Gold Forecaster
- Global Watch
How does a currency collapse?
And the U.S.$?
Julian D.W.
Phillips
May 8, 2006
Excerpts
from "Gold Forecaster - Global Watch."
When a currency loses the confidence
of its people, its fall becomes exponential, as has happened
to the Zimbabwe $, where in 1982 one U.S.$ equalled 1 Zimbabwe
$. Today around Z$200,000 buys one U.S. $ if you can find someone
idiot enough to sell one for the Z$.
In day-to-day terms, the smallest
note in Zimbabwe a Z$500 is the size of a U.S.$. The price of
a single-ply sheet of toilet paper is more expensive at around
Z$867.
The
U.S.$ is nowhere near there, but clearly the U.S. Administration
has no plan or even desire to rectify the U.S. Trade deficit.
Consequently, we are seeing a growing number of Central Banks
turning to the Euro for its reserves and away from the U.S.$.
Whilst most observers and particularly U.S. observers like to
have tangible facts and numbers with which to mathematically
gauge the present and the different possible futures, a collapsing
currency situation is not as neatly gaugeable. Indeed it is driven
in stages of 'confidence', which are rarely measurable in advance.
For instance we see today the
move of the Pension and other long-term funds into the gold E.T.F.'
one finds there are no mathematically measurable factors with
which to measure the pace of change to these funds. Yes, the
number of 'Road-shows' the World Gold Council does affects this
move to some extent, but how do you measure the spread of that
knowledge and resulting investment in the E.T.F.'s outside of
that? How does one measure the forces causing uncertainty and
falling 'confidence'.
It is an emotional progression,
one that moves in lurches as particular incidents destroy confidence
limb by limb. In such a climate a steady degeneration of confidence
lead to an effect we shall call a "plateau - cliff"
process.
- As confidence is whittled
away the currency appears relatively stable.
- Then a particular event will
occur that triggers a breakdown and the currency drops suddenly,
like falling off a cliff, until it finds a short-term bottom
and it holds that level for a period as though on a plateau.
The process then repeats itself.
- The degeneration then accelerates,
so the fall from the cliff to the next stable plateau happens
more quickly.
- Then the height of the cliff
[the fall] extends until it grows at an exponential basis.
- The final collapse will occur
when the currency is completely discredited and used only by
those unfortunate to have no other choice. Alternatively the
currency is changed to a new one, one whose issue is backed by
assets [Such as land - after the Weimar republic] and limited
to a fixed relationship to those assets until confidence
is restored by a healthy economy and a balanced Balance of Payments.
This provides a basis in which to be confident about currency.
However, were the $ heading
for a collapse, the U.S. $, a global reserve asset, nothing in
the U.S. such as land or any other fixed U.S. asset would suffice.
The asset would have to be accessible by its creditors, outside
the States who would have to have a willingness to accept that
asset in the case of a default by the U.S. The use of the $ domestically
and internationally brings such problems that in the final extreme
conditions the $ is inadequate as a global reserve currency.
But for the market to whittle
away confidence in the $ would take some time. But we believe
that it will happen.
- Look back a couple of years
and we saw the $ reigning supreme.
- Then warnings were given against
it as the Trade deficit began to grow.
- The Fed or the Administration
then allied itself to the euro, giving it the respite it has
enjoyed over the last year.
- Now there seems to be a breaking
down of the $ of late and some Central Banks switching to the
Euro out of the $. These were three distinct stages.
- The next stage is for the
$ to fall heavily against the Euro and Euro oriented currencies.
- Next will come the defence
of the $ until the weight of selling pressure exhausts the $
against other currencies [please note the U.S. has few foreign
currencies left in its hands with which to defend the $, but
the Fed put in place measures to allow it intervene in the international
foreign exchanges.]
- This could delay the fall
for some time, but history has shown that when a Central Bank
defends a rate in the market, it gives in periodically and devalues.
If insufficient it has to defend again and again.
- I have no doubt that Central
Banks will use this defence to unload their dollars back to the
States.
- At some stage the U.S.
will have to impose Controls to prevent foreign capital from
exiting the States and rejecting dollars coming home. These
are called Exchange Controls.
- When this happens many currencies
will begin facing the same problems as their reserves become
suspect too and they cannot defend their own Balance of Payments
deficits.
- At this point for the global
economy to function adequately, a new "Global Currency"
will have to be established and be supplied sufficient so as
to regain global confidence. We cannot see this happening
without gold in there to a greater or lesser extent. Of course
this will have to be at prices believed by all nations, not just
individuals!
During
this process confidence in the currency will be the measuring
factor, a nebulous, unstable element in itself. The process of
the decay of confidence is described above. But confidence could
well go down dramatically from the point we are at now with the
$ in the monetary system. Soon the cliffs will extend until the
defence of the currency comes, then a long plateau while the
dollar is defended, until the heavy falls begin.
The international trading power
of the States will dominate just how far the dollar will fall.
Of course if the States manages to show it is in the process
of balancing the Balance of Payments beforehand [which may not
mean the complete elimination of the Trade deficit] the
demand for dollars will probably overcome the supply. But inevitably
that action will mean a huge recession for the States, which
could prove an internal nightmare and cause a global recession
of its own.
It is probable that the Administration
would isolate the U.S.A. from the rest of the world by severe
Exchange Control measures, which will create its own internal
boom, sooner or later. We will produce an article, or series
thereof, at the right time, on this subject.
May 8, 2006
-Julian
D.W. Phillips
email: gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com
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