|
Doug Casey on Surviving
Financial Apocalypse Now
|
|
|
L: Doug, last time we spoke, you said
quite a bit about debt, in the context of your expectation that the euro is
on its way out. At the end of that conversation, you mentioned, of course,
that the problem is not limited to Greece, nor the eurozone. America as a
country has become a world-class debtor, and many Americans seem to think a
maxed-out credit card is a reason to get a higher credit limit, not to
economize. It’s like a global epidemic. Let’s talk about debt.
Doug: Sure. This is a story that’s
going to end very badly for a lot of people. I’ve said this before,
in many different ways, but I think it’s worth saying again, because
most people just don’t grok it…
L: Grok. From the Martian word for
“drink” and “understand.” In Heinlein’s
novels, water was a critical element of Martian culture – makes
sense, for a desert planet. When you grok knowledge, as when you drink
water, you don’t just hold it in your mouth and spit it out. You take
it into yourself, it goes into your blood, and eventually into every cell
in your body; it becomes part of you. This is heavy-duty
understanding… Sorry for jumping in with the spontaneous lecture. I
just suspect many readers will not know the term.
Doug: Or put another way, in the negative
case, most people just don’t get what money really is – and
what it isn’t. They take it as a given, as part of the cosmic
firmament. But it’s not. A prime example of this is the mistaking of
debt for money, a phenomenon David Galland pointed out in a Casey’s
Daily Dispatch a few weeks ago. This is why the entire world’s
monetary system today is headed for a disastrous failure. And this is
absolutely inevitable. There’s no way around it.
L: Why?
Doug: Because you can’t use debt as
money. As I’ve pointed out before, Aristotle, in the fourth century
BC, was the first person to define what money is. And what is it?
It’s a store of value and a medium of exchange.
The paper we use today is a medium of exchange – it
got that way because governments made it illegal not to accept it –
but it’s not a good store of value. And it’s rapidly and
radically becoming less of a store of value. What we use as money today is
actually not money; it’s currency. Technically, that’s simply a
word that indicates a government substitute for money.
What does make for good money? Again, Aristotle gives us
the answer. It’s something that has five characteristics: it’s
durable and divisible, consistent and convenient, and has value in
itself.
L: Some of our readers who’ve
studied Austrian economics challenged us on that last bit, last time we
talked about gold, because, as the Austrians pointed out, value is
subjective. But you don’t mean some sort of value that’s
independent of people making value judgments. You mean that people value
something that makes for good money, because of its innate qualities
– not something “valued” because of government threats of
force.
Doug: Right. And for these reasons, gold
is almost certainly the best thing to use for money. Not because I say so,
nor because Aristotle said so, but because, over time, people have found it
to be the most durable, divisible, consistent, convenient, and inherently
valuable thing to use. Silver is also good, but it’s less durable
because it corrodes. And less convenient, in that it takes about 60 times
more of it – at the moment – to offer the same value as gold.
Copper is the next traditional step down the ladder.
L: That, plus one reason that’s
pertinent today but was not a problem in Aristotle’s world: gold
can’t just be printed up on the arbitrary whims of those in
power.
Doug: That’s the big one. Using
metals as money takes the whole matter out of the hands of the government
and its bureaucrats.
L: But we don’t use gold
today…
Doug: No, as per David’s example,
it’s as though a bunch of friends without any real money started
exchanging IOUs for money, and then after a while forgot that the IOUs were
supposed to represent, and be redeemed in, real money.
The problem with this is that, in the case of the IOUs
between friends, paper is based solely on hope and trust. One can move
away, or die, or turn dishonest, or become insolvent – many other
things could happen. A guy stuck with a dead man’s IOU has
nothing.
With government IOUs, or currencies, it’s worse,
because they can increase the number of IOUs in circulation without telling
anyone – that’s what inflation is. Since the government creates
the IOUs, it gets the benefit of spending them before the inflation they
create raises prices, which is basically stealing from the people. And, of
course, sometimes governments do “die,” leaving the holders
stuck with nothing, just as with the IOUs between friends. In fact,
it’s arguably far more likely that such problems will arise from
trusting a government to print IOUs than from trusting a friend.
(Conversations with Casey: Interviewed by
Louis James, Editor, Inte
rnational Speculator)
****
[To read the full 8-page interview with Doug Casey and what
he thinks will happen to the American middle class, sign
up here.]