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LeninistKing
13th February 2010, 03:11
STICK A FORK IN IT. THE US DOLLAR IS GONE


http://www.nationalexpositor.com/News/2210.html

Andy Sutton on 12 February, 2010 [/URL]
(http://www.nationalexpositor.com/plugins/vbm/click.php?id=26)
(javascript:tsz('article_body','16px')) http://www.nationalexpositor.com/files.php?file=dollarcrash_374051120.jpg Sutton Financial (http://www.sutton-associates.net/) - News junkies, currency buffs, and economists of an Austrian tilt have been having quite an entertaining few weeks. Between massive blizzards from Virginia to New England, another baseless Dollar rally, and the hilarious notion that a little Greek debt could unwind the Euro, there certainly has been plenty to talk about. These ‘black swan’ events are certainly becoming more and more commonplace these days; almost to the point where they can’t even be called black swans anymore. What would previously have been considered ridiculous is now normal, and what was normal is now considered ridiculous. Such is the way of things as empires unwind. Our circumstance today is no different.


The Dollar – The Ultimate Opportunist?


It should not be lost on even the most casual of observers that the US Dollar is dead. How can I say this when it is in the middle of yet another ‘rally’? And aren’t the folks in Washington telling us how strong the Dollar is more and more vapidly and with greater frequency? The fact of the matter here is that the Dollar has, for quite some time now, not been able to rally itself based on its own merits. Remember that currencies are essentially a zero-sum game. Their value is measured in terms of other currencies. One goes up, another must go down. Taking a look at recent Dollar rallies, they’ve happened essentially because bad things have happened in Euroland or elsewhere, whether it is the latest debt crisis with the PIGS (an unfortunate acronym, but who wants to be called a BRIC anyway?) or the massive liquidation of 2008. These were not exhibits of the Dollar’s strength, but rather of a mental model that still hasn’t adjusted to the fact that the Dollar’s run is over. Add to that the lack of an available substitute and voila – instant dollar ‘strength’.
(http://www.sutton-associates.net/)

Think of it this way: if our currency were strong for fundamental reasons, say for example gold backing, genuine budget surpluses free of accounting chicanery, trade surpluses, and similar positives, then countries wouldn’t be sneaking around backrooms around the globe forging agreements to sidestep it. Foreigners wouldn’t be twisting their brains trying to figure out how to get out from under their pile of US Treasuries without upsetting the apple cart. Put mildly, a wheelbarrow full of plutonium would be received better in most financial centers these days than one filled with US Dollars.


Beware of Greeks bearing Debt?


If anyone here in the US still has doubts about what ultimately happens when a nation abuses credit and engorges itself with debt, all they need to do is look at Greece. The small Mediterranean nation needs to raise about $73 Billion in new money this year. While that seems like a mere pittance, it constitutes about 20% of Greek GDP. Greece also faces bond redemptions of $8 and $9 billion in April and May respectively. While Greece has by far the worst debt problem (at the moment) in the EU, it doesn’t stand alone. Portugal, Italy and Spain are also having issues of their own and the whole mess is threatening Euro stability, and by function helping the US Dollar.
http://www.nationalexpositor.com/files/andy5_400_01.jpg




These are real problems for sure, but what is amazing is the continued complacency by media and policymakers alike when it comes to the US and our debt levels. Our level of official borrowing will tally around 12% of GDP in 2010, however, if you look at the GAAP deficits and the resultant borrowing, it is always much higher than advertised. There is an important distinction to be made between Greece and the US, however, and that is the fact that Greece is essentially a hostage of the European Central Bank where the USGovt has a bank willing to issue as much rope as we can possibly need to hang ourselves. We’re hostages of the Fed, but most people aren’t easily inclined to look at it that way. We’ve been trained to believe that when we run deficits we’re borrowing from ourselves. Back in the era when we used US savings bonds to fund government activities, there was at least a modicum of truth to that. However, since we’ve gone overseas and to the internationally-owned Fed for more and more help, we’ve been slowing ceding our national sovereignty to foreigners much in the same way Greece et al have given themselves over to Brussels.
http://www.nationalexpositor.com/files/andy6_400_02.jpg




This is why every freedom-loving person should have a healthy fear of global central banks and even regional currency blocs. The very survival of the PIGS now rides on the whims of Merkel, Sarkozy, and Trichet. Flashback to the weekend of September 13th 2008 when Lehman Brothers here in the US was in the same shoes as Greece is today and then ask yourself how much we’ve really learned over the last 18 months. This is what happens when you globalize and intertwine the fortunes of nations and then base it on the fraud of a fiat currency system, the casino mentality, and a healthy dose of public ignorance.


So now the Europeans are left in a pickle. They have to come up with the right words to soothe the markets. They’ll need to offer words that promise all sorts of coordinated actions and large applications of money while actually doing nothing because they can’t afford it. Their economies are now stumbling out of recovery because there never was a recovery, just a shell created by inflation and debt.
[URL="http://www.sutton-associates.net/"] (http://www.sutton-associates.net/)

America should take heed. It was easy to ignore when it was Argentina, Zimbabwe, and Iceland. However, we’ve done the same thing here. Our government believes that borrowing and saber rattling will force the economy to grow. Europe is the latest shining example of the utter failure of such thinking.

ckaihatsu
13th February 2010, 06:23
It should not be lost on even the most casual of observers that the US Dollar is dead. How can I say this when it is in the middle of yet another ‘rally’? And aren’t the folks in Washington telling us how strong the Dollar is more and more vapidly and with greater frequency? The fact of the matter here is that the Dollar has, for quite some time now, not been able to rally itself based on its own merits.


We have to be careful with this kind of economic "forecasting" because it *happens* to come from nationalist sources. What they're doing here is garnering public sympathy for being in the top spot -- it's like a rich person droning on about their medical / "medical" conditions at length in a vain attempt to humanize themselves.





[T]he U.S. has occupied a privileged position in relation to the rest of the world, both economically (U.S. dollar as world reserve currency) and politically (the world's political and cultural "leadership"). When the rest of the world comes down with fever the U.S. gets a little itch on its nose.

The greatest determining factor will be whether the economic centrifugal force throws some countries, like the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, Spain), out of the EU orbit or not. The U.S., because of the dollar and its (slipping) neocolonization of China, will continue to enjoy an internal cohesion that the EU can only be jealous of.







Remember that currencies are essentially a zero-sum game. Their value is measured in terms of other currencies. One goes up, another must go down.


Relatively, yes, this is true, but the author is going *beyond* mere fluctuations in the currency exchange rates -- saying that "the dollar is dead" is an overstatement to the point of hyperbole and propagandizing.







Think of it this way: if our currency were strong for fundamental reasons, say for example gold backing, genuine budget surpluses free of accounting chicanery, trade surpluses, and similar positives, then countries wouldn’t be sneaking around backrooms around the globe forging agreements to sidestep it. Foreigners wouldn’t be twisting their brains trying to figure out how to get out from under their pile of US Treasuries without upsetting the apple cart. Put mildly, a wheelbarrow full of plutonium would be received better in most financial centers these days than one filled with US Dollars.


This is the typical right-libertarian populist posturing. It's a "call" for a "return to honesty" in finance -- pure horseshit. In reality the *real* currency of the world is U.S. *debt*, which leads us to the question of "Who has the authority to issue debt?" The answer reveals more of a world-hegemonic *political* economy than an *economic* one.







However, since we’ve gone overseas and to the internationally-owned Fed for more and more help, we’ve been slowing ceding our national sovereignty to foreigners much in the same way Greece et al have given themselves over to Brussels.


This is all beside the point, because it's sidestepping the *political* issue, which is what are your *politics* regarding all of this? Merely blaming the agency of currency issuance -- the Fed or the EU -- is only *scapegoating*, at best. We need to look at *how* U.S. debt or the basis for the Euro creates the economic and political policies that are out there, and who are the *proponents* of those monetary policies. This line of inquiry shows us the *politics* of who's *legitimizing* the system of prevailing "economics" -- it's a *class* issue, since only actual *labor* is the source of monetization, or repayment, of debt.







Our government believes that borrowing and saber rattling will force the economy to grow.


Translations:

- "Borrowing" = issuing more *fictitious* U.S. debt in return for the *actual* products of dirt-cheap China slave labor.

- "Saber rattling" = retaining the world's largest military presence so that there's no question as to who's top dog and can continue to issue U.S. debt and have it be accepted as regular money. The term for this is 'financial imperialism'.


Chris



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RadioRaheem84
13th February 2010, 06:29
How does right wing stuff always manage to get posted on rev left? I am sure our analysis is better than shoddy economic forecasting.

BUY GOLD!!!

Leninist, you seem like a cool guy so I advise you to drop the NWO right wing conspiracy stuff. Start reading Monthly Review and Political Affairs.net

Dollars and Sense, a progressive magazine is good too if you're into economics.

ckaihatsu
13th February 2010, 06:48
BUY GOLD!!!


No, *spend* gold and any other currencies or assets you may have so that you can best represent yourself in your interests as a laborer, *not* as an owner.

RadioRaheem84
13th February 2010, 06:59
I was being sarcastic. Should've put a smiley face on there. :p

ckaihatsu
13th February 2010, 07:13
I was being sarcastic. Should've put a smiley face on there. :p


Shoulda, coulda, woulda.... /8 p = )

Irony is obviously beyond my ken. = )