Raiding the Vaults
by
Sean Corrigan
by Sean Corrigan
As
part of the recent G7 jamboree, there was the nauseating display
of a sackcloth-and-ashes session where, to the accompaniment of
yet another well-meaning, but economically untutored bromide by
Rock’s very own St. Francis – U2 frontman, Bono much hypocritical
wailing was expended on the problems of the world’s poor.
[And
this as if the twin evils of the West’s meddlesome foreign policy
and its unyielding economic mercantilism were totally innocent of
any role in helping successive swarms of tinpot militarists, local
warlords, and tribal banditti from battening on the lifeblood of
the Third World’s downtrodden producers and would-be property-holders!]
So,
the issue of forgiving some or all of the obligations owed by the
most indebted pauper nations, either to sovereign governments directly
or to their supranational arm, the IMF, arose once more, amid much
high sounding self-congratulation.
Incidentally,
much less "forgiveness," no self-respecting libertarian
would cavil at a free people wholly repudiating any debts contracted
in their name by the members of their former political elites, especially
where this was done with the less-than-disinterested connivance
of alien powers, themselves pursuing either cynical Realpolitik
or "Open Door" corporatist vote-buying (most likely, both).
This
is because that same libertarian’s profound respect for the sanctity
of private contracts, voluntarily entered into, does not extend
to the case of one temporary office-grubber forcibly pledging his
subjects’ inviolable liberties to another, often over the time span
of generations.
In
any case, at this summit, the upshot was to forgive much of this
debt and then to replace the value of the written-down assets on
the IMF's balance sheet either with the proceeds of actual physical
gold sales, or simply by means of a revaluation of what is said
to lie presently in its vaults.
UK
Chancellor Brown was typically vocal in letting it be known that
he favoured the first option (no doubt, to replicate his fabulous
investment success in selling the Bank of England's gold at multi-decade
lows), largely on the grounds that a simple revaluation would smack
too much of "creative accounting" this from a man who has
up to £100 billion in off-balance sheet liabilities hanging over
the British tax-payer in his Mussolini-style "public-private partnership"
deals!!!
[Of
course, too, the practice of carrying the existing debt – unlikely,
by implication, ever to be repaid in full on the books at
face value, is somehow NOT creative accounting. Such is the twisted
world of international politics.]
Whatever
the intrigues, we must ask ourselves, if the gold is actually sold,
should it affect investment policy in any way? Certainly, this may
represent a short-term negative for the market to the extent that:
- the gold
has not already been lent on and used to cover forward sales by
miners or speculators
- the idea
has not already been discounted
- any sales
are conducted in a disruptive fashion so hurting the prospects
of several of the countries who are supposed to benefit from the
debt write-off
- sales,
rather than revaluations actually DO take place, and
- people
would not now rather not swap paper dollars for hard metal, to
a degree they would not 23 years ago when this was first
mooted
We
can see, then, that no malign effects are at all guaranteed to come
to pass, though neither should their prospect be too lightly dismissed.
As
for any longer term impact, well, gold has effectively been fully
officially demonetized for some time past, so an IMF clearance would
have no import either for policy or psychology on that score, however
much the Goldbugs might gnash their teeth about it.
What
also must be recognized is that any such release would come at a
time when mine supply itself may be in some jeopardy as soaring
energy and materials costs and a weaker dollar hurt a wide range
of producers, especially where these have been "high-grading" their
exploitation of reserves (concentrating on the easier pickings)
throughout the long years of a depressed gold price.
Then,
again, we know that both the Chinese and Russian central banks have
recently given speeches in favour of the metal so one ironic
possibility is that these two heavyweights might happily undertake
(or encourage others in their country to undertake) a convenient
exchange of their overlarge holdings of USD for the IMF's swag.
Furthermore,
our petrodollar-soaked, confiscation-wary Arab friends might not
be averse to such a deal either (though both these suggestions must
remain highly conjectural).
Finally,
as commodities are slowly coming to enjoy a long overdue vogue among
the traditional investment community, our very own pension funds
and insurers may take up the slack, even if the world's export surplus
nations do not.
All
in all, then, this sort of action may help moderate any underlying
trend in the appetite for hard assets vs. paper currencies, but
it is unlikely to reverse it entirely.
Now,
how about mandating a complete debt forgiveness; liquidating the
then-insolvent IMF and distributing any remaining gold, pro rata,
to its owners – the Western taxpayers; enacting a complete abolition
of all trade tariffs, subsides, and quotas; then, as a quid pro
quo, announcing an immediate cessation of all foreign aid?
This
would instantly encourage Third World entrepreneurship and stimulate
mutually-beneficial global commerce (and so help dissipate international
hatreds).
Simultaneously,
it would mean we desist from the practice of propping up "friendly"
despots and that we no longer subsidize the no-less debilitating,
if more outwardly humane, socialist boondoggles which such monies
invariably underwrite in the hallowed "democracies" of
the poor?
That
would be a surefire way of unlocking more wealth than is contained
in all the world’s hoards of gold, whether in or out of the IMF’s
vaults.
Maybe
we could even get Bono to write a song about it…
February
16, 2005
Sean
Corrigan [send him mail]
is an investment analyst in Switzerland.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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