Once the fuel source of the Ponzi runs out (i.e. new credit and debt), the debt Ponzi must collapse. If the following sentence from the forwarded article is true, the fuel source seems to be running very low: “Asian central banks and sovereign wealth funds are spurning all EMU bonds because they have lost confidence in a monetary system with no lender of last resort, coherent form of government, or respect for the rule of law.” Bottom line: the Eurozone is rolling over. Confidence has been lost in the leadership. “Unless
Because the US dollar is the de facto reserve currency of the world, the final backstop of the global debt Ponzi is Ben Bernanke and the US Federal Reserve Bank. The fact that anyone is talking about using
Unfortunately the problem is even bigger than the Federal Reserve can handle. Much bigger. But that won’t stop people from believing in false hope, especially when they see it as being in their best interest to do so. Those who will be most tempted to do this will be those with the most to lose:
One thing people really need to wake up to at this point is that posturing is no longer going to help. During the early days of the collapse, government used to tell us that if they walked around with a bazooka in their pocket that they would never have to use it. The threat of government intervention, they said, would force the market to stay engaged. They thought the market could be so easily manipulated. Since then this theory has been debunked in actual practice several times. Still, it didn't stop The Telegraph from repeating the fairy tale yet again: “The Fed could buy E2 trillion of EMU debt or more, intervening with crushing power. The credible threat of such action by the world's paramount monetary force might alone bring Italian and Spanish yields back down below 5 percent before one bent nickel is even spent.”. Based on what I have seen, any improvement in confidence would be short lived – on the order of 7 days or less – and then the panic would set in again. If real stimulus didn’t reflate things permanently, the simple threat of further stimulus certainly will not. The market is, in essence, more afraid of getting left holding an empty bag by the other players in the debt Ponzi than it is of the Federal Reserve or any other central monetary authority for that matter. If Bernanke goes too far with his helicopter drops then pretty soon the US will be the one struggling with increasing interest rates. Once the US can no longer afford to roll its debt over, I guarantee you that the whole corrupt system will collapse. There is no more powerful monetary authority on the planet than the Fed and once confidence in it is lost, confidence will be lost in the global monetary system.
At the end of the day people have to understand that, due to the interconnectedness of the global economy, there is no fix that does not result in a major crash. Every positive sounding false hope action will result in a negative reaction of unintended consequences. That is not to say that we should not elect Ron Paul and drive honesty back into monetary policy; we must do this so that we don’t continue to have problems years into the future and long after we should have gotten past the upcoming series of defaults. We need to learn from our mistakes and stop doing the same things over and over expecting different outcomes than before.
1 comment:
Debasing the dollar doesn't mean higher prices for everything; wages lag at best, typically they're squashed.
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