Real
Money for Mexico
by
Eric Englund
by Eric Englund
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"Concern
for man himself and his fate must always be the chief interest
of all technical endeavors... In order that the creations of our
mind shall be a blessing and not a curse to mankind. Never forget
this in the midst of your diagrams and equations."
~ Albert
Einstein
Bill Gates
and Warren Buffett certainly enjoy basking in the headlines
related to their joint philanthropic endeavors as undertaken by
the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation. An integral aspect of this foundation’s
mission is to provide financial
services to the poor including loans, insurance, wire transfers,
and savings accounts. Along these lines, Muhammad Yunus and his
Grameen Bank were jointly awarded the 2006
Nobel Peace Prize "…for their efforts to create economic
and social development from below. Lasting peace can not be achieved
unless large population groups find ways in which to break out of
poverty. Micro-credit
is one such means." Perhaps, someday, Messrs. Gates and Buffett
will similarly find themselves to be Peace Prize laureates. However,
all of the global economic development efforts of Muhammad Yunus,
Bill Gates, and Warren Buffett may be for naught if Hugo Salinas
Price and his Mexican
Civic Association for Silver are not successful in bringing
honest money back into circulation in Mexico; thereby, providing
a model for the rest of the world to follow.
On the surface,
Muhammad Yunus’ vision of creating a poverty-free world is a compelling
one – yet, it is fundamentally flawed in that he is promoting indebtedness
instead of savings. His idea is not to provide charity to the poor
but too provide small loans so that such borrowers can start small
businesses, become self-sufficient, and pull themselves out of poverty.
Here are his exact words, pertaining to providing credit to the
poor, from an interview
with the Nobel Foundation:
People come
out of poverty every day. So it's right in front of us what happens
and it can be done globally, it can be done more forcefully, we
can organize more things to go with it, so this is something not
theoretical…it's a very real issue. People can change their own
lives, provided they have the right kind of institutional support.
They're not asking for charity, charity is no solution to poverty…We
didn't do anything special; lend money to the people so – but
they never lent it to the poor people – all we did was we lent
it to the poor people, and that makes the trick. That makes the
change.
Debt promotion
aside, what a wonderful message the Norwegian
Nobel Committee has delivered to the world. There is, indeed,
a connection between entrepreneurship, business, and peace. Entrepreneurs
know that violent and hateful behavior, towards customers, pave
the road to business failure. Consequently, peaceful and mutually
beneficial relationships naturally emerge between business and customers.
By putting money in the hands of the poor (via micro-credit), Muhammad
Yunus desires to plant the seeds for prosperity one person and,
typically, one family at a time. Where prosperity takes root, peace
is bound to grow as well.
With money
being a powerful human construct, it is important to understand
that a moral dimension is bound up within money. What immediately
comes to mind is the following biblical quote: "For the love
of money is the root of all evil: which while some coveted after,
they have erred from the faith, and pierced themselves through with
many sorrows." What many fail to grasp is that money, which
emerged spontaneously via the self-interested actions of individuals,
allows for specialization and the division of labor. Accordingly,
today’s vast array of goods and services never could have become
available, to the masses, without the prior emergence of money.
Hence, money (i.e. gold and silver) has served humanity well and
should be viewed as having a positive moral dimension.
Does Muhammad
Yunus, as reflected by the actions of his Grameen Bank, truly understand
the positive moral dimension of money? Or does Yunus view money
as a useful, therefore coercive, social-engineering tool? Jeffrey
Tucker, in his essay Will
Microcredit Save The World?, provides a most troubling answer
– as demonstrated by the following excerpt:
The repayment
tactics of Yunus are very disturbing. He assembles peer groups
to lean on delinquent borrowers, and makes political-mental reconstruction
a condition of the loans, which nowadays are taken out in order
to repay previous loans and so on. His "Sixteen Decisions"
that must be adopted by all borrowers read like a party platform
for collectivist regimentation.
- "We
shall take part in all social activities collectively"
- "We
shall grow vegetables all the year round. We shall eat plenty
of them and sell the surplus."
- "We
shall build and use pit-latrines."
- "If
we come to know of any breach of discipline in any centre, we
shall all go there and help restore discipline."
Regardless
of Muhammad Yunus’ noble intentions, burdening the poor with debt
and "collectivist regimentation", in the long run, is
more likely to deepen the problem of poverty than to solve it.
Notwithstanding
the considerable defects of Muhammad Yunus’ vision of stamping out
poverty, there is an American institution working at cross-purposes
to his efforts. This institution is the Federal
Reserve. Straight away, the morality of this institution should
be questioned as it has been bestowed, by the U.S. government, the
monopoly power to create money out of thin air. Such a monopoly
power is tantamount to legalized counterfeiting; which benefits
the very wealthy at the expense of the middle class and the poor.
Murray Rothbard provides an excellent explanation
as to the depraved consequences of the Federal Reserve’s practices:
What will
be the consequences? First, there will be a clear gain to the
counterfeiters. They take the newly-created money and use it to
buy goods and services. In the words of the famous New Yorker
cartoon, showing a group of counterfeiters in sober contemplation
of their handiwork: "Retail spending is about to get a needed
shot in the arm." Precisely. Local spending, indeed, does
get a shot in the arm. The new money works its way, step by step,
throughout the economic system. As the new money spreads, it bids
prices up – as we have seen, new money can only dilute the effectiveness
of each dollar. But this dilution takes time and is therefore
uneven; in the meantime, some people gain and other people lose.
In short, the counterfeiters and their local retailers have found
their incomes increased before any rise in the prices of the things
they buy. But, on the other hand, people in remote areas of the
economy, who have not yet received the new money, find their buying
prices rising before their incomes. Retailers at the other end
of the country, for example, will suffer losses. The first receivers
of the new money gain most, and at the expense of the latest receivers.
Inflation,
then, confers no general social benefit; instead, it redistributes
the wealth in favor of the first-comers and at the expense of
the laggards in the race. And inflation is, in effect, a race
– to see who can get the new money earliest. The latecomers –
the ones stuck with the loss – are often called the "fixed income
groups." Ministers, teachers, people on salaries, lag notoriously
behind other groups in acquiring the new money. Particular sufferers
will be those depending on fixed money contracts – contracts made
in the days before the inflationary rise in prices. Life insurance
beneficiaries and annuitants, retired persons living off pensions,
landlords with long term leases, bondholders and other creditors,
those holding cash, all will bear the brunt of the inflation.
They will be the ones who are "taxed." (Italics in the original)
Here is a revealing
article
portraying how the Bank of England’s legalized counterfeiting, presently,
is negatively impacting Britain’s middle class and its poor – unfolding
exactly as Murray Rothbard elucidated above.
So, what is
happening in the United States? Since the founding of the Federal
Reserve in 1913, according to the Bureau
of Labor Statistics, the U.S. dollar has lost over 95% of it
purchasing power. Moreover, since President Nixon severed the dollar’s
last tenuous link to gold on August 15, 1971, the dollar’s purchasing
power has depreciated by 80%.
When one finally
understands the immoral and pernicious tax that is inflation, is
it any wonder that America’s rich
are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer? Families
in America, clearly, are struggling to make ends meet because the
prices of goods and services are rising over time; directly due
to the dollar's depreciation brought on by the Federal Reserve’s
inflationary policies. Using a little bit of logic here, doesn't
it stand to reason that it will be more difficult to climb out of
poverty if the overall prices of goods and services are escalating
continuously? This has international implications.
President Nixon’s
August 15, 1971unilateral withdrawal, from the Bretton
Woods Agreement, put the world on a purely fiat-money standard.
Although Uncle Sam had essentially declared national bankruptcy,
central banks across the world continued to use U.S. dollars as
the reserve currency of choice – knowing full well that the link
to gold had been obliterated. As long as the world’s central bankers
maintained confidence in the full faith and credit of the United
States, the international dollar-reserve system would remain in
tact. And it has remained so.
With the discipline
of gold, regrettably, having been expunged from the monetary system,
the international dollar-reserve scheme has allowed for an explosion
in the amount of fiat dollars created by the Federal Reserve. Alas,
America’s leading export, as shown by the following table,
is inflation itself. One must keep in mind that the classic, and
proper, definition of inflation means increasing the quantity of
money and bank notes in circulation and the quantity of bank deposits
subject to check.

To think that
reserves at central banks have gone from $56 billion, in 1970, up
to nearly $4.6 trillion by 2006, is incomprehensible. Today much
of these reserves are merely account balances represented by nothing
more than abstract digits in a computer.
Per Alan Greenspan’s
November 14, 2005 speech
– delivered to the Banco de Mexico – he confirmed that approximately
60% of foreign exchange reserves were held in the form of U.S. dollars
and 25% in the form of Euros. Although Europe is having some success
in having its particular brand of fiat money accepted internationally,
the United States is still the kingpin of exporting inflation.
With the dollar
being accepted around the world, as a medium of exchange, the Federal
Reserve’s irresponsible inflation of its own brand of money (the
dollar) has dire international ramifications. Frank Shostak provides
an apt description
of what Uncle Sam is doing on a global basis:
Consequently,
by means of money, which was created out of "thin air," …the counterfeiter
can consume without any production. Note that the money here,
which was created out of "thin air," is not supported by any production
of useful goods or services. Or we can also say that here we have
a case where nothing useful is exchanged for money and money is
exchanged for useful things – nothing is exchanged for something
useful by means of money out of "thin air."
He further
states that:
It follows
then that the diversion of real wealth from wealth generators
to non-wealth generators by means of increases in the money supply
is what inflation is all about. Or we can say that inflation is
about the economic impoverishment of wealth producers, which is
set in motion by means of inflating the stock of money.
Hugo Salinas
Price is acutely aware that the United States is plundering the
Earth’s wealth via exchanging dollars, created out of thin air,
for tangible products manufactured worldwide. Mr. Salinas is one
of Mexico’s leading businessmen and, over the past 55 years, has
guided Grupo
Elektra to become one of Mexico’s most successful business enterprises.
He holds degrees from Wharton and ITESM
as well as a law degree from the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de
Mexico. Mr. Salinas, moreover, is a renowned monetary expert, in
North America, and has spearheaded the movement to remonetize
silver in Mexico. This is a man who has seen, first hand, how
Uncle Sam’s profligate inflation can leave a country’s entire economy
in shambles – this happened to Mexico in 1994.
Hugo Salinas
Price’s essay, Why
are the Americans Smiling?,
cogently describes how the international dollar-reserve standard
is little more than a wealth transfer scheme exploiting the poor
and burgeoning middle classes the world over. He states the…
…U.S. has
transferred its inflation, to the rest of the world, exporting
it in the form of dollar reserves in Central Banks around the
world.
When dollars
arrive in foreign countries, the local Central Bank purchases
the dollars in exchange for the local currency. More reserves
equals more local currency. More currency means prices rise; as
prices rise, cheap exports to the U.S. decline. The remedy: devaluation.
Other countries must devalue their currencies in order to have
the privilege of receiving papers from the U.S. Devaluation destroys
local financial and productive systems, because in order to persuade
local savers from exchanging their local currencies for dollars,
interest rates, for instance in Mexican pesos, are raised. Mexico
and Brazil are classic cases.
It is a curious
fact that not one Nobel Prize winner has pointed out these extraordinary
circumstances. The reason must be, that dollar reserves are such
a gigantic tribute operation, that it is not convenient to point
out these things. (Italics in the original)
Not only does
this 1999 essay describe the economic carnage – caused by the Federal
Reserve – in Mexico and Brazil, it is also applicable to other economic
implosions
during the 1990s. Think of Indonesia, South Korea, and Thailand.
As the 1990s
melted away, more economic turmoil, caused by the dollar-reserve
scheme, would welcome humanity into the new millennium. Argentina
became another victim of America’s "gigantic tribute operation."
Indeed, Argentina’s poor and middle classes would bear the brunt
of the economic collapse and would suffer a financially devastating
confiscatory deflation
imposed by the very plutocrats who support a fiat-money system.
In his essay,
What
Really Killed Argentina?, Salinas skillfully exposes
how the dollar-reserve standard gutted Argentina’s economy. To wit:
As most readers
well know, the [Bretton Woods] Agreement was violated by President
Nixon on August 15, 1971, when he "closed the gold window",
and refused to continue redeeming dollars in the hands of foreign
Central Banks, for gold, at any price.
With a dollar
that did not have to be redeemed, as of 1971 the U.S. was free
to expand credit out of nothing, and this expansion of credit
resulted in conditions which led the American people to believe
themselves superior in many ways, to the rest of the world.
As the years
went on, credit – debt that is – kept expanding and this expansion
of credit, led to more money in the hands of the public. The U.S.
public proceeded to buy anything and everything the world had
to offer, and send dollars in payment, to such an extent that
today, dollars in the amount of some $400 billion a year, leave
the U.S. to purchase goods and services, and even for the purchase
of all sorts of assets all over the world.
The other
side of this "exorbitant privilege" for the U.S., is
a corresponding "exorbitant impoverishment" for the
rest of the world.
It is essential
to recognize that the U.S. trade deficit of $400 billion a year,
is really a tax on the whole world, for the benefit of the U.S.
Imports are
not really paid with dollars sent abroad. Imports are only actually
paid with exports of goods and services. Since the U.S. has no
intention of ever actually paying for present and past imports,
with goods and services, and bringing back to the U.S. the immense
amount of dollars sent abroad through its accumulated trade deficits,
that yearly trade deficit amounts to a yearly tax on the rest
of the world. The accumulated taxation extorted by the U.S., is
huge…The measure of the taxation is the amount of Central Bank
reserves – in dollars – which have built up enormously since 1971.
That is what
really killed Argentina: U.S. taxation through the monetary system
which prevails, and which allows the U.S. to buy things without
paying for them.
The process
of enriching the U.S. through this exaction of tribute – the correct
word – is matched by a corresponding impoverishment of the rest
of the world.
Five years
after Salinas wrote this essay, Uncle Sam’s exaction of tribute
has over doubled in size. For calendar year 2006, the United States’
trade deficit is expected to hit $866
billion.
Of course,
this trade deficit mushroomed in conjunction with America’s housing
bubble. As the housing bubble grew in size, courtesy of the Federal
Reserve’s reckless creation of money and credit, millions of Americans
borrowed against home equity to buy products manufactured the world
over. Such Americans, in reality, grew poorer by going deeper into
debt while Wall Street and the banking cartel cheered on while fostering
a shallow American culture of debt addiction and mindless consumption.
It is the very
rich who truly benefit from the international dollar-reserve
scheme; as they are the ones closest in proximity to the printing
press.
Along these
lines, Salinas has written
poignantly as to the poverty and cultural rot fiat inflation (i.e.
the printing press) has inflicted upon Mexico.
In cultural
and human terms the use of simulated money has cost Mexico the
disintegration of the institutions which have given shape to our
nationality. The cultural and human stature of each Mexican has
been severely reduced; we have all with no exceptions fallen into
an endless race for survival. Simulated money is a merciless master
who grants neither peace nor tranquility, and who imperiously
and ceaselessly orders: "Work! Work! Work!" One hundred
million Mexicans are submissive slaves of the system of simulated
money.
Faced with
a history of destruction of our culture, of our institutions and
of the human dimensions of Mexicans, not to mention the impoverishment
which has resulted from the devaluation of our currency, all attributable
to the simulated Peso, the Central Bank remains supremely unconcerned;
however, the consequences of abandoning real money in favor of
simulated money are inevitable, not only for Mexico, but for the
rest of the world as well, which is suffering the same destructive
process. (Italics added)
There is an
undeniable link between social decay and simulated money. Fiat inflation
brings about economic instability, social unrest, chaos, and misery.
In other words, fiat money creates social conditions completely
antithetical to peace and widespread prosperity. Salinas, clearly,
is profoundly aware of this.
Mexico is a
poor country yet, paradoxically, rich in natural resources including
a hard-working labor pool. Being a successful businessman, and a
student of Austrian economics, Hugo Salinas Price understands that
saving provides the foundation for capital accumulation and economic
growth. As Ludwig von Mises stated:
The only
source of the generation of additional capital goods is saving.
If all the goods produced are consumed, no new capital comes into
being.
Mises also
said:
Capital is
not a free gift of God or of nature. It is the outcome of a provident
restriction of consumption on the part of man. It is created and
increased by saving and maintained by the abstention from dissaving.
With the Mexican
peso, however, being nothing more than a derivative
of the dollar, there is little incentive for Mexicans to save
their ever-depreciating currency – inflation encourages spending
not saving. Such inflation hinders Mexico’s organic growth of business
and industry. Inflation, additionally, as exported by the U.S. to
Mexico, makes it more difficult for individuals and families to
rise out of poverty. As mentioned above, it stands to reason that
it is much harder to climb out of poverty when the prices of goods
and services continue to rise due to Uncle Sam’s profligate inflation.
After Mexico’s
economy tanked, in late 1994, Salinas was determined to find a means
to protect Mexicans from the ravages of the fiat-dollar reserve
scheme. Such a means, correspondingly, would encourage Mexicans
to save; thus, providing a foundation for capital accumulation,
entrepreneurship, job growth, and, thereby, planting the seeds for
long-term prosperity and peace. After much thought, the answer was
clear: Mexico must remonetize silver. This is why Salinas founded
the Mexican Civic Association for Silver. He shares his thoughts,
on the matter of remonetizing silver, in his essay Silver’s
Three Flags:
Silver turned
into Mexican money, circulating in parallel with paper money,
no matter how insignificant the importance of that small amount
of silver in the nation’s economy, means that Mexicans will always
remember that silver can actually be used as real, honest money.
And that as the years pass, it will always be there, inviting
us to use it in the most dangerous and dark times that may come.
Silver in
circulation will serve to remind us that it is possible for a
society to use silver and benefit from the use of real money,
honest money.
Otherwise,
it is possible that we may forget this, as has happened to many
nations in the world.
When Mexico
monetizes silver, it will become a lighthouse of hope for the
world, a light that shows the way out of the swamp of slavery
and perpetual impoverishment that comes with paper money.
Paper money,
which is today the only kind of money in the world, ensures economic
and therefore political control over the populations that use
it. The planet’s banking caste that issues paper money and virtual,
electronic money, threatens to become the sovereign power through
the fictitious money it issues, and aspires to dominate all humanity.
The outcome
of paper money is the dehumanization of the human race.
This is silver’s
third and most important flag: the cause of humanity.
Hugo Salinas
Price’s plan, to remonetize silver in Mexico, is straightforward
and workable. In his own words, here are the three key elements
of his proposal:
- The one
troy ounce pure silver coin minted by the Mexican Mint, which
is currently an official coin with certain quite limited legal
tender characteristics, and which is one of the "Libertad"
series of silver coins, will be selected as the coin to circulate
in parallel with paper (fiduciary) pesos. This coin has no nominal
value engraved upon it. This is an essential characteristic of
any coin that is to circulate in parallel with paper money.
- The Mexican
Central Bank will issue a daily quote on the full legal tender
value of the one-ounce "Libertad" coin, expressed in
fiduciary pesos. At its quoted legal tender value, the coin is
good for all types of payments, without discount of any sort.
- The Mexican
Central Bank will not reduce any quoted value of the "Libertad"
ounce in fiduciary pesos, in any future quote. Successive quotes
may stipulate a higher value in fiduciary pesos; or, there may
be no change in a quote for a period of time; but in any case,
there will never be a lower quote for the "Libertad"
ounce.
For further
details about his plan, I highly recommend that you read his essay
How
to Introduce a Silver Coin into Circulation in Mexico: The Hybrid
Coin.
Due to his
tireless efforts, Salinas played the pivotal role in seeing to it
that a bill
be introduced to the Mexican Congress with regard to remonetizing
silver in Mexico. He did not stand alone with respect to this undertaking:
- Governors
from all 31 Mexican states sent a letter to the Ways and Means
Committee, of the Mexican House of Representatives, to urge approval
of legislation to remonetize silver.
- Nearly 200
Mexican journalists signed a declaration in support of the legislation.
- A poll,
by the Mexican television network TV Azteca, found that 96 percent
of viewers approved of the idea to remonetize the silver ounce.
In spite of
such popular support, Mexico’s Congress has yet to pass legislation
to remonetize silver. To be sure, by thwarting the endeavor to remonetize
silver, it is obvious that the U.S. is not the only country where
wealthy elites care nothing for the working classes. Those Mexicans,
who support the current fiat regime, do so for personal gain that
comes at the monumental expense of fellow citizens.
Due to the
depredations of the global fiat-dollar reserve scheme, the longer
the Mexican Congress delays passing legislation to remonetize silver,
the poorer the vast majority of Mexicans will become. Let’s look
at just one glaring example. Mexico is the second-leading
silver mining country in the world while also being a major
player in gold production. In 2005, Mexico exported
over $1 billion worth of gold and silver. Internationally, with
gold and silver being traded in terms of dollars, Mexicans are trading
valuable precious metals for Uncle Sam’s worthless paper tickets.
To literally give away national treasure can only serve to further
impoverish Mexicans.
Enough is enough.
As Jose Alberto Villasana Munguia, vice president of the Mexican
Civic Association for Silver, has stated:
At this time,
money is the most important subject upon which it behooves us
to reflect. Our civilization has arrived at a crucial point and
we must carry out a correct diagnosis. Money is like the blood
of society and that is why we are paying the consequences of its
corruption. When someone can lie with regard to money, he can
lie with regard to anything. If the basic unit of account is only
a fiction, then the whole structure is unstable, with the gravest
consequences imaginable.
It is not
possible to carry out a full reform of the monetary system. False,
fiat money will break down under its own falsity, but not without
causing enormous damage to humanity in a collapse of a magnitude
never before witnessed.
In Mexico
we have a lifesaver with the opportunity to preempt the coming
financial collapse through the introduction of the "Libertad"
silver ounce into the Mexican monetary system. This coin possesses
a value in itself, it does not depend on dollar reserves to be
worth something. Its precious metal content prevents its devaluation
and its official quote, adjustable upward, guarantees that it
will never leave circulation.
We must use
silver as a bridge, over which we may move forward from the fictitious
economy to the real economy, by applying a fiat characteristic
to the stability and real existence of the precious metal.
The entire
globe must come to grips with the socially destabilizing fiat-money
scheme perpetrated by the world’s central banks. Ever since the
dollar ceased being backed by gold, there has been a global explosion
of fiat inflation and debt; which are saddling countries, families,
and individuals on every corner of the Earth. Muhammad Yunus is
simply extending humanity’s debt affliction to the poorest people
alive. Indebtedness can be a cruel master and has been known to
tear families apart. Debt should not be considered a keystone of
global peace.
Hugo Salinas
Price, on the other hand, is not fooled by the debt-hawking, mathematical-economics
wizards populating central banks. Due to his deep understanding
of Austrian economics, he comprehends that not a single one of these
wizards actually knows what the "correct" interest rate
should be and what the "correct" money supply is. To be
sure, central bankers can wow us with complex mathematical equations,
diagrams, and impressive sounding jargon; all to continue justifying
the stealthy process of transferring wealth, via fiat inflation,
from the world’s poor and middle classes to the very wealthy. Hence,
the technical endeavor, of central banking, is not to bless mankind
with stable money (i.e. gold and silver) but is to eternally curse
humanity with the pernicious tax that is fiat inflation and with
debt slavery – remember, under a fractional reserve banking system,
money is loaned into existence. Thank heavens Salinas, and his Mexican
Civic Association for Silver, have the courage, and staying power,
to stand up to the powerful plutocracy in Mexico – which kowtows
to America’s moneyed elites. And, thankfully, Salinas has provided
a roadmap, paved in silver, to get Mexico out of the mess the Banco
de Mexico and the Federal Reserve have jointly created.
Thirty-two
years ago there was a lonely voice, similar to my friend Hugo’s,
imploring economists to stop the madness that is fiat inflation.
The following is the opening paragraph of Friedrich A. Hayek’s lecture
to the memory of Alfred Nobel, delivered on December 11, 1974, titled
The
Pretence of Knowledge:
The particular
occasion of this lecture, combined with the chief practical problem
which economists have to face today, have made the choice of its
topic almost inevitable. On the one hand the still recent establishment
of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Science marks a significant
step in the process by which, in the opinion of the general public,
economics has been conceded some of the dignity and prestige of
the physical sciences. On the other hand, the economists are at
this moment called upon to say how to extricate the free world
from the serious threat of accelerating inflation which, it must
be admitted, has been brought about by policies which the majority
of economists recommended and even urged governments to pursue.
We have indeed at the moment little cause for pride: as a profession
we have made a mess of things.
Friedrich A.
Hayek is the only Austrian economist to have won the Nobel Prize
in economics. Alas, his courageous words have been ignored considering
that central bank fiat-money reserves have increased nearly 8,000%
since he delivered his Prize Lecture. Mainstream mathematical economists,
undeniably, have chosen power and prestige over humankind.
In light of
the mind-numbing fiat inflation produced by central bankers, Salinas
no longer believes the world can be extricated from this monumental
fiat-money mess. In his own words:
I do not
believe that the world’s monetary and financial system can be
reformed; any attempt at reform would decimate the world’s economic
activity instantly. There is no alternative: we have to let the
world’s monetary and financial system proceed to its own destruction;
we cannot "go back to gold".
What we must
therefore strive for, as possible, is the reintroduction of silver
or gold – or even both – to circulate in parallel, along with
the fiat paper money we presently use everywhere. Eventually,
the world fiat money system will destroy itself through its own
inherent defects. Humanity has selected gold and silver as money.
No other metals or objects have served humanity as well. The precious
metals will never be supplanted by fiat money. The fiat money
time we are living in, is an aberration in an instant in human
history which will soon pass.
Just like Hayek,
Salinas is willing to speak truth to power. His endeavor, to remonetize
silver in Mexico, towers above politically-correct, "world-improving"
concepts such as giving away billions of dollars (Gates and Buffett)
and loaning money to the poor (Yunus). America has become the world’s
"mouth" and it is consuming/destroying capital at an alarming
rate. Each day the dollar-reserve scheme survives, the world grows
poorer. A highly successful businessman, such as Salinas, could
simply ignore this fact, enjoy the substantial fruits of his labor,
give some money to charity, and turn his back on the plight of Mexicans.
Instead, this man of considerable courage, intellect, and wealth
has chosen to confront Mexico’s plutocracy at great personal risk.
No stakes are higher. For if the inflationists win, Mexico will
continue down its path to utter destitution and social chaos.
Conversely,
if Salinas’ silver remonetization plan is adopted, this will be
akin to building a bridge from economic darkness (wrought by modern
central banking), to a place where saving, capital formation, and
entrepreneurship will allow prosperity to emerge from the ashes
of fiat money. Salinas is keenly aware that prosperity’s silver
lining is peace itself. Hence, the Norwegian Nobel Committee should
take great interest in Hugo Salinas Price’s body of work, and personal
sacrifice, as there is no greater advocate for peace on this planet.
To award the
Nobel Peace Prize, to Hugo Salinas Price, will enhance the stature
of the prize itself while sending the world a resounding message
that sound money is a fundamental underpinning of peace.
January
9, 2007
Eric
Englund [send him mail], who
has an MBA from Boise State University, lives in the state of Oregon.
He is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You
are invited to visit his website.
Copyright
© 2007 Eric Englund
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