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Only rarely can
you look into the economic future and see what's coming… at
least in time to take advantage. This is one of those times. After
a century of abuse by pandering politicians , encouraged at every
step by the clamoring masses, the U.S. economy is headed for an
iceberg, Moby Dick and a U-Boat.
As David
Galland points out below, clarity is possible because of a
combination of factors that, taken together, leave nothing but
hard choices… assuring the government will try to paper over its
many obligations with cheap money. Only this time, for reasons
explained, inflation will trigger a monetary crisis the likes of
which few living today have experienced.
That's
the bad news. The good news is that if you prepare for it, you'll
turn this once-in-a-lifetime crisis into once-in-a-lifetime
profits.
Doug
Casey
International
Speculator
78
Million.
That figure is the key to steering your portfolio successfully
past the reefs of today’s brewing monetary crisis. And, if you
play things right, it’s the key to making a lot of money for
yourself over the next decade.
78
million is the number of baby boomers who are in or approaching
retirement. That’s the biggest demographic bulge in U.S history,
fully 26% of the population.
And
many of those 78 million are in a jam. As they approach
retirement, they are still carrying historic levels of debt and,
on average, have woefully inadequate net worth -- and much of that
based on shaky housing prices.
In
fact, 25% of the retiring boomers – nearly 20,000,000 in all --
are facing retirement with a net worth of less than $50,000. You
don’t need to be an accountant to see that, with today’s
degraded currency and longer life expectancies, they won’t get
very far on so little.
This
is a real tragedy in the making. After all, what could be sadder
than millions of people striving for a lifetime to reach the
American dream and then discovering that the “golden years”
are just a fantasy, their wealth having been sucked away by
decades of inflation and taxes so that politicians and bureaucrats
could squander it to grease the skids for their own political
success.
In
1930, the total share of the U.S. economy directly controlled by
or dependent on government was about 11%, leaving the balance of
89% firmly in the hands of private enterprise.
Today,
by the late Milton Friedman’s calculations, the government’s
share of the U.S. economy – including the time and resources
required to comply with all the regulations – has ballooned to
over 50%, reducing the wealth-creating machinery of free
enterprise to an auxiliary engine for government.
No
wonder so many people live paycheck to paycheck.
What
It Means and How to Profit
U.S.
government debt now tops $9 trillion, before taking into
account its unfunded obligations for Social Security and Medicare
-- debts that the retiring boomers will soon have their hands out
to collect.
After
adding in Social Security, Medicare and all the government’s
other pay-later obligations, the current debt actually comes in at
over $60 trillion—an amount so large, not one person in a
million has a real sense of it. So let’s try to put that number
into perspective.
A trillion is 1000 X 1000 X 1000 X 1000, or a million millions. In
his first address to Congress, President Reagan, himself a big
spender, accurately pointed out that a stack of $1,000 bills four
inches high makes you a millionaire, and that a trillion dollars
would be a stack 67 miles high!
The U.S. government owes 60
of those sky-piercing stacks of $1,000 bills.
It’s a lot of money. And it’s not just any kind of money.
Amazingly, this unbacked currency of a bankrupt government is
still the reserve currency of virtually every nation in the world
today. But not, we think, for much longer.
To service its debt and keep the game going, the U.S. government
must sell on the order of $2.5 billion per day in new Treasury bills, much of it to foreigners already
sitting on something like $6 trillion of U.S. paper.
Absent the foreign buyers of U.S. Treasury securities, the whole
scam begins to unravel. And once it begins to unravel in earnest,
with wealthy foreigners and then governments rushing to switch out
of dollars, the speed and steepness of the monetary collapse will
be breathtaking.
Back
to the Boomers
While
millions of boomers will be lucky to scrape by for a year or two
of hard living in a trailer park, their meager assets won’t
carry them through the 20 or 30 years of retirement that medical
science now promises. For that, they’ll have to rely on scraps
from Washington. And if they have nothing else, every one of them
has a mailbox that’s just right for receiving government checks.
In
fact, according to the Fed, a majority of retired Americans
already rely on Social Security for 80% or more of their income.
And
that makes Social Security and Medicare politically untouchable,
no matter how badly the programs trap the U.S. economy.
Recognizing that the U.S. has little capacity to rein in its
profligate spending and has neither the intent nor the ability to
actually pay off its $60 trillion debt in money worth anywhere
near what it’s worth today, foreigners are increasingly leery
about accumulating more greenbacks.

On
November 9, for instance, Reuters reported that, “The bond and
foreign-exchange markets were struggling to come to grips with
comments from China's central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan, who
said his country had a clear plan to diversify its $1 trillion in
foreign-exchange reserves and is considering various options to do
so.”
Normally,
the more skeptical foreign investors become, the higher interest
rates must go to entice them to continue raising their hands at
Treasury auctions… and to keep them from dumping their existing
holdings.
But
even that route, at least for now, is closed. That’s due to the
critical role of housing in today’s economy and in the financial
statements of so many millions of American homeowners. Simply,
higher interest rates would devastate the already weak housing
market and bring ruin to a heavily indebted populace, especially
cash-strapped boomers, and further ratchet up the cost of
government borrowing. In other words, raising rates is not an
option.
So
what are nervous bureaucrats to do?
The
answer is to depreciate the currency – and as quietly as
possible. That allows the government to meet its obligations, but
with ever more worthless dollars. It’s their only way to buy
time.
In
fact, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke virtually gave the game book away
in a speech in Frankfurt on November 10.
“It
would be fair to say that monetary and credit aggregates have not
played a central role in the formulation of U.S. monetary
policy.”
In
other words, the total amount of money in the system – what we
“print” -- is whatever the government finds convenient from
one day to the next. That’s a politic way of admitting that the
U.S. government is planning to paper over all its many obligations
and accelerate a trend that has been in motion since the creation
of the Federal Reserve in 1913.
Make
no mistake, it’s a desperate strategy, but at this point it’s
the only option for a government whose decades of reckless
spending have led the economy into a box canyon, the floor of
which is covered in quicksand. There is no way out. The best they
can hope for is to stall the inevitable for as long as they can.
“Not on my watch” is the phrase of the day.
The
Death of the Dollar
In
this age of instant communication, the government can’t hide the
truth – at least not for long. So, no matter that they have
stopped publishing M-3 money supply numbers, recognition that we
are between a rock and a hard place is spreading.
Reckoning
day is not far off. And when it comes, it will rush in faster and
more brutally than almost anyone expects. The world’s financial
picture will be redrawn from scratch, and a painful unwinding of
the economic dislocations built up by decades of political
pandering will begin.
While
no one can say with certainty how the disaster will play out,
there is one truth you can take to the bank. Throughout all of
human history, gold has always
held its value as a monetary instrument. That sort of shock-proof
durability cannot be claimed by any paper currency, certainly not
by the dollar, which has lost 70--% of its value since abandoning
the gold standard in 1971. With the dollar untethered from gold,
the worth of the $20 bill in your pocket is headed for its
intrinsic value… as a recyclable.
In
the weeks, months and years just ahead, gold, silver and other
tangible assets are again going to become much more than financial
obscurities tucked away on the commodities page. They’re about
to become front-page news.
When
that happens, the prices of the metals – and of the high-quality
gold and silver shares we follow on behalf of subscribers to our International
Speculator -- are heading for the moon.
Hopefully,
enough of the 78 million baby boomers will catch on to the
underlying realities of their situation early enough to take
advantage. For many, it may be their last chance at enjoying
dignified golden years – instead of laboring through their
eighth decade under the Golden Arches.

www.caseyresearch.com
and www.kitcocasey.com
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