Apr 30 2010 9:09AM
Gold: Needed Now More Than Ever
Greece’s debt troubles are well known. Less
recognized is the worrying truth that Greece is just the tip of the
iceberg.
There have been plenty of warnings. These include, for
example, the recent downgrades of the debts of Spain and Portugal. By
highlighting the risks, the debt rating agencies have sent a signal with
one certain outcome. Heightened awareness over sovereign credit risk will
grow, and rightly so.
A report released just last month by the Bank for
International Settlements, entitled “The future of public debt:
prospects and implications”, made some startlingly frank and sobering
conclusions. The BIS report began earnestly:
http://www.bis.org/publ/work300.
pdf
“Since the start of the financial crisis,
industrial country public debt levels have increased dramatically. And they
are set to continue rising for the foreseeable future.”
After a through and well-researched analysis complete with
detailed documentation, the BIS walked carefully through this political
minefield, no doubt aware the slightest misstatement would leave it open to
rebuke by its benefactors, the countries and central banks that fund its
operation. But hats-off to the BIS. It left no doubt as to
where it stands on this matter by concluding with the following stark
assessment.
“First, fiscal problems confronting industrial
economies are bigger than suggested by official debt figures…As
frightening as it is to consider public debt increasing to more than 100%
of GDP, an even greater danger arises from a rapidly ageing population. The
related unfunded liabilities are large and growing...In the aftermath of
the financial crisis, the path of future output is likely to be permanently
below where we thought it would be just several years ago. As a result,
government revenues will be lower and expenditures higher, making
consolidation even more difficult…
Second, large public debts have significant financial and
real consequences. The recent sharp rise in risk premia on long-term bonds
issued by several industrial countries suggests that markets no longer
consider sovereign debt low-risk…
Third, we note the risk that persistently high levels of
public debt will drive down capital accumulation, productivity growth and
long-term potential growth…
Finally, looming long-term fiscal imbalances pose
significant risk to the prospects for future monetary stability...unstable
debt dynamics could lead to higher inflation: direct debt monetisation, and
the temptation to reduce the real value of government debt through higher
inflation.”
Please read that last paragraph again about the significant
risk to monetary stability. In other words, governments will not cut
spending and bring their budget back into balance. They will simply lean on
their central bank to print and print and print. Everyone holding
sovereign paper will get their euros and dollars and pounds repaid to them,
but those currencies will have only a fraction of their present purchasing
power. The rest will have been inflated away.
I have always wondered why people – after paying 40%
or so of their income in taxes – then put what they manage to save in
government paper. Further, it always struck me as somewhat bizarre
that they then call the paper they purchased “risk free”, even
though nothing in our real and imperfect world comes without risk. It
is a conundrum with only one explanation – it is irrational. All of
us have seen this behavior before.
It is the behavior that sent the unthinking crowds into
Internet stocks. It is the behavior of unthinking people who bought
second and third homes and condos with debt in the expectation of flipping
them with a huge profit to someone else. It is the behavior of
unthinking bankers who piled into mortgage-backed securities believing that
the triple-A rating meant the paper came without risk. The common
characteristic of all these manic episodes is that they are the actions of
people acting with a ‘bubble mentality’. They are not
guided by rational thought, but unthinking and emotional knee-jerk
reactions. And the same is true today with sovereign credit risk, but with
a difference.
The other examples are past history. The so-called
“risk-free” sovereign debt bubble has only recently begun to
pop.
The signs are all around us. Iceland, Dubai, Latvia,
Greece with Portugal and Spain not far behind, and the UK and even the US
and most every other country on the not-too-distant horizon. The sovereign
debt crisis – which is actually a latent bank crisis because banks
are stuffed full with the worthless paper of over-indebted sovereigns
– is a powder keg, and the fuse has already been lit. So what should
we do? What can we do?
The answer is simple. Own physical gold instead of
someone’s promise. Its time-proven record built up over the centuries
clearly illustrates that gold is the ultimate safe haven. Gold is the
best way to avoid counterparty risk, which is essential today as the
sovereign debt bubble continues to lay bare the stark reality that
governments throughout the world are bankrupt, and more to the point, that
the bubble has popped. People holding sovereign paper are already
heading for the exits. As a result, everyone needs gold now more than
ever.
by James Turk,
April 30th, 2010
*****
James Turk is the Founder & Chairman of
GoldMoney.com <http://goldmoney.com/>. He is the
co-author of The Collapse of the Dollar <www.dollarcollapse.com> and
publisher of the Free Gold Money Report<>http://www.fgmr.com<>.
Copyright © 2010 by James Turk. All rights
reserved.