Friday, April 10, 2009

It is no longer money for production. It is money for power. Those who have the most power get the most money. Production, ordinary labor, capital investment, industry and shipping have all been commoditized.

So long as this remains the case, gold is just another transient investment, another Bingo ticket at the casino for the masses. Sure ... some of the most powerful and wealthiest hold some of their wealth in gold. They also hold factories, mines, ships, politicians, great globs of debt and other financial paper, land, more land, corporations, governments, NGO's, ... But no way would they voluntarilly cede power for gold. No way would they let a classic gold based hard currency take their power over the worlds financials and currencies, from them. The power to make money is the power to rule the world.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Recommendations

This last year was the time to go to cash, sell what could be sold, pay off debts, and downsize ones "nut" -- how much one needs to live on each month.

This next year one should prepare for a mix of empty store shelves and cash shortages. Cash will be short for all, as jobs, pensions, home equity, tax revenues, credit and liquidity will be increasingly in short supply. However this will only sporadically result in lower prices, as the dollar will be increasingly shunned by America's trading partners, and almost everything we can buy is either made overseas or depends heavily on foreign parts or energy.

The supply/demand curves will go unstable, as the supply of imports will go down, the foreign exchange value of the dollar will decline, credit based, investment and home equity funds will continue to evaporate, while the Fed continues to inject increasing trillions of dollars, trying to revive the failed economy.

So we will have a volatile mix of shortages, including of essentials such as food, and increasing price volatility, along with dramatic increases in crime in some areas, increases in government power grabs, and increases in unemployment.

This means one should stock up on essentials, such as long shelf life food as well as cash, while preparing to live on less.

The Fed is responding as if the problem was a lack of sufficient funds. The problem is rather that the dollar and treasuries are turning from what has been the most liquid asset in human history into toxic sludge. Injecting more sludge (debt based financing) into an engine that is freezing up because its oil has turned to sludge does not get the engine running at full speed again; rather it makes the engine more gummed up. Injecting highly volatile top fuel nitro into such an engine doesn't work either; rather it erratic bursts of power and risks fires and explosions.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Order, Darwin and Religion

It is our mission to leave the world a better place.

This means improving the healthy order of the world, at the various levels, from the simple physical to the higher conceptual and spiritual.

This properly includes attending to our own well being, physically, financially, emotionally and spiritually, so that we may have the strength, capacity and insight to make a greater impact.

The Darwin vs. religion debate is being in stated in terms that miss the point and fail to communicate to either side.

The scientific aspects of Darwin's Theory of Evolution have, I presume, useful application. But the unspoken message on another plane is that this is a zero sum game, each man and species for himself, may the best man win. This message justifies proving ones superiority by culling the weaker. That is a poisonous message.

The KumBaYa crowd doesn't get it much better. They still tend to think of this as a zero sum game, only instead of the strong stealing from the weak, rather we should all share. They distinguish only order and harmony at limited levels, and refuse to invoke destructive violence at one level in order to obtain a greater gain in order at another level.

The struggle is for a healthy order, locally and universally, at the several levels. A healthy order is one that contributes more order at the focal point than it extracts from elsewhere.

Order can increase, and the forces of disorder must be fought, sometimes with all the violence one can muster.

(The above was written after spending a couple of weeks attending to my late mothers affairs. My studies in economics have been put on hold. Now I must attend to my sister Jeans affairs, as she needs some assistance in her living arrangements.)

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Symptoms of misallocation

There are several glaring signs of misallocation of resources in our economies.

I noticed one of these today in my economics studies. One of the other students had worked for a few years in a cardboard factory, making pizza and takeout fastfood boxes. He reported that despite being in one of the better run, more efficient factories, the price competition was wicked and they continuously lost money.

This is likely what has been happening on the coast of China in spades. There has been too much money available for capital investments, leading to excess, unprofitable manufacturing capacity. Along with this, major manufacturing firms were no longer making money in their mainline businesses, and depended on investments, loans, financial products or speculation to stay in business. [P.S. For a delightful report on the enormity of the misallocations in China, see Inside China: A Sculptor's View, a post on Mish's blog, dated Feb 20, 2009]

Other signs of misallocation were the housing bubble, McMansions for NINJA applicants, millions of sudden profits for young hotshot traders on Wall Street, the humongous increase in derivative, swap and other leveraged financial paper, the weakening book to price, earnings to price and dividends of public companies, and the mushrooming, opaque, and entangled debt markets.

A giant house of financial cards provided a massive influx of investment and credit money for both expanding production capacity and consumption. Then the house collapsed.

We need to learn how to develop more robust global financial and credit markets.

Production and consumption are signs of prosperity, and the rapid expansion of both led us to think we were robustly healthy. Like the athlete winning on high doses of steroids, we didn't notice that our liver was getting destroyed ... or in this case our global financial system.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Economics as nutrition

Economics considers itself the study of scarcity, and allocation of resources to counter scarcity. Even the Austrian school complains that the problem with misallocation is that then there are not enough resources left where they need to be, once again assuming that "The Economic Problem" is
scarcity.

That would be as if nutrition considered itself the study of starvation.

Nutrition and such other measures to improve ones health are not simply "getting enough food". They are about understanding fairly complex bio-chemical systems and providing the right measures, and minimizing the wrong, at various times. Sun, exercise, sleep, various potients, stimulants and relaxants, and a seeming unending variety of nutrients.

What's more, notice how poorly nutrition is understood and much abused by those who can profit the most, and expect no less in our common understanding of economics, even if we could do more.

What's even more, we are still lacking general competence in handling matters of nutrition, after studying the same human biological subject for millenia. The world economy has some aspects that are at least in enormous degree unlike anything that existed even earlier in my life. The truth will elude us, and would be treated as a lie even if stumbled upon.

Standards for monetary reform, such as returning to a 100% gold reserve based currency or returning to private banks which have no special government powers or bailouts or insurance, are better than nothing. But this is like noticing that people whose diets are constrained to fewer calories live longer than those who pig out and become obese. Such simple metrics are crude guides to optimum economic or biological health.

The proper goal of nutrition is health, substainable and consistent with the well being of ones fellow beings and natural surroundings. The proper goal of economics is prosperity, substainable and consistent with the well being of ones fellow beings and natural surroundings.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Mother broke her hip

My mother broke her hip yesterday. She lives in Florida with my sister. My time may be needed there, which could interrupt my Economics studies at UNT, where I had attended my first college classes in 30 years earlier this week.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Bank deposit reserve ratios and ever increasing debt

When I claim that the deposits made in a bank by its customers serve to increase the banks reserves against which they can make further loans, I sometimes get the rebuttal that such deposits aren't assets to the bank, but liabilities. The rebutter notes that ones checking and savings accounts deposits represent liabilities to the bank, not assets.

This rebuttal is a half-truth talking point that is absurdly misleading. Banks don't and wouldn't just generate liabilites without a compensating asset. My cash deposit in my bank account represents two bookkeeping entries (as is typical with double entry bookkeeping) to the bank. The cash I handed over to the teller goes into their vaults, increasing their assets. The corresponding and balancing debit entry describes the IOU they essentially give me in return for my deposit, where that IOU grants me the right, under specified conditions, to demand the return of my money.

The bank can loan out the money it has, though it also has to retain some regulated amount of reserves to cover the liabilities of the potential withdrawals from the demand deposits it holds.

On related issues ...

We commonly account in blog discussions for this reserve requirement as requiring that the bank hold 10% of its demand account liabilities in reserves. However I seem to recall reading that the actual reserve requirements vary between 0% and 10%, depending on the size of the account, where small accounts have a 0% reserve requirement. I also seem to recall reading that actual reserve ratios of the major American banks is more like 3%.

Putting all this aside, things have gotten much worse (less conducive to stability in times of economic stress) for the major banks in the last five or ten years, due to their being able to package up the mortgages they hold for their customers into Mortgage Backed Securities and sell these securities for money. Just as the size of the available backing for Treasuries was greatly extended from just the banks to mutual funds and private investors in the 1970's (see the explanation of the "subsequent explosion in the size and breadth of bond markets", at http://www.gold-eagle.com/gold_digest_04/blumen081204.html), once again, in the 2002-2007 recovery following the dot-com bust, the available backing for bank reserves was greatly extended once again using securitized mortgages. Now a bank was not constrained to loan out some (large) percentage of its deposits and capital. Instead a bank could bundle up what loans it had extended so far, sell them for cash, and issue yet more loans. A vastly greater pool of debt was formed.

That pool is now draining.