By
Wolf Richter
March
26, 2012
When
the world's major central bankers get together, as they did at the Fed
conference in Washington this weekend, ironies abound. Off to the side was
Turkey’s government that had just floated a plan to get its people to turn in
their physical gold in exchange for “certificates,” a first if still voluntary
step in what may become a process of gold confiscation. In the background was
the Fed, which in January had promised to keep interest rates at record lows
through 2014, come hell or high water, after having purchased $2.3 trillion in
bonds. And in the foreground were the money printers of Japan and Europe.
“If
low interest rates induce investment projects that are only profitable at such
interest-rate levels, this could have an adverse impact on productivity and
growth...,” said Masaaki Shirakawa, Governor of the
Bank of Japan, the champion of deficit monetization and ultra-low interest
rates.
He
was worried, he said, about “side effects” such as rising commodity prices ~ a
non sequitur after he'd announced in mid-February that the BOJ
would plow another ¥10 trillion ($128 billion) into asset purchases, having already done three waves of
asset purchases in 2011. And then we learned that board members fretted that
this might be considered monetization of Japan's deficit. Um, yes.
Not
to be outdone, Jean-Claude Trichet, ex-President of the ECB, did his own
fretting. Under him, the ECB had purchased crappy Eurozone sovereign bonds
despite a treaty that prohibits it. And now he
worried that these bond purchases by
central banks have become part of a new “permanent regime,” and that it could
create “behavioral contagion” ~ something that has already happened. “I think
we have to reflect on that,” he said belatedly.
Back
to Turkey: it found a different solution for its own out-of-control budget
deficit. Like that of Japan, the US, and other countries, Turkey’s deficit, at
10% of GDP, has become part of the “permanent regime.” But rather than deal
with it the hard and honest way ~ cut spending and increase tax collections ~ Turkey
is grasping for alternatives.
Hence
the plan to bamboozle its citizens into
handing over their hidden stashes of physical gold in return for what would
certainly be pretty certificates. And as an additional incentive, gold-deposit
accounts would earn interest.
When
I was in Turkey in 1997, pocket money was a wad of Turkish lira that included
1,000,000-lira notes. Even beggars could be millionaires. And those who spent
their last million on gold (jewelry was a favorite) would never forget how
smart that decision was. Not only would the price of gold, at the time around
$300 per ounce, start rising again, but also the value of the lira would
dissipate into hyperinflation.
On
January 1, 2005, the government revalued the currency at 1,000,000 lira to 1 New Turkish lira and issued new
banknotes and coins. Then, on January 1, 2009, the government again put new
banknotes and coins in circulation but without New in the name. They looked different, and
omitting New would
certainly inspire confidence and help people forget the fiasco of the old lira.
Inflation
in February was 10.4%. Yield on the two-year bond is near 10%. And last year,
the lira plummeted 20% against the dollar. No wonder Turks don’t trust their
paper money, regardless of how the government dresses it up. So they doubled
their purchases of physical gold in 2011, according to the World Gold Council.
Their savings rate is at a 30-year low. They’re borrowing and spending lira,
and they’re buying gold for safekeeping in their homes. A lot of it. $150 -
$300 billion, according to government estimates ~ savings that are not part
of the "savings rate."
If
the government got its hands on, say, $200 billion of its people’s gold, it
could transfer it into the international market and kick the deficit can down
the road. And if push came to shove, it could do with the certificates what
Greece did with its bonds.
Which
makes people wonder who the advisor on the project was. Goldman Sachs?
But
Turks saw what happened next door: “We owed it to our children and
grandchildren to rid them of the burden of this debt,” said Greek Finance
Minister Evangelos Venizelos after the bond swap, a default that had whacked
private sector investors with a 72% loss. While everyone other than the bondholders
was applauding, Greece’s economic horror show continued in its relentless
manner. For that whole debacle, read..... “A harder Default To Come.”
And who, what controls Turkey? A very tiny minority (the "donmeh"; same old story)
ReplyDeleteOn the new "gold rush" - many people are making plan to move into gold, silver, etc. but don't have an exit plan - i.e. when to get out and why ...
Mike Stathis (claims that gold, silver, etc. could turn into a big scam -as the market is nearly totally controlled by the usual international crime gang (no surprise), but he does advocate holding some as investment) and his article with some more of truth:
"...perhaps the most overlooked element of fraud comes from the Zionist media. The Zionist mafia has designed countless ways to steal from gentiles. And they won’t hesitate using these methods on other Jews as long as money is involved."
full article here:
http://poorrichards-blog.blogspot.com/2011/12/how-zionist-media-steals-from-gentiles.html
A more fair system should be used than either the current fiat currency (under total control of the talmudics) or gold-backed money (almost under total control of the talmudics) such as that described in this excellent video - "The Secrets of Oz" (yes it's USA oriented, but applies to the entire world now ...)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=swkq2E8mswI