An Overdue Collapse of Money
by Richard Daughty
Previously
by Richard Daughty: Let
Them Inflate
The Economist
magazine had the Buttonwood blog titled Law of Easy Money,
which immediately gets your hopes up that there is such a thing
as easy money, which actually exists (just ask Connecticuts
Senator Chris Dodd!), but unfortunately not for guys like you and
me who dont have the political power and grease to extort
money and skim taxpayers, which is gratuitously rude and scandalous,
I agree, but which only shows the depth of my contempt for the huge,
huge, cancerously huge, ridiculously and dangerously incompetent,
ignorant and stupid system of governments in America, as exemplified
by the despicable Congress and the even more despicable Senator
Dodd.
But it turns
out that Law of Easy Money was just a clever play on
words, and was the story of how John Law talked Frances king,
Louis XIV, who had borrowed and spent France to bankruptcy, into
letting him start a bank and force everyone to pay their taxes with
a new kind of paper money that Mr. Laws bank would create
and, soon enough, loaning more gigantic supplies of paper money
to finance the development of the kings colonies in the New
World, a fiasco now known as the Mississippi Bubble, an economic
bubble where everybody got wiped out financially, the country was
ruined and the aristocracy had their heads chopped off, which I
am sure was not in the prospectus or brochure that the king got
from Mr. Law.
However, the
essay is not about how the French in the 18th century were a bunch
of buttheads who didnt know any better, or how we are a bigger
bunch of buttheads who should have known better in the 20th century,
or even about how we are going to suffer in the 21st century for
knowing better but not acting better, but about, as the subhead
says, A 300-year-old example of quantitative easing.
Of course,
if you had to read A
Tale of Two Cities in high school where all you learned
was that it opens with the immortal line It was the best of
times, it was the worst of times, or if you have ever seen
a movie on TV about the French Revolution, you know it ends Very,
Very Badly (VVB).
The blog admits
that the parallels with today are not exact, which is
true in that we seem to dress a lot worse in the ruffled-shirt and
hat-with-feathery-plumes department, a grim sartorial fact which
is not mentioned, but two differences which are mentioned are Laws
system took just four years to collapse; todays fiat money
regime has been running for nearly 40 years, and the
growth in money supply has been less excessive this time.
Lest you take
any cheer from that, beware that the summation says, But one
lesson from Laws sorry tale endures: attempts to maintain
asset prices above their fundamental value are eventually doomed
to failure.
And what big
failures they are going to be, too, as I gather from The Wall
Street Journal reporting that Much to their dismay, Americans
learned last year that they owned Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac. Well, meet their cousin, Ginnie Mae or the Government National
Mortgage Association, which will soon join them as a trillion-dollar
packager of subprime mortgages. Trillion-dollar!
In case you
didnt know, Ginnies mission is to bundle, guarantee
and then sell mortgages insured by the Federal Housing Administration,
which is Uncle Sams home mortgage shop. Ginnies growth
is a by-product of the FHAs spectacular growth. The FHA now
insures $560 billion of mortgages quadruple the amount in
2006.
Now,
the scam has gotten so huge that Among the FHA, Ginnie, Fannie
and Freddie, nearly nine of every 10 new mortgages in America now
carry a federal taxpayer guarantee! Yikes! 90 percent of mortgages!
This probably
explains why Only last week, Ginnie announced that it issued
a monthly record of $43 billion in mortgage-backed securities in
June, which is pretty astonishing when you multiply $43 billion
in one month by 12 months in a year, and I suggest you not do it
because the answer will scare you to death.
Not so astonishing,
then, is the news that Ginnie Maes mortgage exposure
is expected to top $1 trillion by the end of next year or
far more than double the dollar amount of 2007.
And
all of this money, all these trillions and trillions in new money,
must come, directly or indirectly, from the Federal Reserve creating
it, which means that A Lot Of New Money (ALONM) is being jammed
into the economy, which means (if you are a Junior Mogambo Ranger
(JMR)) that the government is acting like irresponsible halfwit
scumbags, and doubly so in letting the Federal Reserve do it, and
that history has shown that the only thing that is going to save
your proletariat butt in the inevitable collapse is gold.
History is
not quite as convincing about armored bunkers in ones backyard
or the efficacy of sheer firepower against the sustained assault
of hordes of desperate, angry, starving people in a decidedly nothing
to lose mood who are outraged that they were betrayed when
they trusted the value of the dollar and the Federal Reserve supposedly
maintaining its purchasing power via monetary policy, and they trusted
the Congress to handle fiscal policy wisely and who had the power
to control the Federal Reserves handling of monetary policy,
but well soon see!
But at least
we have the safety and security of gold!
August
25, 2009
Richard Daughty (Mogambo
Guru) is general partner and COO for Smith Consultant Group, serving
the financial and medical communities, and the writer/publisher
of the Mogambo Guru economic newsletter, an avocational exercise
to better heap disrespect on those who desperately deserve it. The
Mogambo Guru is quoted frequently in Barrons, The
Daily Reckoning, and other fine publications.
Copyright
© 2009 Daily Reckoning
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