Legalise Freedom

 

Posts Tagged ‘fiat currency’

Trust in free markets is dead

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Plutocracy, rule by the rich, is not named for Pluto, god of death, but his spoiled son, Plutus, the personification of wealth. The juxtaposition of a dead economy and bank billionaires makes this lineage apt.

The failure of Washington and Wall Street to foresee the financial crisis is well known. Less well known is their failure to grasp the depth of the crisis once it began. The crisis did not emerge suddenly in September 2008 with Lehman and AIG; it was in full swing by August 2007 with the Fed’s emergency discount rate cut. Why were our leaders blind not once, at the outset, but twice, after the crisis had begun?

Things got worse than regulators first imagined because of the hidden role of derivatives. A simple example makes the point. In 2007, there were about $1 trillion in subprime and similar risky mortgages outstanding. Historic default rates on mortgages were around 3 percent. It became clear that subprime defaults would be much higher. So assuming some sky-high estimate like a 25 percent default rate meant $250 billion of potential losses on $1 trillion of risky mortgages. A $250 billion loss is a big number but manageable in a $14 trillion economy. In real terms, it was not worse than the S&L crisis of the late 1980’s. Experts thought this was a problem to be managed but not one that threatened the financial system as a whole. This view prevailed through the spring and summer of 2008 as the Bear Stearns, Fannie and Freddie bailouts continued. There was a persistent sense that somehow the crisis was not going away, yet the basic subprime math made it hard to understand why. 

Unknown to the public, politicians and bank regulators, a grotesque edifice of credit default swaps had emerged in the shadows of Wall Street. Credit defaults swaps, CDS, are just side bets on whether some normal debt instrument will perform or fail. The size of the CDS market grew from $2.2 trillion in 2002 to $54 trillion in 2006. Not all of these CDS related to subprime mortgages but a large percentage did. If we generously assume half were subprime related, that’s a $27 trillion bet. Now, when we apply the 25 percent default rate we get losses of over $6 trillion; much closer to the actual losses in the collapse of 2007-2008 and over 20 times greater than the $250 billion estimate from subprime mortgages alone. (Article continues below) 

The subprime market was a scandalous fraud by itself. But the lying borrowers, crooked mortgage brokers, greedy investment bankers, corrupt rating agencies, crony-filled government agencies and ignorant investors combined could only lose $250 billion on their own. It took the quants at Goldman and elsewhere to find a way to lose over 20 times that amount through the magic of derivatives. Who said American technology is dead? It takes genius to turn a quarter-trillion-dollar scam into a $6 trillion catastrophe.

Surely some social good came out of this financial alchemy? After all, isn’t reward half of the risk-reward spectrum? When a city borrows money an airport can be built. When a corporation borrows a new factory rises. When individuals borrow they buy a house or car. Along with debt comes some investment, purchase or savings that helps advance the economy however fitfully. How many airports, roads, factories, farms, houses, cars or other goods fell out of the $27 trillion CDS piñata? I won’t keep you in suspense—the answer is none.

Unlike real banking which raises capital for worthy enterprises, the CDS market is a betting parlour with no social utility. But don’t the bets just change hands between winners and losers with no harm to the rest of us? Not exactly. The winners like Goldman made sure to collect. But the losers, after receiving their personal bonuses on up-front fees and buying houses in Nantucket, walked away and handed society the bill. If you’re wondering who the real losers are and you happen to be a taxpayer just look in a mirror.

Society is so in thrall to Goldman and the other banks that we can’t even hold them accountable. Their critics are accused of using hindsight as if the game wasn’t rigged from the start. Opponents are accused of being anti-free market as if putting horsemeat in hamburgers is a legitimate market activity. As a society, we’ve lost our nerve when it comes to bankers and their lobbyists. The Age of the Plutocrat has well and truly arrived.

Democrats are going through the motions of reform now while Republicans are going through the motions of reform later. There is no reform. The Dodd and Frank bills are shot through with easy loopholes a second-year law student could find. Blanche Lincoln’s bill has teeth, but no hope of passage. The new bank bailout fund is just another wealth transfer from citizens to the banks. The new systemic risk regulator does not understand risk, viewing it as stocks and flows to be dialled up or down rather than the complex nonlinear system poised on the edge of catastrophe, which it really is. Campaign contributions are flowing, lobbyists are high-fiving, journalists don’t get it and the public is confused and disgusted. We are blinded by a so-called free-market ideology subscribed to by politicians and pundits who can’t see the difference between a free-market and a rigged game. Free markets depend on trust and that died a long time ago.

Source: King World News Blog http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/KWN_DailyWeb.html

Comment on this Article

Local currencies: the missing link in the quest for sustainability

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Currency is the lifeblood of an economic system. Most people think that there’s only one type of money, because that’s all they’ve ever known. Cheques and credit cards etc. represent special-purpose forms of cash, but money is money, they think, regardless of the form it takes. Few realise that there are, potentially at least, many different forms of money, and each type can affect the economy, human society and the natural environment in a different way.

Bernard Lietaer, research fellow at the Centre for Sustainable Resources, California, and author of “The Future of Money” (2001), says:

‘We create our exchange systems and then they create the world we live in.’

Richard Douthwaite, author of “The Ecology of Money” (1999), says:

‘If we wish to live more ecologically, it would make sense to adopt monetary systems that make it easier to do so.’ (Continues below)

southampton-local-currency

Essentially, community currencies connect unused or under-utilised resources with unmet needs, enabling exchanges to take place despite a shortage of money.

A wide variety of currency models are currently in use throughout the world, including manually operated mutual credit systems, beautifully designed vouchers and on-line accounting systems.

Members form trading circles, list their offerings and needs, and offer and accept payment for goods and services either wholly or partly in the local currency.

Local Currencies are the ultimate in loyalty programs. Unlike profits derived from trading with national currencies, the wealth generated by trading with exchange systems created by and for local communities stays within the district.

Since community currencies work alongside and supplement national currency, once their advantages are understood they are welcomed by the community, particularly in times of economic stress. Historically, community currencies have been economic and social lifesavers.

The principle advantages of community currencies are:

• Protection against global economic instability

• Stemming ‘leakage’ of community wealth to outsiders/offshore

• Support for local small/medium businesses

• Business opportunities in import substitution

• Less fuel needed for imported product

• Increased employment opportunities

• Less conventional money required for desirable projects

• Enhanced sense of community

• Branding opportunity for the district

• Tourist attraction, especially for early adopters

Read article: http://alethonews.blogspot.com/2009/11/local-currencies-missing-link-in-quest.html

Comment on this Article

Our money system would be a joke if it didn’t cause suffering to billions of people

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Have the authorities in our supposedly democratic country been deliberately concealing from citizens and their representatives how the money system they manage for us now works? Yes, of course they have.

In the last few weeks, this lunatic saga has continued to unravel. It still has further to go and more to reveal. Developed by us oh-so-clever humans and used by no other species, the idiotic way we allow our money system to be managed would be a joke – if it didn’t cause suffering to billions of people and other creatures around the world.

Around the world now, thousands of politicians, officials, experts, NGOs, commentators and journalists from many countries are preparing for the Copenhagen global climate conference in December. Already they accept that it won’t produce a binding treaty, only prepare the ground for the possibility of one at a later date. (Continues below)

11908_liarbanker

More important in the long run, none of them seem to understand the link between the global environmental threat and global finance. It is that the world’s money system now imposes a perverse calculus of values on countries, places and people everywhere.

This both encourages the better-off minority to try to preserve and expand their privileged economic and social positions, and compels the poorer majority to try to survive and maintain themselves and their families, in ways that are bound to overwhelm the planet’s resources, including its capacity to absorb carbon and other climate-changing emissions. Without the worldwide money system’s radical reform, any eventual climate treaty is bound to fail.

Continue reading at: http://www.jamesrobertson.com/newsletter.htm

Comment on this Article

When cash is no longer king

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

While half of those watching the world of finance is waiting for the other shoe to drop and the other half celebrating the mainstream news that the economy is bouncing back, I have been looking at new paradigms in creating an economically sustainable future. Whether it all comes unraveled by mid-November, as some of our insiders have been telling us, or not, we have a frighteningly bloated and decaying beast we’ve been feasting on in the west – a credit based (debt based) economy. And it’s beginning to decompose to the extent that there is barely any flesh left on it’s bones.

Three days ago I heard an NPR business report that mentioned Harley Davidson’s profits were down 83% in the third quarter. In response, the luxury motorcycle manufacturer was quickly developing new markets, including major cities in the Middle East. The reporter interviewed an Arab woman who says she is excited to be on the back of her husband’s bike. It evoked some interesting, though likely inaccurate, visuals in my mind. But soon my logic took over. No more Harleys for middle aged white lawyers and dentists meant that they could no longer secure credit. Oops. If these guys aren’t being given credit, what’s happening to the rest of us? Yes, I know, that’s a rhetorical question.

The stark truth is that the one factor that keeps most human beings at the bottom tier of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs is a scarcity of money in our lives. This lack keeps us in fear and working simply for our survival. This is not what it means to be human. We are innately creative beings with a need to express beauty, kindness, generosity and love, only we’re too tired to do it most of the time. But what happens if money goes away, at least money as we know it?

Read article: http://consciousmedianetwork.blogspot.com/

Comment on this Article

The new inflation threat

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Late on a Friday in August, when most people around the world were not looking, the international monetary system, in an unprecedented move, evolved. We were notified by the IMF of the following:

Aug. 28 (Bloomberg) — The International Monetary Fund said it today pumped about $250 billion into foreign-exchange reserves worldwide, acting on an April call from leaders of the Group of 20 nations to boost global liquidity.

Countries will be able to convert the money, to come from so-called Special Drawing Rights, into hard currencies through “voluntary trading arrangements” with other members, the IMF said on its Web site today. The SDRs are the institution’s unit of account based on a basket of currencies.

What this means is that for the first time in history we have a world central bank capable of creating money out of thin air. No longer does the IMF need to borrow money with a vote of all members plus the consent of the US congress. It can simply create whatever amount of money it needs through the creation of SDRs. Not for itself, mind you, but for the world. The SDR has been around since 1967, but never as a convertible asset. That changed Friday, August 28th, 2009.  The SDR has quietly mutated.

Read article: http://www.kitco.com/ind/Nathan/aug312009.html

Comment on this Article

Why is monetary reform a censored subject?

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Machiavelli pointed out that “He who introduces a new order of things has all those who profit from the old order as enemies, and he has only lukewarm allies in all those who might profit from the new” (The Prince, 1532). Very true. But we need to pursue the question further.

Why do virtually no politicians, officials, economists, academics, media commentators, and bankers and other finance professionals acknowledge publicly how our money supply is now created? And why do they avoid discussing the possibility of a better way than allowing the banks to create it as profit-making “credit”?

And what about the multitude of charities and pressure groups and NGOs around the world, focused on poverty, overseas aid, the environment and each of the many other spheres in which people suffer from our dependence on banks to create the world’s money supplies? Are they so concentrated on raising money for their own activities that they don’t recognise the present way of creating money as a cause of the ills they oppose? or are they just scared of offending the banks?

These are not academic questions. To some people they will be hostile. To others they may be helpful. Corrupting and corrupted self-interested opponents of monetary reform will contest them or try to ignore them. But, to the larger number of people passively unmoved by the need for reform, a less hostile approach will be more effective. (Continues below)

cov-f_0

We are all motivated to some extent by how we perceive the balance of risk and reward between the different courses of action open to us. That applies to all the professionals directly concerned with money, and to the press and broadcasting media, as it does to everyone else. To some extent, the careers, reputations, earnings, pensions and investments of thousands of influential people in our legislatures and press and broadcasting industries as well as banking are directly affected by the fortunes of the banking industry.

To create the necessary momentum in favour of monetary reform we have to find ways both of combating the actively negative influence of corruption, competing commitments, over-cautious inaction and passive lack of concern, and of strengthening positive interest and committed support for reform.

Those two approaches together are needed to convince public and electoral opinion strongly enough of the need for monetary reform to compel increasing numbers of the professionals in charge of managing the money system to change their thinking in that direction too.

Read newsletter: http://www.jamesrobertson.com/news-aug09.htm

Comment on this Article

Civilizations cannot function on fraudulent money

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Let us imagine that in August of 1971 the governments of the world decreed that as of that date all vehicles of the world should run on water rather than on gasoline. Within 48 hours, at the most, all vehicular traffic in the world would have ceased. The cause – an absurd decree – would have produced disastrous effects immediately. In human affairs, which are much more complex, it generally happens that bad decisions do not produce all their bad effects immediately, but only in the course of time.

Today the world is struggling with an unprecedented economic collapse, caused by a mistaken decision taken almost 38 years ago. The distance of 38 years in time, in a world which is undergoing change at such a rapid pace as ours, is a great distance. Those who can remember the bad decision of August 15, 1971, and who can recall how the world worked before that date, are today at least 63 years of age. They are already either retired or about to retire from active life.

 1


For men who are active today, 1971 is a date that is beyond the horizon of their interest. For those men, what they have seen in their lives seems to them completely normal; they think that life has always been as they have known it. Why should it not continue to be so?

Read article: http://www.plata.com.mx/mplata/articulos/articlesFilt.asp?fiidarticulo=96

Comment on this Article

NO2ID - Stop ID cards and the database state