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Welcome to Call to Decision
HYPERINFLATION SPECIAL REPORT
Issue Number 41
April 8, 2008
__________
Inflationary Recession Is in Place
Banking Solvency Crisis Has Opened First
Phase of Monetary Inflation
Hyperinflationary Depression Remains Likely
As Early As 2010
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Overview
The U.S. economy is in an intensifying inflationary recession that
eventually will evolve into a hyperinflationary great depression.
Hyperinflation could be experienced as early as 2010, if not before,
and likely no more than a decade down the road. The U.S. government
and Federal Reserve already have committed the system to this course
through the easy politics of a bottomless pocketbook, the servicing of
big-moneyed special interests, and gross mismanagement.
The U.S. has no way of avoiding a financial Armageddon. Bankrupt
sovereign states most commonly use the currency printing press as a
solution to not having enough money to cover their obligations.
The alternative would be for the U.S. to renege on its existing debt
and obligations, a solution for modern sovereign states rarely seen
outside of governments overthrown in revolution, and a solution with
no happier ending than simply printing the needed money. With the
creation of massive amounts of new fiat (not backed by gold) dollars
will come the eventual complete collapse of the value of the U.S.
dollar and related dollar-denominated paper assets.
What lies ahead will be extremely difficult and unhappy times for
many. Ralph T. Foster, in his "Fiat Paper Money" (see
recommended further reading at the end of this issue), closes his
book’s preface with a particularly poignant quote from a 1993
interview of Friedrich Kessler, a law professor at Harvard and
University of California Berkeley, who experienced the Weimar Republic
hyperinflation:
"It was horrible. Horrible! Like lightning it struck. No one was
prepared. You cannot imagine the rapidity with which the whole thing
happened. The shelves in the grocery stores were empty. You could buy
nothing with your paper money."
This Special Report updates and expands upon the three-part Hyperinflation
Series that began with the December 2006 SGS Newsletter,
exploring: (1) the causes and background of the evolving
hyperinflation and great depression; (2) why circumstances will differ
from the deflationary Great Depression of the 1930s; (3) implications
for politics and the financial markets; (4) considerations for
individuals and businesses.
The broad outlook has not changed during the last year. More
generally, though, developments in the economy and the financial
markets have been in line with projections and have tended to confirm
the unfolding disaster. Specifically, the current inflationary
recession has gained much broader recognition, while the
still-unfolding banking solvency crisis has confirmed the Fed’s and
the U.S. government’s willingness to spend whatever money they have
to create in order to keep the financial system from imploding. While
the dollar has taken a heavy hit — down roughly 20% against key
currencies from last year — selling of the U.S. currency still has
been far short of the outright dollar dumping that eventually will
lead to flight to safety outside of the U.S. dollar. That event is
important to the shorter-term timing of the pending hyperinflation.
Regular readers may recognize text from last year’s Series,
as well as material from various SGS newsletters, but such is the
nature of revisions to prior material. Points that may be repeated
from earlier newsletters are done so in sequence to help build the
arguments explaining the unfolding crisis. Great thanks are extended
to the numerous subscribers who offered ideas, questions and materials
that have been incorporated in this report.
Defining the Components of a
Hyperinflationary Great Depression
Deflation, Inflation and Hyperinflation. Inflation
generally is defined in terms of a rise in general prices due to an
increase in the amount of money in circulation. The
inflation/deflation issues defined and discussed here are as applied
to goods and services, not to the pricing of financial assets.
In terms of hyperinflation, there have been a variety of definitions
used over time. The circumstance envisioned ahead is not one of
double- or triple- digit annual inflation, but more along the lines of
seven- to 10-digit inflation seen in other circumstances during the
last century. Under such circumstances, the currency in question
becomes worthless, as seen in Germany (Weimar Republic) in the early
1920s, in Hungary after World War II and in the dismembered Yugoslavia
of the early 1990s.
The historical culprit generally has been the use of fiat currencies
— currencies with no asset backing such as gold — and the
resulting massive printing of currency that the issuing authority
needed to support its system, when it did not have the ability,
otherwise, to raise enough money for its perceived needs, through
taxes or other means.
Foster (see recommended further reading at the end of this issue)
details the history of fiat paper currencies from 11th century
Szechwan, China, to date, and their consistent collapses,
time-after-time, due to what appears to be the inevitable,
irresistible urge of issuing authorities to print too much of a good
thing. The United States is no exception, already having obligated
itself to liabilities well beyond its ability ever to pay off.
Here are the definitions:
Deflation. A decrease in the prices of goods
and services, usually tied to a contraction of money in circulation.
Inflation. An increase in the prices of
goods and services, usually tied to an increase of money in
circulation.
Hyperinflation: Extreme inflation, minimally
in excess of four-digit annual percent change, where the involved
currency becomes worthless. A fairly crude definition of
hyperinflation is a circumstance, where, due to extremely rapid price
increases, the largest pre-hyperinflation bank note ($100 bill in the
United States) becomes worth more as functional toilet paper/tissue
than as currency.
As discussed in the section Historical U.S. Inflation: Why
Hyperinflation Instead of Deflation, the domestic economy has been
through periods of both major inflation and deflation, usually tied to
wars and their aftermaths. Such, however, preceded the U.S. going off
the gold standard in 1933. The era of the modern fiat dollar generally
has been one of persistent and slowly debilitating inflation.
Recession, Depression and Great Depression. A couple
of decades back, I tried to tie down the definitional differences
between a recession, depression and a great depression with the Bureau
of Economic Analysis (BEA), the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
and a number of private economists. I found that there was no
consensus on the matter, so I set some definitions that the various
parties (neither formally nor officially) thought were within reason.
If you look at the plot of the level of economic activity during a
downturn, you will see something that looks like a bowl, with activity
recessing on the downside and recovering on the upside. The term used
to describe this bowl-shaped circumstance before World War II was
"depression," while the downside portion of the cycle was
called "recession." Before World War II, all downturns
simply were referred to as depressions. In the wake of the Great
Depression of the 1930s, however, a euphemism was sought for future
economic contractions so as to avoid evoking memories of that earlier,
financially painful time.
Accordingly, a post-World War II downturn was called
"recession." Officially, the worst post-World War II
recession was from November 1973 through March 1975, with a
peak-to-trough contraction of 5%. Such followed the Vietnam War,
Nixon’s floating of the U.S. dollar and the Oil Embargo. The
double-dip recession in the early-1980s may have seen a combined
contraction of roughly 6%. I contend that the current double-dip
recession that began in late-2000 already is rivaling the 1980s
double-dip as to depth. (See the Reporting/Market Focus of the October
2006 SGS for further detail.) Please note that the definition for
"great depression" below has been revised to a contraction
in excess of 25% (from 20% stated in the March 16, 2008 newsletter),
in order to be consistent with the usage in last year’s Series.
Here are the definitions:
Recession:Two or more consecutive quarters
of contracting real (inflation-adjusted) GDP, where the downturn is
not triggered by an exogenous factor such as a truckers’ strike. The
NBER, which is the official arbiter of when the United States economy
is in recession, attempts to refine its timing calls, on a monthly
basis, through the use of economic series such as payroll employment
and industrial production, and it no longer relies on the two quarters
of contracting GDP rule.
Depression:A recession, where the
peak-to-trough contraction in real growth exceeds 10%.
Great Depression:A depression, where the
peak-to-trough contraction in real growth exceeds 25%.
On the basis of the preceding, there has been the one Great
Depression, in the 1930s. Most of the economic contractions before
that would be classified as depressions. All business downturns since
World War II — as officially reported — have been recessions.
Using the somewhat broader "great depression" definition of
a contraction in excess of 20% (instead of 25%), the depression of
1837 to 1843 would be considered "great," as technically
would be the war-time production shut-down in 1945.
The current economic contraction is about halfway towards being
classified as a "depression," based on my definitions and
GDP accounting. As the Great War became World War I with the advent of
World War II, so too may the Great Depression become Great Depression
I, as the current crisis reaches its full, terrible potential. As with
the two world wars, what may become known as Great Depression II had
its roots in Great Depression I.
Current Environment
Before examining how the current circumstance can evolve from an
inflationary recession to a hyperinflationary depression and then
great depression, it is worth defining the nature of the current
economic and inflation conditions in the United States, and likely
near-term developments.
Based on the regular material discussed in the SGS Newsletter,
the U.S. economy is in an inflationary recession as will be reported
in official statistics. Real (inflation-adjusted) fourth-quarter
2007 GDP, in July’s benchmark revision, and/or first-quarter 2008
GDP should be in contraction, with most underlying economic series
showing distressed levels of activity consistent with a recession.
Annual CPI inflation is at 4.0% and headed higher. Oil prices remain
over $100 per barrel, weakness in the dollar is just beginning to
impact the CPI, and the inflationary effects of soaring broad money
growth should start to surface around mid-year. Official CPI could be
running in double-digits by year-end 2008.
Net of gimmicked methodologies that have reduced CPI inflation
reporting and inflated GDP reporting, the U.S. economy has been in a
recession since late-2006, entering the second down-leg of a
multiple-dip economic contraction, where the first downleg was the
recession of 2001 that really began back in late-1999. Annual CPI
inflation currently is running around 11.6%, again, facing further
upside pressures.
The current outlook does not exclude further bounces and dips in
economic activity. As was seen during the Great Depression, in severe
contractions the economy can hit bottom and then bounce briefly until
it falls again, finding a new bottom. As discussed in the
Depression/Great Depression section, the current economic downturn
reflects a structural shift, which increasingly has constrained
consumer activity during the last several decades, and which cannot be
turned quickly. The current downturn, by my numbers, already is
halfway to qualifying as a depression. The evolving depression quickly
will move to great depression status, when the hyperinflation hits, as
such will be extremely disruptive to the conduct of normal commerce.
The efforts by the federal government and the Federal Reserve to
prevent a systemic collapse as a result of the banking solvency crisis
has started to spike broad money growth, as measured by the SGS-Ongoing
M3 measure, which currently shows a record annual growth rate of
17.3%. While the Fed has not been formally creating new money — yet
— by adding to reserves, it has had the effect of creating new money
by re-liquefying otherwise illiquid banks, by lending liquid assets
versus illiquid assets. As a result, a number of banks have been able
to resume more normal functioning, lending money and creating new
money supply. As the systemic bailout proceeds, formal money creation
will follow and already may be starting to show up in official
accounting.
In response to the rapidly deteriorating fundamentals underlying the
value of the U.S. dollar, selling of the greenback has been intense,
but contained, with brief periods of stability as seen at the moment.
In the near future, dollar selling should build towards an extreme,
with heavy foreign investment in the dollar fleeing the U.S. currency
for safety elsewhere. With the domestic financial markets and U.S.
Treasuries so heavily dependent on foreign capital for liquidity, the
Federal Reserve — now touted as the formal financial market
stabilizer — will be forced increasingly to monetize federal debt.
That process will build over time, given the federal government’s
effective bankruptcy, as discussed in the section U.S. Government
Cannot Cover Existing Obligations. Therein lies the ultimate basis for
the pending hyperinflation.
Again, the current circumstance will evolve into a hyperinflationary
depression, then great depression. Although such is not likely much
before 2010, or after 2018, that financial end game for the current
markets will tend to come sooner rather than later and will break with
surprising speed when it hits. As discussed later, this likely will
not be a deflationary environment as seen during the Great Depression.
What lies ahead for the current year will be severe enough and
financially painful enough to affect the outcome of the 2008
presidential election. Historically, the concerns of the electorate
have been dominated by pocketbook issues. Prior to gimmicked
methodologies making the reporting of disposable personal income
largely meaningless, that measure was an excellent predictor of
presidential elections.
In every presidential race since 1908, in which consistent, real
(inflation-adjusted) annual disposable income growth was above 3.3%,
the incumbent party holding the White House won every time. When
income growth was below 3.3%, the incumbent party lost every time.
Again, with redefinitions to the national income accounts in the last
two decades, a consistent measure of disposable income as reported by
the government has disappeared. Yet, even with official reporting, the
current annual growth in real disposable income is at 2.2%, well below
the traditional 3.3% limit.
Accordingly, odds are quite high that the numbers for 2008 will favor
an incumbent party loss, i.e. a victory for the Democrats. Where I
always endeavor to keep my political persuasions separate from my
analyses, for purposes of full disclosure, my background is as a
conservative Republican with a libertarian bent.
What follows or coincides politically with a hyperinflationary
depression offers a wide variety of possibilities, but the political
status quo likely would not continue. Times would be financially
painful enough to encourage the development of a third party that
could move the Republicans or Democrats to third-party status in the
2010 mid-term or 2012 presidential elections.
Historical U.S. Inflation: Why
Hyperinflation Instead of Deflation
Fire and Ice
Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I’ve tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.
– Robert Frost
As to the fate of the developing U.S. great depression, it will
encompass the fire of a hyperinflation, instead of the ice of
deflation seen in the major U.S. depressions prior to World War II.
What promises hyperinflation this time is the lack monetary discipline
formerly imposed on the system by the gold standard, and a Federal
Reserve dedicated to preventing a collapse in the money supply and the
implosion of the still, extremely over-leveraged domestic financial
system.
The accompanying two graphs measure the level of consumer prices since
1665 in the American Colonies and later the United States. The first
graph shows what appears to be a fairly stable level of prices up to
the founding of the Federal Reserve in 1913 (began activity in 1914)
and Franklin Roosevelt’s abandoning of the gold standard in 1933.
Then, inflation takes off in a manner not seen in the prior 250 years,
and at an exponential rate when viewed using the SGS-Alternate Measure
of Consumer Prices in the last several decades. The price levels shown
prior to 1913 were constructed by Robert Sahr of Oregon State
University. Price levels since 1913 either are Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS) or SGS based, as indicated.
The magnitude of the increase in price levels in the last 50 years or
so, however, visually masks in the first graph the inflation
volatility of the earlier years. That volatility becomes evident in
the second graph, with inflation history shown only through 1960.
What is shown in the second graph is that up through the Great
Depression, regular periods of inflation — usually seen around wars
— have been offset by periods of deflation. Particular inflation
spikes can be seen at the time of the American Revolution, the War of
1812, the Civil War, World War I and World War II.
Further Reading
http://www.shadowstats.com/article/292
ALL KNOW it was an inside job,
they're in forced denial, and they just refuse to believe that their
leaders would execute them for profit and geo political maneuvering.
It’s called cognitive disassociation, its nothing really
complicated. Its just simple denial to keep them in a safe comfortable
bubble
"If there is a decay of conscience, the pulpit is responsible for
it. If the public press lacks moral discernment, the pulpit is
responsible for it. If the church is degenerate and worldly, the
pulpit is responsible for it. If the world loses its interest in
Christianity, the pulpit is responsible for it. If Satan rules in our
halls of legislation, the pulpit is responsible for it. If our
politics become so corrupt that the very foundations of our government
are ready to fall away, the pulpit is responsible for it." famed
Nineteenth Century revivalist Charles G. Finney
"Indeed
I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just.":
Thomas Jefferson: "The man who reads nothing at all is better
educated than the man who reads nothing but newspapers."
This video is perfect for this picture. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xOIUYdO-0bY
Stay in touch when you're away with Windows Live Messenger. IM
anytime you're online.
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