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Madmen, Gamblers,
Alcoholics, the US Dollar and Gold
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By Ron Hera
Nov 30 2009 3:58PM
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If a lawless gang of madmen, gamblers and alcoholics
seized control of a large company, how would you expect the business to
perform? How would you expect the story to end? What if, instead of a
company, they seized control of the world’s largest economy, thus, to
some extent, the world financial system?
Unsound monetary policy, reckless risk taking, and
out-of-control spending are what characterize the US economy today. The
proverbial madmen are central bankers, i.e., the US Federal Reserve, whose
polices, inspired by Johannes Gutenberg, threaten to destroy the US dollar
in the name of saving US banks from their own irresponsibility and greed.
The compulsive gamblers are Wall Street investment banks, along with the
largest US banks, which have gone so far as to speculate with government
bailout money, having learned little from the near collapse of the world
financial system in 2008. If money were liquor, the US federal government
would be a band of raging alcoholics in charge of a liquor store. These are
the tragic characters upon whom Americans depend for their jobs, for their
college and retirement funds, for the financing of their educations, homes
and business ventures, for the stability of prices and US financial
markets, and for the value of their hard earned savings.
The triangle of dysfunction has not gone without notice.
Foreign purchases of US Treasury bonds are being made, essentially, under
duress while demand for Treasuries remains tepid and quantitative easing by
the Federal Reserve continues. The US dollar has fallen from new low to new
low and the skyrocketing price of gold is sounding the alarm, but between
Washington DC and Wall Street nary an ear can hear.
The Madmen
The incurable incapacity
of a central autocracy to accurately match interest rates and the money
supply to the requirements of the diverse, complex markets that make up the
US economy is a fundamental flaw in US monetary policy. While the ideology
may be different, central economic planning under the name of central
banking produces no better result than central economic planning under the
name of communism. A series of ever larger economic bubbles coupled with an
ever weaker currency is ultimately little better than the economic
stagnation of the former Soviet system. Low interest rates may stimulate
economic activity, for example, but they may also result in high inflation,
unsustainable levels of debt, and asset price bubbles.
For every intervention in the free market, whether by
government edict or monetary policy, there are unintended consequences.
Government intervention in the US housing market, for example, intended to
increase opportunities for home ownership among less successful members of
society, played a key role in undermining lending standards. Combined with
the Federal Reserve’s policy of low interest rates, which fueled
speculation in real estate and mortgage backed securities, government
intervention ultimately proved disastrous.
Markets have existed since the dawn of human civilization
without the blessings either of government subsidies and guarantees or of
central banking. An economy is best described as an organic system rather
than a machine. Interventions purporting to be the processes required to
‘operate’ the economy are at best futile if not inevitably
disruptive and destructive. Like a living organism, the economy is largely
self organizing and self regulating. When governments collapse, for
example, currencies may fail but trade marches on. The behavior of an
economy is an infinitely complex aggregate of individual human actions
driven by self-interest and, while it may be characterized at different
times either by rationality or by irrationality, it is self correcting
(unlike interventions, which know no bounds). As a result, it is not
possible for a small group of experts, no matter how intelligent or well
intentioned, who have an imperfect understanding and incomplete, inevitably
out-of-date information to successfully control the economy without
unintended, unexpected and usually destructive consequences.
The notion that a central authority, even one equipped with
sophisticated computer models, can successfully substitute a
mathematically-based view from on high for the individual judgments of
millions of businesses, entrepreneurs, and consumers across countless
regions and industries is not merely the height of hubris but quite simply
mad. Fundamentally, it is entrepreneurs deploying private capital, not
bankers or economists that create the products, services, business, and
jobs that make up the economy. Whether for the sake of social welfare or
for the purposes of monetary policy, intervention in the free market
invariably distorts the distribution of wealth, causes a net reduction of
wealth for society as a whole, and misdirects entrepreneurs into activities
eventually revealed as uneconomic. Perhaps the best argument for the
futility of central bank monetary policy is that of Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Shalom Bernanke, Ph.D., who said to graduates of the Boston
College School of Law on May 22, 2009:
“As an economist and policymaker, I have plenty
of experience in trying to foretell the future, because policy decisions
inevitably involve projections of how alternative policy choices will
influence the future course of the economy. The Federal Reserve, therefore,
devotes substantial resources to economic forecasting. Likewise, individual
investors and businesses have strong financial incentives to try to
anticipate how the economy will evolve. With so much at stake, you will not
be surprised to know that, over the years, many very smart people have
applied the most sophisticated statistical and modeling tools available to
try to better divine the economic future. But the results, unfortunately,
have more often than not been underwhelming. Like weather forecasters,
economic forecasters must deal with a system that is extraordinarily
complex, that is subject to random shocks, and about which our data and
understanding will always be imperfect. In some ways, predicting the
economy is even more difficult than forecasting the weather, because an
economy is not made up of molecules whose behavior is subject to the laws
of physics, but rather of human beings who are themselves thinking about
the future and whose behavior may be influenced by the forecasts that they
or others make.”
Mr. Bernanke’s comments are not remarkable only for
their clarity and candor, or because they are a stark admission of the
failure of central bank monetary policy, but because they echo the founding
principles of the Austrian school of economics. In fact, Mr. Bernanke
provides excellent reasons for the repeal of the US Federal Reserve Act.
Despite common misconceptions of economics as a branch of mathematics or as
a hard science, economics is in fact a social science, similar to
psychology. For example, when we speak of economic incentives we are
referring to the manipulation of human behavior through artificial means to
achieve policy objectives such as increasing consumer spending, just as
pairing the sound of a bell with the introduction of dog food will produce
dogs that salivate at the sound of a bell when no food is present (of
course the salivation response can eventually be extinguished if no food is
provided for an extended period of time).
Psychology, it turns out, has a great deal to say about
economics, investment banking, and public finance. Indeed, key
psychological themes are common to all three areas of endeavor.
The Illusion of Control
There may be
a simple explanation, rooted in human nature, for the ever larger disasters
brought about by government interventions in the economy and by the
institution of central banking. The illusion of control is persistence in
the belief that a given outcome can be controlled when no demonstrable
influence exists or where, as Mr. Bernanke stated, outcomes cannot be
accurately predicted. Whether intervention is the result of central bank
monetary policy or of government legislation, taxation or regulation, it is
the inherent unpredictability of the outcomes of intervention that belies
the philosophy of interventionism itself. Former Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan, Ph.D., grappled with this fact in the wake of the financial
crisis when, in testimony before the US Congress on October 24, 2008, he
said:
“… an ideology is [...] a conceptual
framework with the way people deal with reality. Everyone has one. You have
to -- to exist, you need an ideology. The question is whether it is
accurate or not. And what I'm saying to you is, yes, I found a flaw. I
don't know how significant or permanent it is, but I've been very
distressed by that fact. [That there is a] flaw in the model that I
perceived is the critical functioning structure that defines how the world
works, so to speak. … I was shocked, because I had been going for 40
years or more with very considerable evidence that it was working
exceptionally well.”
Mr. Greenspan accurately refers to the dominant economic
theory, not as a science, but as an ideology that ultimately does
not conform to reality. In psychological terms, an irrational belief that
cannot be modified by reason or evidence is precisely the definition of the
term “delusion.” Despite his having been confused for 40 years,
Mr. Greenspan clearly recognized and acknowledged a limitation of his
economic ideology. In retrospect, perhaps Mr. Greenspan regrets having
departed from his original views. Sadly, the same cannot be said for the
majority of economists, central bankers and US government officials who do
not recognize, as Albert Einstein pointed out, that ”the definition
of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting
different results.”
The Gamblers
Gambling addiction and
belief in the paranormal, e.g., psychokinesis, are examples of the illusion
of control. When rolling dice in the casino game craps, for example, people
tend to throw harder for high numbers and softer for low numbers when there
is no connection between the force with which the dice are thrown and the
result. Experimental subjects can even be made to believe that they can
affect the outcome of a coin toss through their level of concentration. The
illusion of control is a key factor in gambling addiction because it is
reinforced by occasional successes and, as has been long established by
behavioral psychologists, behaviors conditioned by intermittent
reinforcement are the most difficult to extinguish.
Warning signs of gambling addiction include defensiveness,
secrecy, and desperation: precisely the attitudes exhibited by Wall Street
bankers seeking bailouts from the US government in 2008. Like US banks
transferring private losses to taxpayers, gambling addicts may hold others
responsible for their financial problems and they may adamantly insist that
they be trusted. Gambling addicts tend to be secretive about finances,
while at the same time irrationally insisting on having control over money,
just as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has insisted that
Congressional review of the Federal Reserve’s books. i.e., to find
out what financial institutions received taxpayer dollars, would compromise
its vaunted independence and harm the US economy. The more gambling addicts
are in debt, the more they feel the need to defend gambling and they often
defend a specific theory or model that “guarantees” winning (if
only they can get more money to continue gambling).
A gambling addict’s savings and assets may
mysteriously dwindle, perhaps like crumbling bank balance sheets laden with
sub-prime mortgages or bank losses associated with risky financial
derivatives, and there may be unexplained loans or cash advances, perhaps
like the Federal Reserve’s Term Asset-Backed Loan Facility (TALF)
program. Like banks jacking up credit card interest rates, gambling addicts
become increasingly desperate for money to fund further gambling. The debts
of gambling addicts may increase sharply, reflecting a “bet more, win
more” mentality that inevitably leads to the gambler going bust.
Gambling addicts seek money with increasing desperation, perhaps like
former US Treasury Secretary (and former Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer of Goldman Sachs) Henry M. Paulson’s dire warnings of
financial Armageddon in 2008. Items easily sold or pawned for money may
mysteriously disappear, perhaps like the US government’s Fort Knox
gold, which is surrounded by rumors and speculation that a long sought
(e.g., by the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee) independent audit could
easily dispel.
The Alcoholics
The original Twelve
Steps published by Alcoholics Anonymous include admitting that one’s
life, or in this case the US economy has become unmanageable and that a
power beyond one’s self (i.e., beyond current economic theories and
government policies) is necessary to restore sanity. Contrary to the views
of current Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein, the Higher Power cannot be
one’s self. The self regulating dynamics of a free market, for
example would certainly adjust US housing prices to sustainable levels and
promote sound lending standards, but this has been prevented by the
interventions of the Federal Reserve and US government. Not coincidentally,
it was the Federal Reserve and the US government, respectively, that
originally caused the inflation of housing prices and undermined lending
standards.
Breaking the grip of alcohol addiction requires a searching
and fearless moral inventory, admitting the exact nature of one’s
wrongs, and an unreserved willingness to change and to make amends with
those who have been harmed. Sadly, neither the Federal Reserve, nor Wall
Street bankers, nor the US Congress, which is committed to borrowing its
way out of debt, seem likely to repent.
The destructive behavior of alcoholics is often enabled by
dysfunctional, co-dependent relationships. A dysfunctional relationship is
one that creates more emotional turmoil than satisfaction, or in the case
of the US economy, more destruction of wealth than creation. Warning signs
of a dysfunctional relationship include, for example, addictive or
obsessive attitudes, an imbalance of power, or a superiority complex on the
part of one person. Co-dependency is a pattern of detrimental behavioral
interactions within a dysfunctional relationship, most commonly a
relationship with an alcohol or drug abuser, but equally possible in a
relationship with a gambling addict. The co-dependent is a person who
perpetuates the addiction or pathological condition of someone close to
them in a way that impedes recovery.
The US government appears trapped, together with the
Federal Reserve and Wall Street banks, in a destructive web of
dysfunctional, co-dependent relationships. The US government is addicted to
the easy money created by the Federal Reserve at the expense of taxpayers
who eventually suffer a loss of purchasing power. According to Mr.
Greenspan’s 1966 article Gold and Economic Freedom, “deficit
spending is simply a scheme for the confiscation of wealth.” Wall
Street bankers depend on US government bailouts and guarantees, as well as
on the Federal Reserve’s lax monetary policy, and the Federal Reserve
depends directly on the US government for the legalization of its
unaccountable monopoly and indirectly on the continuation of the largest US
banks. While a dysfunctional triangle of co-dependency is merely
descriptive, the interdependence of the Federal Reserve, the largest US
banks and the US government is a fact in reality
Unfortunately, it is no more possible to spend one’s
way to prosperity or to borrow one’s way out of debt than it is to
drink one’s self sober. Nonetheless, thanks to the Federal
Reserve’s 7 day per week, 24 hour per day money printing service, the
US government plans to do precisely this. If creating wealth were as simple
as printing money, the dominant school of economics would be led by Robert
Mugabe, President of Zimbabwe, and Gideon Gono, governor of Zimbabwe's
Reserve Bank (and winner of the 2009 Ig Nobel Prize in Mathematics), who
share with Mr. Bernanke a love for the feel of crisp paper and for the
smell of fresh ink.

As Milton Friedman once said “The real problem with
government is not the deficit. The real problem with government is the
amount of our money that it spends.”
The wealth destroyed by the collapse of the US real estate
bubble and the stock market crash of 2008 has not been and cannot be
brought back by bailouts, stimulus spending or outright money printing.
While averting a deflationary spiral is necessary, propping up asset prices
by dropping money from a helicopter redistributes wealth and interferes
with the price mechanism of the free market. Devaluing the US dollar may
help to hold up asset prices but it also prevents housing prices from
falling to sustainable levels while at the same time adding the risk of
eventually far higher prices, or, in the worst case, hyperinflation. There
is no historical example of a successfully re-inflated economic bubble.
What is more important, however, is that the unintended consequences of
currency debasement, i.e., the result of an inflationary monetary policy
marked by near 0% interest rates, are likely to outweigh the goals of the
policy even if they are achieved.
Reducing the value of debts in real terms through currency
debasement requires a commensurate loss of purchasing power, thus while
housing prices may be prevented from falling further, savings will be
destroyed and wages will lag behind prices once they inevitably begin to
rise. Although consumer prices in the US currently lag behind the downtrend
of the US Dollar Index (USDX), an inflation tax will eventually be levied.
Under the name “economic stimulus”, wealth is being dissipated
by the US government at an alarming rate with no sustainable benefit. US
government programs like Cash for Clunkers only impact short-term economic
data while, in reality, destroying wealth, increasing debt and diverting
consumer spending into already bankrupt industries. At the same time, the
US government is eager to increase tax revenues to offset deficit spending
and it has all manner of businesses, as well as wealthy individuals in its
crosshairs. German-born Presbyterian clergyman William Boetcker (1873-1962)
wrote:
“You cannot bring about prosperity by
discouraging thrift. You cannot help small men by tearing down big men. You
cannot strengthen the weak by weakening the strong. You cannot lift the
wage-earner by pulling down the wage-payer. You cannot help the poor man by
destroying the rich. You cannot keep out of trouble by spending more than
your income...”
Boetcker’s words are profound. It is not possible to
repair the US economy through stimulus spending or to increase the wealth
of consumers by inflating asset values via currency debasement. Supporting
asset prices, thus bank balance sheets, via currency debasement, in the
best case, can spread debt defaults over time, perhaps delaying the
collapse of bankrupt financial institutions. However, currency debasement
promises to move Americans closer to the financial status of Zimbabweans
due to the destruction of the purchasing power of the US dollar. A less
valuable US dollar will reduce consumer spending in real terms, and reduced
consumer spending will impact businesses and, therefore, jobs.
The US Dollar and Gold
The price of
gold indicates a lack of confidence in the US dollar and in the US economy
and it reflects poorly on the credibility of the Federal Reserve and of the
US government. The changing composition of central bank reserves, e.g.,
increasing gold holdings, is a direct effect of the currently weak US
economy and US dollar, which has lost considerable value in recent months.
In contrast, gold is the only financial asset, in fact a currency that has
no counterparty risk. This simple, but often overlooked fact goes a long
way to explain current investment demand for gold.

All other things being equal, strong economies offer
investors superior returns and lower risk compared to weak economies, thus
the currencies of stronger economies are always preferred over those of
weaker ones and have a higher relative value as a function of supply and
demand. Of course, monetary inflation and monetary deflation also influence
the value of a currency in terms of supply.
In a world financial system composed entirely of fiat
currencies, where no currency is redeemable in terms of hard assets, money
is an abstract claim on production and the value of one national currency
relative to another can only, ultimately be a reflection of the performance
of the underlying economy that the currency represents (performance being
inclusive of the consequences of its monetary policy), i.e., a claim on its
production. Thus, if an economy is in decline, i.e., its production is
falling, its currency, over time, must also decline. Conversely, there can
be no doubt that if the US economy were exhibiting credible and significant
growth, i.e., if production were increasing, the US dollar would certainly
gain value, but that is not the case.

The fact that central banks are reducing US dollar holdings
and increasing holdings of other currencies, including gold, is simply a
matter of preserving the value of their reserves in the face of
developments influencing the value of the US dollar, such as the burgeoning
US dollar carry trade. Having gone “all in” to save the largest
banks, the Federal Reserve and US government continue to assume that the
crisis can be managed, despite the fact that their policies are making the
situation worse in terms of sustainable housing prices, public debt and the
value of the US dollar. In the mean time, Wall Street bankers have gone
back to the casino, nonchalantly cashing in their bailout chips and
pocketing the gains.
The rationale of buying time for US banks and of supporting
US real estate prices seems reasonable on its face but this probably doomed
policy is already proving counterproductive. Despite the patina of economic
recovery sprinkled over the news media like fairy dust, small businessand
commercial real estate failures, as well as ongoing residential mortgage
and credit card defaults, are rippling through the weak US economy, while
unemployment continues to rise undermining consumer spending thus,
ultimately, bank balance sheets. Setting aside the understandable
reluctance of US banks to make new loans, no amount of tenuous good news,
no matter how exaggerated, has been able to rekindle the frenzy of consumer
borrowing that formerly characterized the US economy.
The illusion of control is a temporary state of affairs.
The triangle of dysfunction and co-dependency formed by the Federal
Reserve, Wall Street banks, and the US government is like a story about a
madman, a gambler and an alcoholic, where each traps the others in their
respective downward spirals. The illusion of control, common to all three,
is gradually bringing about a situation that will inevitably be entirely
out of control, but, as with gambling addicts and alcoholics, the point
where control is lost can only become apparent after the fact, just as the
financial crisis of 2008 caught the vast majority of experts by
surprise.
Investors, governments and central banks around the world
are seeking safety outside the US dollar, particularly in gold, as well as
outside of the US stock market, e.g., in emerging economies. The more
borrowed money the US government spends, the more money the Federal Reserve
prints and the longer zombie banks are kept on life support, the worse the
eventual condition of the US economy, the weaker the US dollar and the
higher the price of everything in US dollars will ultimately be,
particularly gold.
Ron Hera
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