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Will the US Devalue the Dollar?

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The ability to wage war on credit gave the West an insurmountable advantage over the East. The West’s credit, however, has now turned to debt and the West has lost its advantage. But the return to parity will not be easy.

 

The three hundred year economic expansion fueled by debt-based capital markets is coming to an end and with it, the hegemony of the West over the East. During that period, debt-based paper money propelled first England then the US to world dominion because of the ability to wage war on credit and to print money ad infinitum.

 

That era is now ending because the critical balance between credit-driven expansion and debt-driven contraction has now shifted significantly in favor of the latter; and in 2010, both East and West now find themselves on the edge of a growing deflationary sinkhole created by the sequential collapse of two large US bubbles, the dot.com and US real estate bubbles.

 

The US caused the 1930s deflationary depression and is again cause of the current contraction; and although similarities exist between the two, the differences between them insure a far more consequential outcome today than in the 1930s.

 

Global demand is again falling as credit contracts, a sign that debt-driven deflation is back but, today, there is an additional danger as well. Since 1971, because of the US default on its gold obligations, money no longer possesses intrinsic value and the consequences will soon become apparent. Deflationary depressions and a collapse in the value of fiat money have happened before but never simultaneously. Soon, they will.

 

We are in what Stephen Roach, Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, calls the end-game, the resolution of past monetary excesses and imbalances, excesses and imbalances that reached never-before-seen heights in the last decade. The long awaited day of reckoning has arrived.

 

THE PROBLEM

 

Capitalism cannot function unless its constantly compounding debt is serviced and/or paid down. Today, the US, the world’s largest debtor, can no longer pay what it owes except by rolling its debt forward and borrowing more, what the late economist Hyman Minsky called ponzi-financing, financing common in the final stages of mature capital systems.

 

The amount of outstanding US debt has now reached levels that can never be paid off:

… the United States government and its agencies have, by far, the largest pile-up of interest-bearing debts ($15.6 trillion), the largest accumulation of unsecured obligations (over $60 trillion), the largest yearly deficit ($1.6 trillion), and the greatest indebtedness to the rest of the world ($4.8 trillion).

Martin D. Weiss, www.moneyandmarkets.com    

 

The unpayable levels of US debt are not just the problem of the US. Because the US dollar is the lynchpin of today’s fiat money system, US debt is everyone’s problem. The US dollar is the world reserve currency and a default by the US will have far-reaching consequences, especially in China, its largest creditor.

 

INFLATE, DEVALUE AND TAX

 

Bill Gross, co-founder of PIMCO, the world’s largest bond fund and an expert in matters of debt, wrote in 2006, the way a reserve currency nation [such as the US] gets out from under the burden of excessive liabilities is to inflate, devalue, and tax.

 

Inflation destroys the value/cost of liabilities by eroding the value of money. Debts are paid back with inflated currencies, a process which benefits the debtor and injures the creditor. This is why reserve currency nations usually inflate their way out of debt by printing what they owe.

 

Devaluation is another option afforded reserve currency nations. By devaluing the value of their currency, the value of what they owe falls relative to other currencies. Again, the benefit is to the debtor at the expense of the creditor.

 

Taxation is another option but is no longer available to the US, as its liabilities are now too high. It would be like forcing the elderly and morbidly obese to engage in strenuous exercise to regain youth. Of the three, inflating away debt is by far the preferred option but it is one the US can no longer choose.

 

Managing Director and Chief US Economist at Morgan Stanley, Richard Berner, recently discussed the reasons in We Can’t Inflate Our Way Out, February 24, 2010. www.morganstanley.com/views/gef/index.html#anchor6647bf63-2073-11df-978b-bbc960980e46

 

It’s tempting to think that the US can inflate its way out of its fiscal problems.  A faster, sustained increase in prices would erode the real value of past debt, and higher future inflation would – other things equal – reduce the real resources needed to service and pay back the promises we are making today.

 

However, inflating away US debt won’t work because as Richard Berner points out nearly half of federal outlays are [now] linked to inflation, meaning that increments to debt would [also] rise with inflation.

 

Inducing monetary inflation would also raise aggregate US debt resulting in a self-defeating cycle of higher prices and higher debt. However, there is also another more fundamental reason why inflating away US debt won’t work, to wit: Inflation is almost impossible to induce during severe deflationary contractions.

 

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke understands this difficulty quite well. Bernanke’s late mentor, Milton Friedman, theorized the Great Depression could have been prevented by sufficient monetary stimulus and so in 2008, faced with the possibility of another deflationary depression, Bernanke put Friedman’s theory to the test. It failed.

 

jutiagroup.com/2010/01/27/looking-over-into-the-abyss/

 

Unfortunately, when tested, Friedman’s theory didn’t work. Despite Bernanke’s massive monetary expansion, global credit is still contracting and lending is drying up.

 

The Telegraph UK reported on February 17, 2010:  lending has fallen by over $100bn (£63.8bn) since January, plummeting at an annual rate of 16%.  “Since the credit crisis began, $740bn of bank credit has evaporated. This is a record 10% decline,” he [analyst David Rosenberg of Gluskin Sheff] said. The article continues: The M3 broad money supply – watched by monetarists as a leading indicator of trouble a year ahead – has been contracting at a rate of 5.6% over the last three months. www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/7259323/US-bank-lending-falls-at-fastest-rate-in-history.html


Inflating away debt is virtually impossible in the presence of deflation, but if US monetary expansion is sufficiently large, it could result in the hyperinflation of the US money supply, which would destroy both US debt and the US economy as well.

 

DEVALUING THE US DOLLAR

 

Devaluation is the US’ only remaining option. But, on February 25th, Comstock Partners’ special report, The Cycle of Deflation, Impediments to Debt Relief, pointed out the major impediment to a US devaluation to reduce debt—China.

 

there is a stumbling block to the normal competitive devaluations that typically take place. In the past, a country that incurred too much debt just did what they could to devalue their currency in order to export their way out of the dilemma by exporting their goods and services to their trading partners. ..[But]The Chinese have linked their currency to ours, so as we debase our currency, one of our major trading partner’s currency is also declining and China becomes the major beneficiary of the debasement of our dollar.

www.comstockfunds.com

 

The China peg to the US dollar thus prevents the US from altering its trade deficit by currency devaluation, but it does not prevent the US from devaluing the dollar for other reasons. If the US does devalue the dollar, it will not be to reduce debt—it will be to maintain its advantage over the world in general and China in particular.

 

YESTERDAY JAPAN TODAY CHINA

 

In 1985, when Japan was challenging the US for economic dominance the Japanese economy was in danger of overheating and Japan signaled the US its intent to raise interest rates.

 

The US responded by threatening Japan with trade sanctions, cutting off Japan from US markets. During the 1980s, the US badly needed Japanese savings to fuel Reagan’s multi-trillion dollar debt-based military buildup; and if Japanese rates were raised, Japanese savings would stay at home.

 

Threats of US trade sanctions forced Japan to keep interest rates low but at a perhaps fatal cost to Japan. Low interest rates combined with inflows of burgeoning trade profits ignited a speculative frenzy in stocks causing the then largest stock market bubble in history; and when the bubble collapsed in 1990, Japan fell into a deflationary trap from which it has never fully emerged.

 

Today, US dominance is again being challenged, this time by China. While it is not possible to know what the US will do, it is naïve to believe the US will do nothing; but whatever happens, US debt and the US dollar will be affected.

 

China has now significantly reduced its buying of US debt leaving the US with growing deficits and a virtual boycott by China of new US IOUs. This will impact future US/China relations.

 

The tentative but mutual benefits of the past are being replaced by self-interest as US spending and consequent debt is increasingly perceived as being out of control by China. That perception is correct. Since the 1980s, America’s focus has been on borrowing more, not spending less and the implications are clear.

U.S. government borrowing, percentage of outstanding U.S. Treasuries owned by China (2002-2009) – Sources: US Treasury, Haver Analytics, New York Times

 

With China moving away from increasingly risky US debt, the US is now far more likely to treat China as a challenger than as a needed creditor; and, while devaluing the US dollar would have minimal impact on overall US debt, it would have a significant impact on China.

 

In December 2009, total foreign holdings of US government debt equaled $3.29 trillion. With total US obligations now close to $100 trillion, a 30 % devaluation of the US dollar would impact only that debt held by foreigners—but the losses to China would significant

 

China currently owns at least $1.7 billion in US dollar denominated securities; and, if the US devalued the dollar by 30 %, China’s losses on its investments would be in excess of $500 million.

 

As stated earlier, it is not possible to know what the US will do. But since WWII geopolitical considerations have always outweighed economic factors in US policy decisions and there is little reason to expect this to change—even as the end-game approaches.

 

THE END GAME AND SOVEREIGN DEFAULT

 

The US is trapped. Caught between rising expenditures and the need to borrow more, outstanding US debt is incapable of ever being repaid and should the credit rating of the US ever reflect its actual state, sovereign default, not devaluation would be the result.

 

In 2008, Kenneth Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart in This Time Is Different: A Panoramic View of Eight Centuries of Financial Crisis reviewed the history of sovereign defaults concluding the then dearth of defaults was in actuality a warning of more to come. They were right.

 

Then, Rogoff and Reinhart mistakenly described the US as a “default virgin”, belonging to a small group of nations that had never defaulted. But on February 26th Rogoff said that the US had, in fact, defaulted during the Great Depression by changing the price of gold from $20 to $35 per ounce.

 

While technically a default, the US action was actually a currency devaluation. The real default occurred in 1973 when the US officially reneged on its gold obligations under Bretton-Woods, leaving other nations holding US paper dollars that could no longer be converted to gold.

 

Professor Antal Fekete noted the significance of that default when he wrote in 2008, Thirty-five years ago gold, symbol of permanence, was chased out from the Monetary

Garden of Eden, replaced by the floating irredeemable dollar as the pillar of the

international monetary system. That’s right: a floating pillar. The gold demonetization

exercise was a farce. It was designed as a fig leaf to cover up the ugly default of the U.S.

government on its gold-redeemable sight obligations to foreigners. The word ‘default’

itself was put under taboo even though it punctured big holes in the balance sheet of

every central bank of the world, as its dollar-denominated assets sank in value in terms of

anything but the dollar itself.

 

As the end-game progresses it is impossible to know what the US will do. It is likely the US doesn’t know itself. What the US does know is that it is now trapped by increasing levels of mounting debt from which there is no easy exit.

 

NO EXIT

 

What if – to put it simply – you couldn’t get out of a debt crisis by creating more debt?

Bill Gross, PIMCO, March 2010

 

 

 

 

The question, What if you couldn’t get out of a debt crisis by creating more debt? will, in fact, be answered in some way by Mr. Gross himself. As Managing Director of PIMCO, the world’s largest bond fund, Mr. Gross is in the business of buying debt and betting on the outcome, an avocation that increasingly resembles Russian roulette.

 

Spreads on sovereign debt are rising and credit default swaps reflect the higher premiums being charged to protect against default. Investors such as Mr. Gross compare risk to reward in regards to debt and when the reward is believed to compensate for the risk, the bond is bought and the bet is placed.

 

As we enter the end-game, the odds, as in Russian roulette, exponentially increase making previous yield curves irrelevant. The trigger event may be Greece, Spain, the UK, the US, Latvia, Japan or some other nation. But, one thing is certain, when someone takes a bullet, all bets will be off. No one can cover what can’t be covered.

 

THE END GAME AND HUNGARY

 

Professor Antal E. Fekete grew up in Hungary during the most virulent period of hyperinflation in the world. Perhaps the experience made the good professor more sensitive than most about the possibility of its reoccurrence in America but he is not alone in believing so.

 

The possibility of a US hyperinflation was raised by Professor Laurance Kotlikoff in the July/August 2006 Review, published by the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank: …The United States has experienced high rates of inflation in the past and appears to be running the same type of fiscal policies that engendered hyperinflations in 20 countries over the past century.

 

Since Professor Kotlikoff wrote those words, US monetary expansion has far exceeded what preceded it; and, what follows may be more predictable than we want to know.

 

 

From March 25-29, in Szombathely, Hungary, Professor Fekete will present a seminar on the unfolding financial crisis. Mr. Sandeep Jaitly, along with Professor Fekete will discuss how the basis can be used to predict movements in the price of gold and silver.

 

Mr. Jaitly is the publisher of The ‘Gold Basis Service’ a monthly subscription newsletter that describes movements in the basis and co-basis along with predictions for the coming month for gold and silver, proceeds will benefit the Gold Standard Institute. For details, see 



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    Total 12 comments
    • Anonymous

      “Capitalism cannot function unless its constantly compounding debt is serviced and/or paid down.”

      I’m sick and tired of this bullshit about capitalism. Come on, look up capitalism in the dictionary or on Wikipedia. Capitalism is about free markets. The US dollar is a corporation-state merger between the private organization known as the Federal Reserve and the public organization known as the US Treasury. This relationship is clearly fascism. Look up fascism in the dictionary or on Wikipedia.

      The US dollar is a government-forced monopoly granted to an elite band of thugs. Its fascism, plain as day and simple as 1+1=2.

      Capitalism is good for the poor and good for economies. Fascism, communism are terrible for economies and to a lesser degree economic liberalism is as well. People should use Wikipedia and the dictionary before they speak about complex topics so at least they’ve got the basics down.

    • Anonymous

      I should add to my previous comment that while the article is misinformed about capitalism as described in my adjacent comment, it is generally a very well researched article and clearly the author knows more than I do about economics in general… just less about that certain point.

    • HfjNUlYZ

      So, how would the US “devalue” the dollar? It can’t do what it did in the 1930′s, since it does not exchange dollars for gold anymore.

      Will it “order” everyone around the world to pay two dollars for every dollar of debt? I don’t think so.

      Will it simply double the balance in every dollar denominated bank account in the US? If so, how will it force every other country to double the number of eurodollars? Even if that could be done, what would result? Would everyone decide it is simply too risky to buy US treasuries?

    • Jethro Bodine

      I appreciate the comments “anonymous” left. The observations are accurate and the final question deserves an answer, namely how will the US devalue the dollar? I hope the author, (D R Schoon) will respond with an answer.

    • HfjNUlYZ

      The US can devalue the dollar in a few ways.

      1) The Fed can keep monetizing debt instruments
      2) The can reprice the official value of gold
      3) They can pull what Venezuela, Zimbabwe, et al did, drop a zero off. Got 1000 bucks in the bank? Now you have 100. Oh the price of stuff keeps going up though? Sorry ’bout that, and good luck.

    • HfjNUlYZ

      Dear Finn, monetizing debt is not “devaluation” which is carried out by changing the rate at which a government’s currency is redeemed or exchanged by that government for gold or for a different currency. Since gold is no longer exchanged by the US government for dollars, there is no “official value of gold”; its price is determined by the gold markets. And if somehow everyone’s bank balance were suddenly 10X smaller, that would have the opposite effect of devaluation, since every dollar would suddenly be 10X more valuable. So, let me guess: you’re a Harvard economist (seriously, I would expect no more of them ;)

    • HfjNUlYZ

      There is an official value of gold as it is listed on the Fed’s balance sheet at that price. I went to public schools to learn how to read, they didn’t teach how to corrupt or swindle there like they do at Harvard; they can’t afford to pay as much.

      And two, if you are knocking zero’s off of you’re currency as prices continue to rise, you have less money to buy less things with. I’d call that a devaluation. It’s exactly what happened in Zimbabwe recently. And Venezuela and Argentina, etc.

      Take your polite insult and shove it where the sun doesn’t shine. A point of criticism would have sufficed on it’s own.

    • HfjNUlYZ

      For the reader’s edification (dictionary term, not learned at Harvard)….

      Zimbabwe’s Measures to Control Inflation

      Some countries attempt to deal with inflationary trends in their economy by manipulating their currency. As an extreme example, consider the devaluation of the Zimbabwe Dollar in 2008.

      In 2008, the African nation of Zimbabwe had the highest rate of inflation in the world, with estimates for February of 2008 showing inflation in the African nation running at 165,000% a year. By May of that year, the inflation rate had gone up by some estimates to as high as 1.8 million%.

      The Zimbabwe dollar, perhaps needless to say, could buy very little, and plenty of Zimbabwean dollars were needed with the exchange rate at 60,000.000.000,000,000 to one U.S. Dollar.

      In order to deal with this massive inflation, the Zimbabwean government decided to devalue its currency by knocking off 13 of its 17 zeros, effectively making the exchange rate 6,000 to one U.S. Dollar.
      http://www.forextraders.com/forex-analysis/forex-fundamental-analysis/currency-devaluation-examples.html

    • HfjNUlYZ

      Further info….To the present day, the United States gold reserve of roughly two hundred-sixty million ounces is ostensibly priced at 42.22 dollars per ounce,
      http://www.e-goldprospecting.com/html/the_era_of_modern_economy.html

    • HfjNUlYZ

      Dear Finn, sorry for the insult. Since you have nothing to do with Harvard, I have no desire to associate you with such rot and corruption. But your public school insult reveals that your pride is hurt. Let’s put insults aside. As to the “official value of gold” on the Fed’s balance sheet, you and I both know that we can’t trust the Ivy League scum that floats to the top of such powerful institutions. The nominal unit price of the US gold reserve is obviously a fiction; no one is selling gold at $42 an ounce. As to “knocking off zeros”, if it were possible to knock two zeros off a $10,000 bill, it would become a $100 bill, so that this particular note would indeed be worth 100X less. In a sense, the value of this note has been “devalued”; but that’s not what I’m talking about. Now, let’s assume that the stock of dollars around the world in all the world’s banks and pockets, is $10 trillion. If it were somehow possible for the Fed suddenly to reduce this to $1 trillion, i.e., “knock off a zero”, what would happen? Everything priced in dollars would have to be priced in fewer dollars, since there would then be fewer dollars available to buy the goods and services available for sale. But that would not “devalue” the dollar; rather, its value would be substantially increased. BTW, I appreciate your intellectual honesty; it’s a rare virtue these days. And it’s a quality possessed by NO ONE from Harvard.

    • Anonymous

      How does the United States go about devaluing the dollar?
      I’m no expert of this matter but it is my understanding that the U.S. is not tied to anything and the value of the dollar is decided in currency markets.
      The U.S. can’t print money. They can sell Treasury Bonds but money is created in the Federal Reserve and sent through the banks. The Fed can buy Treasury Bonds and Notes if it so pleases but they can also not buy them.
      So how is it possible to devalue a currency that floats on the open market like orange juice?

    • Anonymous

      I don’t believe that using orange juice in comparison to dollars is a parallel analogy. Oranges are a finite product that require labor to produce, Dollars are backed by nothing and created out of thin air. This is why increasing the money supply is an effective way of devaluing the dollar. And, as an added benefit, the people that get to spend the dollars first – the United States Government – aren’t subject to the inflation created by the money.

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