Déjà
Vu All Over Again. Once More.
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
Kleptocracy
in America
Rarely have
we been criticized for understating trouble. But trouble keeps getting
ahead of us. We can barely keep up with it. So often have we anticipated
disaster or catastrophe that the words now
fall like empty shells. We light the fuses; they dont go off.
Alas, we have become alarmists with no bell or siren. We break the
glass and pull the lever every week, but no sound is heard
except
the familiar words whispered with in a hoarse, weary voice
watch
out!
So today we
turn to the dead for eyewitness accounts:
Otto Freidrich
described the period of German hyperinflation and its effects:
People carried wages home in huge crates; by the time they could
spend even their trillion-mark notes they were practically worthless
There was not a single girl in the entire middle class who could
get married without her father paying a dowry
They saved and
saved so that they could get married, and so it destroyed the whole
idea of remaining chaste until marriage
the girls learned that
virginity didnt matter anymore.
Against
my will, wrote author Stefan Zweig I have witnessed
the most terrible defeat of reason and wildest triumph of brutality
in the chronicles of history. Zweig lived through the hyperinflation
in Germany during the 20s and sold stories to survive. Later,
he moved to Brazil and blew his brains out.
Brutality triumphed
because civilized life was smothered by inflation. The Treaty of
Versailles condemned the Huns to pay more than 47,000 tonnes of
gold in reparations. Taking that amount of real money out of the
economy left the Germans with no choice. They had no money left.
They had to create it. Result: hyperinflation. The size of the banknotes
rose with the crisis. In 1922, the highest denomination was 50,000
Mark. By 1923, the highest denomination was 100,000,000,000,000
Mark. By December 1923 the exchange rate was 4,200,000,000,000 Marks
to 1 US dollar.
The
German middle class was wiped out. More importantly, the handrails
and guideposts wobbled, so there was nothing to hold onto and no
way to know where you were going. Businesses, banks, military, police,
even the government itself everything tottered and fell down.
In the tumult, war-hardened rabble rolled towards Herr Hitler like
loose nuts.
In economics,
begins the Wikipedia description, hyperinflation is inflation
that is very high or out of control
Hyperinflation is often
associated with wars (or their aftermath), economic depressions,
and political or social upheavals. In both classical economics and
monetarism, it is always the result of the monetary authority irresponsibly
borrowing money to pay all its expenses.
Whos
the biggest borrower today? The United States of America. At 12%
of GDP, its deficit is more than twice as large as that of France.
It already owes Japan and China as much as Germany owed its former
enemies in reparations adjusted to todays money. But
Americas debts are far grander than those of Germany in 1923
even relative to the size of the US economy. Where Germany
owed a little over $1 trillion; America if you include private
debt, official government debt, off-budget obligations and internal
commitments owes 100 times as much. And the United States
keeps borrowing more. In a single year 2009 it will
borrow $1.3 trillion, again, just shy of the debt that sank the
Weimar Republic.
While the private
sector during the bubble years brought U.S. debts to a record 3.7
times the entire nations output, now its the public
sector that does the borrowing. The Obama Administration is adding
to the accumulated U.S. debt at a suicidal pace four times
faster than the record set just last year. And Americas central
bank hands the borrower a loaded pistol; it is adding bank reserves
which allow the money supply to expand geometrically
at a 4,500% rate.
That last number
is not a typo. Its an alarm. If the Federal Reserve were a
heart patient, the defibrillators would be on already. If it were
a normal bank, it would be closed down immediately.
But neither
Karl Helferich nor Ben Bernanke set out to ruin their economies.
Central bankers dont do it intentionally; they do it inevitably.
Not because they want to, but because they have to. Like the Germans
in the 20s, America has no politically acceptable way to pay
her growing debts except by printing more money. And now,
her leading intellectuals urge her on. Cometh the hour when the
feds begin to think about cutting back on their program of inflation,
cometh the experts who will tell them to keep at it.
The crisis
seems to be easing, and a chorus of critics is already demanding
that the Federal Reserve and the Obama administration abandon their
rescue efforts, writes Nobel winning economist Paul Krugman
in the New York Times this week. Those demands should
be ignored. Its much too soon to give up on policies that
have
pulled us a few inches back from the abyss.
Its
déjà vu all over again, he concludes, referring
to the Japanese in the 90s and the Americans in the 30s.
In both cases, he thinks their economies died because they turned
off the juice too soon. But people come to think what they must
think when they must think it:
To follow
the good counsel of stopping [the inflation machine] would mean
that in a very short time the entire public, factories, mines, railways
and post office, national and local government, in short, all national
and economic life would be stopped.
Karl Helferich,
Chairman, Central Bank of Germany, 1923.
Déjà
vu, all over again. Once more.
June
22,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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