than
that.
While now is the time to begin accumulating your gold and gold share positions
-- if you have not already started doing so -- how will you know when things
are about to get really "interesting"? My partner Doug Casey recently made
the observation that it is not when the trade deficit is rising that you should
be concerned, but when it starts to contract... because that is a sign that
the flood of greenbacks is starting to return home.
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