Doug
Casey's Current View of the World
Doug
Casey Interviewed by The
Gold Report
Recently
by Doug Casey:
More on the Morality of Money
Doug Casey's
latest book, Totally
Incorrect, gathers his iconoclastic views in a tidy package
to stimulate and possibly dismay readers. In an interview with The
Gold Report, Doug elaborates on some of his most radical
ideas and offers his view of where the markets are likely to head
in 2013.
The
Gold Report: Doug, you have a new book out called
Totally
Incorrect: Conversations with Doug Casey. In one of those
incorrect conversations with Louis James you said, "It's not the
US economy that's facing a fiscal cliff, it's the US government.
People equate government with the economy. They are entirely two
different things. The only way to revitalize the US economy is through
both vast reductions in taxes and vast reductions in government
spending. Instead, these idiots are arguing over how much to raise
taxes and how little they can cut spending." Now that we have avoided
parts of the fiscal cliff and delayed addressing other parts, what
are your observations?
Doug
Casey: Nothing has changed. I am amazed to read about what
is called a trillion-dollar platinum plan to get around Congress
having to raise the debt ceiling. It's actually quite comical that
some people are talking about it as a solution; it's Three Stooges
economics. My only question is: Why not make it a $10 trillion coin?
That would solve the problem for several years and release the government
from even the fictional restraints on spending it now has. Actually,
let's do $100 trillion; why deal in half measures? It's all a ridiculous
charade at this point, the precisely scripted Kabuki theater between
the left and right wings of the Demopublican Party. The ending of
the ridiculous drama is totally predictable.
The point is
that the government is spending more than $1 trillion a year more
than it is taking in. And that's using cash accounting, which is
improper. If the government used accrual accounting, which takes
into account future obligations, mandates, and liabilities, the
number is more like $3-4 trillion.
Already the
Chinese and the Japanese really don't want to buy any more Treasuries
to finance the deficit. So the Federal Reserve is buying most of
it and crediting the accounts of the US government with the money
it creates. Maybe it should ask the Chinese if it would like the
trillion-dollar coin? At least it would have a cute collectible.
The Chinese should insist on a 10-ounce-size coin, so it doesn't
get lost too easily.
But all kidding
aside, the Fed may as well issue a $1-trillion coin. As the economy
really goes off a cliff over the next couple of years, government
outlays will almost necessarily go up and tax revenue will absolutely
decline as the economy slows down.
TGR:
You often make a distinction between the government and the country,
and the economy. But if the government and the economy are two different
things and the government is the one facing the fiscal cliff, why
should the economy go downhill as well?
DC:
Because the government is such a massive actor in the economy
today. Whenever a massive economic actor is bankrupt, there will
be repercussions. There are around 2.7 million people directly employed
by the federal government, by all the hundreds of agencies, bureaus,
commissions, and whatnot; that's been fairly stable for a long time.
They say there are around 22 million employed by all levels of government,
and that's actually been dropping non-federal governments can't
borrow any more, and they can't print money. A few have declared
bankruptcy.
But those numbers
don't include things like the Post Office and Amtrak. They don't
include 1.5 million active-duty troops. And all branches of government
have increasingly gone to using outside contractors, as the military
famously does.
Some 25 million
people, more or less, employed by government is one thing. That's
a lot. But of course, many are doing things that would otherwise
be done privately. The real problem is so many major corporations
have the state as their major customer military and aerospace
contractors, construction firms, computer outfits everything you
can imagine. Having your major customer bankrupt is a big problem.
But there's
much more. The US government has 50 million people dependent on
food stamps, 7 million on disability, and scores of millions more
on Medicaid, Medicare, and other programs.
In my ideal
world, government would exist for two reasons: as a police force
to protect the citizens, and as a court system to allow citizens
to adjudicate disputes. The economy is far too important to be left
to the government and the kind of people who are drawn to work in
it.
The fiscal
cliff and the bankruptcy of the government are important because
so many people depend on the government for their livelihoods. Most
major corporations are customers of the US government. It's said
fully 37% of Americans derive their income from the government.
That is a gigantic distortion that has been put into the economy
over many decades, and it has to be unwound.
TGR:
Can it be unwound slowly over many decades or do we have to go over
a cliff?
DC:
It could be unwound slowly over many decades, but that
would require a complete change in the way the American people think.
Right now, the people who run for president or for Congress, for
state legislature seats, and even local offices, actually think
that government is a magic cornucopia.
This problem
will not be solved unless that attitude changes, and I do not see
how that will happen at this point. In fact, there's every reason
to believe it's going to get worse.
TGR:
Some European countries have implemented severe austerity programs.
Will that help Europe turn around or are these programs just a slow,
painful edging toward the same cliff?
DC:
Europe is in much worse shape than the US. Socialism is
totally ingrained in the psyche of the average European. The European
idea of austerity is cutting back some government programs around
the edges, making a few cosmetic changes. Maybe an occasional headline
upbraiding a particularly egregious example of corruption. It's
all public relations and generalities. But the idea of pulling the
plant out by its roots is totally anathema. That's because they
really believe socialism, welfarism, and all kinds of state intervention
is morally correct. Most Europeans actually want a stronger state,
all paid for with money stolen from a diminishing pool of productive
taxpayers.
Most Europeans
believe the state owes them a living and that the rich should be
eaten to finance that. That attitude will not be changed without
real tumult. There is no impetus for gradual change or reversal
in Europe.
TGR:
In the conversation titled On
2013, you say 2013 will be ugly, but merely a warm-up for
2014. Yet the economic trends appear to be positive: the end of
quantitative easing by year-end, increased domestic oil and gas
production resulting in inexpensive energy for decades to come,
more manufacturing jobs, and less unemployment. Is this slow-growing
economic recovery masking the effects of the deficit and unfunded
liabilities, thus allowing politicians to kick the can further down
the road? Why do you think 2013 and 2014 will be so bad?
DC:
Most of the information that people get about what is going
on comes from the popular press and, at this point, the popular
press is almost the fifth branch of government after all the agencies,
which have become the fourth branch of government.
As for things
improving, yes, things seem better because we're not actually in
the middle of chaos. Well, actually we are, but only because it's
the eye of the hurricane. Those trillions of currency units that
have been and still are being created make people feel more prosperous
than would otherwise be the case.
I have no trust
in the unemployment figure. If it were still calculated as it was
before 1980, unemployment would be between 13% and 19% today. I
have no more confidence in the inflation figures issued by the US
government than I have in the inflation figures published by the
Argentinean government.
It is in the
government's interest to keep those reported numbers as low as possible,
in part because payments on things like Social Security are adjusted
to inflation. In addition, people in government think the economy
depends more on psychology than reality, and no one wants to set
off a panic. I suggest people panic now and beat the last minute
rush. [laughs]
As far as oil
is concerned, I believe in the peak oil theory, which basically
says that the cheap, easy, light sweet crude has all been found.
Crude is extremely hard to find. At the same time I believe technology
will solve all energy problems oil is a very simple compound made
out of hydrogen and carbon, essentially. Technology allows us to
create almost anything, so there's no reason why we'd ever run out
of oil. Fracking and horizontal drilling will make lots of hydrocarbons
available. The question is, at what price?
TGR:
But why 2013?
DC:
In 2007, we started into the leading edge of a financial
hurricane. In 2010 through 2012, governments around the world printed
trillions of new currency. That did not solve the financial problems
of the banks, brokers, hedge funds, or large corporations much
the way giving a million dollars to a wino will temporarily solve
a lot of his problems but at some point those dollars, which are
currently sequestered, will start coming into circulation. That
will result in huge price rises of everything.
You can't solve
problems just by printing pieces of paper. You become prosperous
by producing more than you consume and by saving the difference.
However, the US, Western Europe, and many other parts of the world
consume more than they produce. They have been living on borrowed
money and mortgaging our future with debt. That holds true for governments
and for individuals.
TGR:
That leads me to another conversation in the book, called The
Morality of Money. In that conversation, you argue that accumulating
wealth is an important social as well as personal good. You say,
"The good to the individuals of accumulating wealth is obvious,
but the social good often goes unrecognized. Put simply, progress
requires capital. Major new undertakings, from hydropower dams to
spaceships, require huge amounts of capital. You need the wealth
to accumulate in private hands to pay for these things. If the world
is going to improve, we need huge pools of capital, intelligently
invested."
You said earlier
that the goal of government should be to provide police and to adjudicate
disputes. But if world improvement requires huge amounts of capital,
who is better placed to make those intelligent investments: self-serving
wealthy individuals or self-serving governments?
DC:
Let me say something many people will consider shocking:
I do not believe government entities should exist at all, or are
even necessary. Government is based on force and coercion. Essentially,
the power of government comes out of the barrel of a gun, as Mao
Zedong noted. I do not think that is the proper way for a civilized
society to function. By its nature, government never has and never
will be a producer. It is a consumer. It acquires income by theft.
I am an anarchist.
Contrary to popular opinion, anarchy has nothing to do with a guy
dressed in black holding a little round bomb with a lit fuse. Anarchy
is a system of self-rule; you do not have someone telling you what
to do and not do.
TGR:
But if civilization needs huge amounts of capital to progress, can
we expect the wealthy to employ their capital wisely and for the
social good?
DC:
You cannot expect anybody to do anything, but the fact
that the wealthy have a lot of money shows they are good at making
money which is to say, creating and conserving wealth. Governments
aren't noted for production their history is largely one of wars,
persecutions, confiscations, and general repression. And the people
who are attracted to government are problematical for that reason.
Most rich people,
for example Warren Buffett today and Sam Walton a generation ago,
are not interested in consumption. They are more interested in creating
more capital. It is better to trust the people who are creating
more capital than to trust those in government who do things for
political, not economic reasons.
TGR:
In the On 2013 conversation, you talk about the bond market,
saying, "We are approaching the absolute peak of the bond bubble.
Interest rates in the developed economies around the world are two
percent, one percent, or even negative. This is fueling a bond bubble
of truly catastrophic proportions. When it bursts, it will be an
order of magnitude worse than the tech stock-market crash of 2001
or the real-estate crash of 2008."
DC:
This is another reason why I think 2013 and 2014 will be
so turbulent. At this point, it appears interest rates are at an
all-time low. Bonds are in a bubble. And low rates encourage people
to borrow not save. But saving is absolutely critical and as
much as possible because it's proof that an individual or a society
is producing more than it's consuming. When interest rates start
going back up, the face value of the bonds will collapse. A lot
of individuals and a lot of governments cannot crack their monthly
interest nut at low interest rates. How will they cope with high
interest rates?
This bond bubble
will be much more serious than the stock market bubble, especially
because absolutely everyone is buying all kinds of complete junk
today that offers a 2% yield. This will be much more serious than
the tech-stock or real-estate crashes. The money markets are much
bigger.
I pity those
who are reaching for yield now. Instead of risk-free return, they're
getting return-free risk.
TGR:
Do you see ancillary economies crashing along with the bond market,
or do you agree with the notion that rising interest rates will
prompt governments to print more money, creating hyperinflation?
DC:
A catastrophic deflation is always a possibility and
it's better than the alternative, a catastrophic inflation. Either
way, a depression is inevitable we're in it now, actually. I think
at this point the authorities will go with creating lots more money.
The government
gets revenue three ways. The first is by confiscating the wealth
of citizens through taxes. There are hundreds of different taxes,
and they all are quite high right now. The second way is by borrowing.
Governments are incredibly overindebted and uncreditworthy now,
and those debts will never be repaid. The third way is by printing
money.
They will continue
to print money because number one, it is now the only way out. Number
two, the politicians masquerading as economists actually think printing
is a good way to stimulate the economy.
TGR:
Will that create a bond crash or hyperinflation, or are they one
and the same thing?
DC:
Perhaps both in sequence. The thing to remember here is
that bonds are a triple threat to your capital: interest rate risk,
inflation risk, and the risk of default. Anyone who holds old bonds
today is holding an asset that is reward-free risk. The risks have
never ever been greater in the bond market, and the returns have
never been lower. We are at the peak of one of the biggest bubbles
in history.
TGR:
If we are at the peak, what is the best way to preserve wealth and
ride out the next two or three years?
DC:
Agriculture and arable land have become quite popular recently.
I like them. But I am not crazy about investing in grains and soybeans
because they are very political commodities, and the price of agricultural
real estate has gone up hugely to reflect higher grain prices. There
are no bargains anywhere in the world.
I am a big
fan of cattle because cattle herds are at generational lows today.
They have been in liquidation because it has been an unprofitable
business for years. For most people, however, cattle are not a practical
investment.
The most practical
thing the average person can do is have a significant position in
precious metals. They should own the metal. In years to come, when
governments have blown up their currencies, gold and silver will
be reinstituted as money.
TGR:
How large a portion of one's portfolio should be in precious metals?
DC:
Apart from my house, my business, and expensive consumer goods,
I would not be afraid to have most of my financial assets in precious
metals.
I am not very
interested in the stock market today. The bond market, as I said,
is a fantastic short-sell at this point. Real estate is certainly
a lot cheaper than it was, but it floats on a sea of debt. That's
not good. It's also the easiest thing for governments to tax.
Now people
ask what about owning cash? The dollar is an unsecured asset of
a bankrupt government, and it will be a hot potato in the years
to come. For cash you definitely want to own precious metals even
at current prices. The other thing to look for is speculations in
the marketplace. As inflation heats up and markets become more chaotic
in the years to come, people will be forced to speculate. It's a
pity, really...
TGR:
And what would those be?
DC:
Speculation is capitalizing on politically caused distortions in
the marketplace. In effect, it's betting against the government.
It is not gambling in the market.
The best speculation
the most beat-up market right now is mining exploration companies,
junior resource stocks. There are several thousand of them trading
around the world. Most are not "investments," most are "burning
matches," but relative to the price of the metals, they are close
to the lowest levels in history. We have not had a truly good bull
market for them in years, so they are an excellent place to put
a portion of your capital with potentially large returns.
TGR:
To what extent do investors need to be selective in that category?
DC:
There is an old saying in the mining-stock business: When
the wind blows, even the turkeys will fly. That is true. When the
public gets the bit in its teeth and gold and silver are running,
all kinds of junk will be promoted. A lot of money will be spent
on promotion instead of exploration work out in the field.
TGR:
If the bond bubble bursts this year or next, should investors wait
for that before buying into the gold and silver junior mining stocks?
Might they not be at even lower prices once the bubble busts?
DC:
That is a real possibility. If you want to speculate and
ride the futures market, sell long-term bonds short. That will offer
a bit of a hedge.
You have to
get the timing right in the market, of course. In the past, decent
companies have sold for half of their cash in the bank and you end
up with all of their properties for free, along with half the cash
in the bank.
There is no
telling how cheap the market can get. Anything can happen with these
little stocks, but I think now is the time to start accumulating
quality issues.
TGR:
Both Totally Incorrect and the earlier Conversations with
Casey are thought-provoking and entertaining. What motivated you
to have these conversations and publish them?
DC:
No one in the mass media and no politician today is willing
to say that the king does not have any clothes on. That is why I
am doing this. I say a lot of things I suspect you do not hear among
friends at cocktail parties.
TGR:
True. Cocktail party chatter tends to be about weather, sports,
maybe entertainment, but nobody talks about government or religion.
Why is that?
DC:
I blame the educational system in part. In the last century,
people learned Latin and Greek and read the classics. The object
was to see what people thousands of years ago thought and said and
to be able to comment on whether they were correct and how those
thoughts might apply today. Education today is sound bites. Nobody
reads a classical book in school anymore, only PC stuff that has
been passed by a school board. They have a half an hour of geography
where they're lectured by some teacher who probably has not traveled
outside his or her home country, maybe never out of the state or
province. Education has been transformed into political indoctrination
in many ways.
TGR:
Will greater access to the Internet, where you can Google just about
anything and delve into specific topics and areas, change people's
appetite for more meaningful conversations?
DC:
The Internet is the best thing since the invention of moveable
type. Rather than misallocating years of time and huge amounts of
money to go off to college where they will just chase the opposite
sex and drink, and where the quality of the professors is uncertain
and the courses are in subjects that will clutter up their minds
gender studies, political science, English, and the like people
who really want to can get an education from the Internet.
The fact that
you cannot believe everything on the Internet is equally true for
what you read in books or newspapers.
TGR:
That is a perfect example of why the book is called Totally
Incorrect. Thank you for this conversation.
Ever wonder
how famous investors and self-made millionaires think what
it is that makes them so successful? Then you should let Doug
Casey give you a piece of his mind. His new book, Totally
Incorrect, is a showcase of radical libertarian thinking and
unwavering free-market advocacy that will open your eyes to a new
world view... not to mention investment opportunities flying under
Wall Streets radar. To learn more about this provocative
work, click
here now.
Inside
the Mind of a Multimillionaire
Did
you ever wonder how famous investors and self-made multimillionaires
think what it is that makes them so successful? Then you should
let Doug Casey give you a piece of his mind.
Doug's new
book, TOTALLY
INCORRECT, showcases radical libertarian thinking
and unwavering free-market advocacy
not to mention his irreverent
and hugely entertaining personality.
"There
is no other modern American critic who is half as brilliant. Doug
is the only person on the scene today who could rightfully claim
Mencken's mantle. What's in this book will show you the world in
a new light. It will allow you to see the world as it really is...
which is a gift everyone should enjoy."
Porter Stansberry, founder and CEO of Stansberry & Associates
Investment Research
February
1, 2013
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Caseys
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2013 Casey
Research
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