Is this It? Or Can They Fool Us Again?
A stressful weekend for the world's bankers and politicians, followed by a sleepless Monday, and all with a single question rattling around in their heads: How can we fool them again? For decades now the financial/public sector complex has been able to clean up its recurring messes - from Long Term Capital Management to the Asian Contagion to the tech crash to the housing bust - with credit. Just lower interest rates, shovel capital into the banks, and watch the hedge funds and CNBC eat it up. This has worked so well for so long that most of the people now running things seem to believe that it's right, that easy money actually improves lives and greases the wheels of capitalism. History will show, of course, that an unfettered printing press is actually economic heroin, inducing happy dreams at first but requiring ever higher doses until it finally kills its victim. Over the past three decades, the doses of debt have grown to near-fatal levels, leaving only the question of timing: when do we realize that not only have we been conned but that the con is over, and abandon, perhaps violently, the existing system? Today could easily be that day. Interest rates are as low as they can go, debt is surreally high, and life is still getting worse. Government and the big banks seem to have fallen back on platitudes and finger pointing. Just today the president proclaimed that "The United States of America is now and always will be a triple-A credit!" On the other hand, they've fooled us so many times, and so brazenly, that the possibility of one more for the road can't be discounted. Here's how the strategy is evolving:
The above is mostly speculation, of course, but it does seem reasonable that among the things we'll be offered at Tuesday's Fed meeting will be a promise of low interest rates pretty much forever, increased buying of long-term bonds to lower interest rates even further, and a statement of willingness to flood the banks with cash again if the bonus pool shrinks, er, if the economy keeps slowing. None of these, of course, will make the junkie stop shaking. So the next dose - a towering QE3 - will come soon. But will it "work" again, buying the banks another year to drain the last few drops of wealth from the system? Or will the markets finally see through the monetary illusion and pour every last bit of free capital into hard assets and out of the US?
John Rubino is co-author, with GoldMoney's James Turk, of The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit From It (Doubleday, 2007), and author of Clean Money: Picking Winners in the Green-Tech Boom (Wiley, 2008), How to Profit from the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003) and Main Street, Not Wall Street (Morrow, 1998). He currently edits DollarCollapse.com and GreenStockInvesting.com. |
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