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Should
You Save Your Money or Hide It Under The Mattress?
by
Bill Sardi
Recently
by Bill Sardi: The
American Dream Has Changed. Have You?
Recently a
woman in Sydney, Australia unwittingly
baked her family’s entire life savings ($15,000 of Australian
dollars) that her husband placed in the oven for safekeeping after
selling an automobile for cash. While your banked money isn’t being
burnt to charcoal like this woman in Australia, due to hidden inflation,
most Americans should consider their money has been placed in an
oven and the temperature set on "slow bake."
Oh, there are
a lot of articles planted by the banking industry urging Americans
to save more, but all that Americans are doing is recapitalizing
their banks for free while experiencing erosion in the value of
their banked money. In fact, American banks are so audacious in
their back-door robbery of your money that they are rewarding their
stockholders with dividends while depositors experience hidden decay
of their life savings.
In case you
hadn’t noticed, most American banks are paying less than 1% interest
on savings accounts in the face of a nine-times-higher rate of inflation.
Oh Mr. Ben Bernanke, chairman of the nation’s central bank – the
Federal Reserve says inflation
this year (2012) will fall between 1.2 and 1.7 percent, under
its 2.0% target rate. The nation’s news media allows this bearded
sage of finance to get away with this propaganda.
But according
to economist John Williams writing at ShadowStats.com,
the way inflation is calculated was altered in 1980 and then again
in 1990 to provide a skewed number. If you revert back to the earlier
way of calculating inflation, the purchasing power of Americans’
saved money is losing value at the annual rate of -9.3%. Over the
next five years if nothing is done to correct this, the estimated
$10 trillion in so-called time deposits will lose nearly 40% of
its value. Americans might as well go back to stashing paper money
under their mattress.
Most Americans
are oblivious to this slow form of bank robbery. The internet allows
savers to search for the best
interest rates offered on banked money. However, the most popularly
advertised website dedicated to that purpose posts an obscure disclosure
which says "This website may be compensated by companies mentioned
through advertising, affiliate programs or otherwise." In other
words, it is a shill for the banksters.
Interest
rates: global comparison shopping
Being curious
about this inflation vs. interest game being played at banks worldwide,
I searched to determine if better interest rates can be obtained
by depositing money in foreign banks. I created the chart below
which compares estimated rates of inflation from three different
sources against the best interest rate available (average percentage
yield or APY) in 31 countries. Only nine of thirty-one countries
offer depositors a significantly higher rate of interest than the
rate of inflation.
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~
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Inflation
|
Inflation
|
Inflation
|
Interest
|
Interest
rate exceeds inflation
|
|
Source
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Trading
Economics
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Inflation.eu
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CIA
Factbook
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International
Deposit Interest Rate Exchange**
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~
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|
Period
|
2012
|
June
2012
|
2011
|
2012
|
~
|
|
Argentina
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9.9%
|
2.2%
|
22.0%
|
10.08%
|
~
|
|
Australia
|
1.2%
|
--
|
3.4%
|
5.10%
|
X
|
|
Austria
|
2.2%
|
4.9%
|
3.3%
|
2.00%
|
~
|
|
Brazil
|
4.9%
|
--
|
6.5%
|
6.17%
|
~
|
|
Canada
|
1.5%
|
1.2%
|
2.8%
|
1.40%
|
~
|
|
Cayman
Isles
|
--
|
--
|
3.4%
|
0.70%
|
~
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|
Chile
|
2.7%
|
--
|
3.3%
|
5.52%
|
X
|
|
China
|
2.2%
|
--
|
5.4%
|
3.50%
|
~
|
|
Finland
|
--
|
2.8%
|
3.4%
|
0.15%
|
~
|
|
France
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1.9%
|
--
|
2.0%
|
0.48%
|
~
|
|
Germany
|
1.7%
|
--
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2.2%
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2.25%
|
~
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|
Great
Britain
|
2.4%
|
--
|
4.5%
|
3.75%
|
~
|
|
Greece
|
1.2%
|
1.3%
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2.9%
|
1.00%
|
~
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|
Hong
Kong
|
3.7%
|
--
|
5.3%
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0.93%
|
~
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|
India
|
7.2%
|
10.1%
|
6.8%
|
9.25%
|
~
|
|
Ireland
|
1.7%
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1.7%
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2.5%
|
3.25%
|
X
|
|
Israel
|
1.0%
|
--
|
3.2%
|
1.60%
|
~
|
|
Italy
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3.3%
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3.3%
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2.8%
|
3.50%
|
X
|
|
Japan
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3.3%
|
0.2%
|
0.4%
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0.30%
|
~
|
|
Mexico
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4.3%
|
4.3%
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3.5%
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4.55%
|
X
|
|
Norway
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0.5%
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0.4%
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1.4%
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3.40%
|
X
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|
Peru
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4.0%
|
--
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3.4%
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3.00%
|
~
|
|
Romania
|
2.0%
|
--
|
3.1%
|
4.00%
|
X
|
|
Russia
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4.3%
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3.6%
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8.9%
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8.00%
|
~
|
|
Singapore
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5.3%
|
--
|
--
|
0.35%
|
~
|
|
South
Africa
|
5.5%
|
5.5%
|
5.0%
|
6.15%
|
X
|
|
Spain
|
1.9%
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1.9%
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3.1%
|
1.75%
|
~
|
|
Sweden
|
1.0%
|
1.0%
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2.5%
|
2.95%
|
X
|
|
Switzerland
(UBS)
|
-1.1%
|
-1.0%
|
0.4%
|
1.25%
|
X
|
|
Turkey
|
--
|
8.8%
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7.8%
|
9.75%
|
X
|
|
United
States
|
1.7%
|
1.6%
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3.0%
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1.17%
|
~~
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|
~
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9.3%
ShadowStats.com
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~
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~
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|
~
|
~
|
~
|
~
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**
annual percentage yield (APY), best rate available
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~
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Noticing that
India currently offers a 9.25% rate of return on banked money, when
traveling in India this year I inquired of a banker there if I could
park my money at the Bank of India which is offering this rate.
I was informed foreigners cannot place their money in a savings
account in India. I wonder about East Indian nationals who live
in America, whether they can place their U.S. money in a bank in
India and gain higher interest rates than offered in the U.S?
Another item
of interest is the wide variance in interest rates within a country.
Here are some examples:
Country Variance
in interest rate (annual percentage yield or APY)
| Germany |
0.90% to
2.25% |
2.5 times
difference |
| U.S. |
0.05% to
1.17% |
23.4 times
difference |
| Britain |
0.06% to
3.75% |
62.9 times
difference |
| Hong Kong |
0.01% to
0.95% |
95.0 times
difference |
| Australia |
3.25% to
5.10% |
1.56 times
difference |
| Canada |
0.65% to
1.40% |
2.15 times
difference |
Source: International
Deposit Interest Rate Exchange
Financial
literacy
A major problem
is that Americans grew up without significant training in how to
handle money. This appears to be planned. Ask any American if they
know what fiat money, debt-based money or fractional banking is
and they are usually clueless. This makes it easy to fleece the
public of their wealth.
School curriculums
are so pitifully poor in teaching American students about money
that most kids getting out of high school have never balanced a
check book. And what about putting students through an exercise
in filling out a federal tax form or reading and deciphering a home
mortgage, all documents they will face in adulthood, before they
graduate? The current practice is to leave them financially illiterate.
Oh, the Minneapolis
Federal Reserve Bank did conduct a financial
literacy test over a decade ago and asked this question: "If
your annual income rises by five percent while prices of the things
you buy rise by ten percent ...
- You are
better off.
- You are
worse off.
- You are
unaffected.
Answer:
b. If the prices of the goods and services a person buys rise
more than the increase in that person's income, that individual's
purchasing power, that is, the ability to buy a given quantity of
goods and services, has declined."
90%
Answered Correctly
But notice
the Federal Reserve made no mention about inflation eroding the
value of banked money versus the rate of interest gained. It could
have asked the question this way: "If your saved money gains
less than 1% interest and the cost of living (rate of inflation)
rises by 2%...," but it didn’t do that. That would dissuade
Americans from capitalizing the banks for free.
The Federal
Reserve Bank provides an online
lesson about savings. It displays a chart showing a $50/month
savings plan over 30 years would rise to about $35,000-$75,000 in
value @ 4% and 8% rate of interest. Of course, this is not real
world. You can’t find that high an interest rate these days. But
assume you could. Nothing is said about inflation in the document.
Nor is any mention made of taxes that are due.
So if you
saved $50/month for 30 years beginning in 1982 to 2012 you have
placed $18,000 in savings that would, in the Federal Reserve example,
gain interest to $35,000, but over that time it would have eroded
in value (purchasing power) by more than 8-fold! (To calculate this
on your own go to Tom’s
Inflation Calculator and select under "options" the
ShadowStats price inflation estimate.)
And while your
$18,000 invested would rise to $35,000, for an imagined gain of
$17,000, assume you paid federal taxes at the rate of 20%, so you
would also need to deduct $3400 from that paper entry gain. So,
no, your saved money did not increase in value relative to the cost
of goods and services, it only rose on paper.
The Federal
Reserve is misleading American kids in online curriculums it provides.
American kids may be tech savvy, internet adept, and connected at
Facebook, but they are sitting ducks when it comes to financial
matters.
Raise Interest
Rates Or Savers Will Be Ruined
Unless Congress
instructs the independent Federal Reserve Bank to raise interest
rates on money it lends to banks (it currently provides near-free
money to lenders – 0.00 to 0.25%) to let’s say 9%, and the lending
banks then lend that money out for home loans and other purposes
at 11%, and therefore can offer their depositors 9% interest and
keep the 2% difference as profit, savers will not be spared from
the quagmire of inflationary attrition. Yes, home buyers would have
to pay 11% interest compared to the less than 4% loans now being
offered, but this low loan rate has not brought the real estate
market back from the grave and only threatens to drag savers into
inflationary quicksand.
Have you heard
the White House or any Presidential candidate other than Ron Paul
talk about this bank robbery of the American savings class? Since
the Federal Reserve obviously represents bankers’ interests over
the public’s interests and continues to hide behind its Congressionally-mandated
independence to perpetuate this fraud and is therefore not directly
accountable to the public, the only way to put a stop to this thievery-by-banker
is to end the Fed. Not just audit the Fed, get rid of it. Eliminate
the bankster class, save the savers.
Five more years
of this and what little wealth Americans have saved will have evaporated.
American bankers will then wake up to the fact they are holding
trillions of dollars of saved money in reserve that has little or
no value. They are firing a slow bullet at their own head. Ron Paul
pleaded for fiscal sanity, but Americans somehow had other Presidential
candidates foisted upon them who are obviously bought off and do
not even address this issue. In the light of the life savings of
Americans being put at risk while Presidential candidates argue
over comparably irrelevant issues, Americans need to protect their
savings by pulling the plug on The Fed.
July
28, 2012
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
His
latest book is Downsizing
Your Body.
Copyright
© 2012 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should link rather than
post at other URLs.
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