It Ain't Money If I Can't Print It!
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Don't
be Fooled by Political Posturing
I have been
forecasting with near certainty that QE2 would not be the end of
the Fed's money-printing program. My suspicions were confirmed in
both the Fed minutes on Tuesday and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's
semi-annual testimony to Congress yesterday. The former laid out
the conditions upon which a new round of inflation would be launched,
and the latter re-emphasized in case anyone still doubted
that Mr. Bernanke has no regard for the principles of a sound
currency.
Tuesday's release
of the Fed minutes contained the first indication that a third round
of quantitative easing (QE3) is being considered. The notes described
unanimous agreement that QE2 should be completed, along with the
following comment: "depending on how economic conditions evolve,
the Committee might have to consider providing additional monetary
policy stimulus, especially if economic growth remained too slow
to meaningfully reduce the unemployment rate in the medium run."
Since the unemployment situation is deteriorating, and by all accounts
will continue to do so, the Fed is essentially pledging to keep
the spigot turned on. The committee also decided to look only at
current "overall inflation" in making their judgments,
as opposed to "inflation trends." Since new dollars take
awhile to circulate around the economy and raise prices, this means
the Fed is sure to be too late in tightening once inflation starts
to run away, causing more dislocations in the American economy.
If anyone had
lingering faith that Mr. Bernanke actually has a plan to end the
US government's addiction to cheap money, the Chairman's semi-annual
testimony to Congress should have washed it away. In addition to
claiming that his money-printing has helped the US economy, Bernanke
told Congress that gold is not money, people buying gold are not
concerned about inflation, and the external value of the dollar
has no influence on its domestic purchasing power. He even took
a moment to stump for President Obama's plan to raise the debt ceiling.
By claiming
that gold is not money, the Chairman demonstrates his ignorance
of much of monetary history. He told Congressman Ron Paul that he
had no idea why central banks hold gold, before speculating that
it might have something to do with tradition. Yes, traditionally
gold is money, which is precisely why central banks hold it. And
gold is money because central bankers like Mr. Bernanke cannot be
trusted with a paper substitute.
Bernanke further
disputes the facts by claiming that the only reason people are buying
gold is to hedge against uncertainty, or "tail risks"
as he calls them. My advice to the Chairman is to ask the people
who are actually buying it. As someone who has been buying gold
myself for a decade, I can assure him that my gold buying has nothing
to do with "uncertainty." In fact, it's just the opposite.
I am buying gold because of what is certain, not what is uncertain.
I am certain that Mr. Bernanke's incompetence will destroy the value
of the dollar and unleash runaway inflation.
If it were
true that people bought gold to protect themselves from market uncertainty,
as the Chairman claims, then the metal should have spiked in the
midst of the '08 credit crunch. Instead, it fell along with most
other assets. People instinctively fled into US dollars and Treasuries
because of their long record of stability. What Bernanke doesn't
understand is that his irresponsible monetary policy is undermining
that faith in US assets, built up over generations. That is what's
driving gold: easy money, negative interest rates, and quantitative
easing.
Finally, by
claiming that the dollar's exchange rate has no effect on domestic
prices, Mr. Bernanke demonstrates that he probably lacks the competence
to be a bank teller, let alone Chairman of the Federal Reserve.
A weaker dollar means Americans have to pay more for imported goods.
But it also means domestic producers have to pay more for raw materials
and imported components, which raises domestic production costs
as well. It also means that more domestically produced goods are
exported, reducing the supply and raising the price of what is left
for Americans to consume. This is Econ 101.
Given the Chairman's
confusion on the basics of economics, perhaps it's no surprise that
he's put quantitative easing right back on the table, where, despite
prior rhetoric, it has been all along. The Fed has always known
that QE3 is coming; it's just looking for an excuse to launch it.
The problem
is that fighting a recession with QE is like fighting a fire with
gasoline. As the flames of recession reignite, more QE, while dousing
it momentarily, will only produce an even larger economic inferno.
At one point,
Bernanke said, "The right analogy for not raising the debt
ceiling is going out and having a spending spree on your credit
card and then refusing to pay the bill." He's got the analogy
right, but his conclusions are completely wrong. Yes, Congress has
gone on a spending spree and it's time to pay up. But raising the
debt ceiling is like taking out a Mastercard to pay the Visa...
it just makes the problem worse. If you or I go out one night, get
drunk, and run up a huge credit card bill, we know that the way
to fix it is to buckle down and pay it back. We might postpone vacation
plans or put off buying a new car, we might cancel our cable TV
subscription or gym membership. The point is that we would have
to reduce current consumption to make up for the overspending in
the past.
Obama claims
that raising the debt ceiling is about getting a hold of the federal
debt. Have you ever heard of anyone getting out of debt by taking
on more debt? Has anyone ever reduced their debt without reducing
current consumption? How can the Fed Chairman endorse such a preposterous
idea?
Bernanke actually
went a step further and warned against reducing current federal
spending too sharply, claiming that such a move might impede the
"recovery." He apparently believes that it is the role
of the Congress to go on spending sprees, and his role to pay the
mounting bills with freshly printed dollars. The fact that this
formula has produced larger and larger economic crises does not
seem to bother him. I guess ignorance is bliss.
July
15, 2011
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is How
an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes.
Copyright
© 2011 Euro Pacific Capital
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