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Silver and Monetary Considerations
David Morgan,
www.lemetropolecafe.com
07/31/08
Hyperinflation
in Germany
Many of you are probably too young to
appreciate the full impact of the
hyperinflation in Germany after WW1.
It was devastating. The picture BELOW
shows you the amount of paper that was
equal to one silver dollar, or ¾ of
one troy ounce of fine silver. After
seven years of constantly accelerating
inflation, the mark is finally
stabilized at the rate of over 4
trillion to a U.S. dollar. The black
market rate, however, was an
incredible 12 trillion to the dollar
at this time. The pre-inflation
exchange rate for the mark was by
contrast a modest 4.2 to the U.S.
dollar. Can anyone say Hyperinflation?
I have looked at this picture many
times, and during
one of my presentations, it suddenly
hit me that this amount of paper was
roughly equal to the amount of value
in a silver dollar. In other words,
the commodity value of the paper
was worth something, because paper can
be burned to give off heat and
certainly this is of value.
German Currency Crisis: Burn, Baby,
Burn
Recently one of my associates sent me
a photo (SEE BELOW) and indeed what I
had surmised was true. You can see
this woman burning the notes because
they did possess the value of being
able to heat the room, but this was
the highest and best use. The ability
to be a means of final settlement
(real money’s function) had
evaporated. See below.
The question for us today becomes
whether this is the path that we are
taking presently. I certainly must
state that so far it is, but we are
seeing some deflationary forces taking
place in the credit markets. We must
remember that after WW2, the Breton
Woods agreement was signed using the
U.S. dollar as the reserve currency of
the world. This was done because the
U.S. dollar was backed by gold, and by
using the U.S. dollar as the world’s
reserve currency, it meant essentially
that it was “as good as gold.” I put
quotations around that expression
because I am old enough to recall
hearing that expression of speech in
my youth. In fact there were basically
two well known expressions about the
dollar. One was, “good as gold”; the
other was, “sound as a dollar.”
The U.S. abused this privilege and
printed too much money. France caught
on to this, as I am sure others did as
well, but France shipped dollars back
to the U.S. and took the gold,
according to the contract. As this
developed, Richard Nixon, President at
the time, did about the only thing he
could and that was to renege on the
contract. This is politely referred to
as “closing the gold window,” but what
is really meant is that the world had
entered into a new era of financial
mismanagement that would have dire
consequences down the road.
I believe that we are now getting near
the end of that road and that we are
all in this together. What I mean by
that is that Germany, as well as all
of Europe, Asia, South America, North
America—basically the entire world—is
tied to the fate of the U.S. dollar.
Since the reserve is still the dollar,
as it goes down in value it obviously
means that all nations that hold
dollars are in trouble as well.
The implications from monetary history
are not good, as these two slides have
shown. The main stated function of the
central bank is to maintain monetary
stability, and yet this has not been
the case anywhere in the world. Taking
the United States as an example, the
value of the “dollar” is about 3.5
cents since the last central bank was
established, so in less than one
hundred years the reserve currency of
the world has lost almost 98% of its
value. This is a fact that escapes
many people because it has taken more
than two generations and has happened
at a slow enough pace for people to
adjust their thinking, to believe that
inflation is normal, that a little
inflation is necessary, or that, “My
wages are going up so who cares about
inflation?”
Most problems are best addressed when
the real problem is put into simple
terms. The problem as it exists today,
as it existed during the Weimar
Republic, is you cannot print your way
out of this mess. Or perhaps better
stated, you cannot print wealth.
Wealth has to be earned by the
production of real goods and services
that the free marketplace determines
without any outside interference.
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