Horses to Water
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/currency-wars-australian-dollar-us-dollar-euro-rom-pd20121025-ZDQZ6?OpenDocument&src=sph
Many many posts ago I discussed the looming currency wars. We are now there; as competitive devaluations start to take hold and fiat money as a system comes under sustained attack. There is now a concerted effort across the major developed economies to inflate the global economy through sustaining, a now apparently intentional monetary expansion. I say intentional because that is exactly what got us into this place in preceding two decades. Instead of cutting a zero of the global balance sheet there now seems a considered desire to add another one. Effectively this strategy now means a shift in power from savers in favour of debtors; sovereign, corporate, and individual.
Maintaining high levels of inflation for even a period of a few years will greatly reduce the debt burden on debtors sovereign or otherwise. It sounds like a plan, and indeed is until you think about the end game. It may look something like:
The middle east is now far more unstable that it was before the disastrous Arab Spring which replaced totalitarian but stable secular governments with whatever may replace them; which will be anything but democracies. I suspect that as much as it may try to avoid it Turkey will have a critical role as a focus point of conflict here.
Well a lot of geo-political speculation today. I will go pack the crystal ball back up!
Many many posts ago I discussed the looming currency wars. We are now there; as competitive devaluations start to take hold and fiat money as a system comes under sustained attack. There is now a concerted effort across the major developed economies to inflate the global economy through sustaining, a now apparently intentional monetary expansion. I say intentional because that is exactly what got us into this place in preceding two decades. Instead of cutting a zero of the global balance sheet there now seems a considered desire to add another one. Effectively this strategy now means a shift in power from savers in favour of debtors; sovereign, corporate, and individual.
Maintaining high levels of inflation for even a period of a few years will greatly reduce the debt burden on debtors sovereign or otherwise. It sounds like a plan, and indeed is until you think about the end game. It may look something like:
- A breakdown in global trade with significant consequences for emergent economies.
- The politicisation of trade into alliance factions.
- Undermining of property rights driven by debasement of fiat currency systems.
- Re-emergence and re-entrenchment of more authoritarian systems of government.
- Armed conflict as a tool of government policy for managing dissent.
- South China Sea - China, Japan, Vietnam, The Philippines, and the US.
- Siberia - China and Russia.
- Mongolia - China and Russia.
The middle east is now far more unstable that it was before the disastrous Arab Spring which replaced totalitarian but stable secular governments with whatever may replace them; which will be anything but democracies. I suspect that as much as it may try to avoid it Turkey will have a critical role as a focus point of conflict here.
Well a lot of geo-political speculation today. I will go pack the crystal ball back up!
4 Comments:
Great blog I guess were in a slow motion depression. Even if a lot of folks do not realize it yet.
Well Peter . . you called it. I have to say that the current war has been in place for an extended period of time, but I think over the last three months its gone up a notch or two.
Cases in point recently:
1. The Yen . . . The Japanese are seriously debasing their currently by printing money in a bid to reset their economy / exports and get out of deflation.
2. Manipulation of the Euro “French President Francois Hollande last week raised the possibility of political interference in exchange rate policy when he called for a medium-term target for the euro's value, a move to counter its recent appreciation”. Basically, kept the euro artificially low to help competitiveness.
3. The US – Already talking about the rising value of the dollar possibly derailing the recovery (while helicopter Ben runs his printing presses as fast as possible). I’ve always laughed at the fact they accuse China of currently manipulation . . . hmmmmm.
4. The AUD – doesn’t it seem strange that we have interest rates at record lows (emergency levels really), yet the economy is growing at trend (3% ish), unemployment is historically very low and the overall economy is bubbling along. They are doing it to try and bring down the AUD to save what’s left of our dying manufacturing. If they started tightening, the AUD would absolutely skyrocket.
Working here in Vietnam, I have a first hand appreciation of the tension in this area and its waters. It’s going to get very nasty at one point (and that’s without throwing north Korea into the mix haha).
People are being forced back into equities in search of a return, they have no choice really. Its evident in the US and is starting to gather pace here too.
I am thinking it might be high time I get some more exposure to gold equities.
Todd Sheedy
AstroLuckIndia.com
Thanks for sharing this very up to date post.
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