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Currency Collapse

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Currency Collapse

Posted with permission and written by Jeff Thomas (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 

Currency Collapse - Jeff Thomas

 

 

Cash is a scarce commodity in Greece.

In June, Greek banks declared a surprise limitation on how much could be withdrawn from an account. At present, the government still limits the cash withdrawals of its citizens.

Of course, this is just the most recent development in a series of events that make up the cash squeeze. In response, Greeks have done what all people do when they cannot get enough currency – improvise.

Since 2010, several alternative systems of payment for goods and services have cropped up in Greece. One is TEM, which allows people to accrue monetary credit online and then use that credit to pay others. Another is the Athens Time Bank, which logs time units and allows individuals to pay each other with their time; the services provided can be anything from language lessons to medical consultations. And still, other systems are popping up, as Greeks, cut off from their own savings in the banks, seek out any method of payment other than the euro. As expected, barter is becoming commonplace.

Greece is right where Weimar Germany was in late 1922. The 1919 Treaty of Versailles required Germany to pay reparations for WWI. But after losing the war, Germany was already on the ropes economically, and the conditions of the treaty amounted to an unpayable level of debt. As it became apparent that the debt was impossible to pay, the Allies squeezed harder. Economic conditions in Germany dramatically worsened, not unlike those in Greece today, and for the same reason.

Germans did their best to sidestep the economic squeeze. As the cost of goods and services was rapidly rising (on a daily basis), they learned that it was best to spend Reichsmarks as quickly as possible on anything that was holding its value better than banknotes were.

Interestingly, in 1922, virtually no one felt that currency was the problem. German politicians blamed the Allies, particularly the French, for demanding that Germany fulfill the terms of the treaty. Bankers often blamed foreign currencies for rising against the mark. And the people of Germany generally placed the blame on the most immediate symptom – the fact that costs were rising more quickly than wages. Although they were pleased when their own wages went up, they wanted the prices of commodities to remain the same. The common people therefore blamed the merchants (particularly the many Jewish merchants) for raising the prices of their goods every time wages increased. They called it “Jewish greed” and failed to understand that every time wages increased, the cost of production increased, and in turn, this increase was passed to the merchants.

In 1922, as in 2015, most everyone failed to recognize that monetary movement is circular in nature, not linear. All payments, for all goods and services, impact one another in a domino effect.

The provision of goods and services is the lifeblood of any economy. Those who offer goods or services and those who pay for them create wealth. This is the natural order of economics. However, if currency isartificially pumped into an economic system – through the printing of bank notes, as in Germany in 1922, or through the provision of bailouts, as in Greece in 2015 – no goods have been created, and no services have been performed. The injection of currency fails to improve the economy; it makes the situation worse.At some point, the money tap must be shut off, and when it is, a crash takes place. The severity of the crash is directly proportional to the degree of currency injection.

So, as long as we’re comparing parallel events, what else happened back then? Well, while most people in Germany were experiencing a steady decrease in their standard of living, farmers seemed to be holding their own. This, of course, was because they remained productive. They created essential goods for sale to others, so they maintained their living standards. In the autumn of 1922, while most Bavarians could not afford to attend Oktoberfest, the beer halls still did acceptable business because of the farmers who came to town for the celebration. However, city dwellers deeply resented those farmers for buying the beer that they themselves could not afford.

So great was the resentment that the prime minister of Bavaria submitted a bill to the Reichsrat to make gluttony a public offence.

In 1923, as the Weimar inflation grew to the point where city dwellers were starving, many people went out to the country to steal the produce farmers had worked to grow. The city dwellers’ resentment was so high that many raiders even killed farmers out of hatred. Further, since they couldn’t take the farmers’ cattle back to the city with them, they slaughtered them in the fields out of spite. Of course, by destroying thesource of the food, they assured that they would receive even less in future. Many starved.

As stated by British Author Adam Fergusson in When Money Dies, “It brought out the worst in everybody…. It caused fear and insecurity among those who had already known too much of both. It fostered xenophobia. It promoted contempt for government and the subversion of law and order.”

Further, as stated at the time by Sir Basil Blackett, controller of finance of the British Treasury, “Each class in Germany thinks that the burden of taxation should fall on some other class.” (Does any of this sound familiar?)

If Greece in 2015 mirrors Germany in 1922, then we might expect Greece in 2016 to resemble Germany in 1923.

But what about the rest of us? We’re not in the same financial state as Greece – at least not yet. But the whole of the EU, the U.S., Canada, and many other “First World” countries are following the same destructive economic path. We just aren’t quite as far along as Weimar Germany in 1923.

So, what happened next in Germany?

· Public demand for a mandatory redistribution of wealth increased.

The desire for redistribution of wealth has become a common cry, and particularly in the U.S., where a presidential election will take place in a year and some candidates are fanning the flames on the issue.

· Any movement of currency had to be reported, then authorized.

Currency controls are being implemented, one after the other, to limit people’s ability to move their own money. Most threatening is a plan to eliminate cash so that money cannot be transferred without the permission of the banks.

· Importation was regulated.

Politicians in the EU and U.S. are increasingly speaking of the need for protective tariffs.

For decades, political leaders have been squeezing the economy for all they can get. As they’ve reached the point of diminishing returns, they’ve done what politicians always do: increase debt to prolong and increase their intake of wealth.

These actions can be likened to those of a farmer who, wanting more milk than a cow can produce, milks it dry, and then, refusing to admit his folly, starts draining the cow of its blood. He may claim that the increasing need will be satisfied by increasing the removal of blood and, on a temporary basis, this claim will allow him to continue making use of the cow. However, it is a certainty that, at some point very soon, the cow will collapse.

This was the case in Germany in 1923, and this is the case in much of the world now.

Most people have no idea what really happens when a currency collapses, let alone how to prepare.

We think everyone should own some physical gold. Gold is the ultimate form of wealth insurance. Its wealth preserves through every kind of crisis imaginable. It will preserve wealth during the next crisis, too.

 

 

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Currency Collapse

Posted with permission and written by Jeff Thomas (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 

 

 

Jeff Thomas is British and resides in the Caribbean. The son of an economist and historian, he learned early to be distrustful of governments as a general principle. Although he spent his career creating and developing businesses, for eight years, he penned a weekly newspaper column on the theme of limiting government. He began his study of economics around 1990, learning initially from Sir John Templeton, then Harry Schulz and Doug Casey and later others of an Austrian persuasion. He is now a regular feature writer for Casey Research’s International Man and Strategic Wealth Preservation in the Cayman Islands.

 

 

 

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Wed, 12/16/2015 - 12:26 | 6930783 FinalEvent
FinalEvent's picture

There is nothing with an intrinsic value. 

Value is subjective.

 

Wed, 12/16/2015 - 10:12 | 6930065 Ghordius
Ghordius's picture

yes. the question is which fiat and when

historically, the fantasy that some have here that all fiat goes down at the same time... never happened

and nobody has an explanation about how it can even happen for the first time in 6'000 years of monetary history

-----

Greece isn't at the 1922 stage of things. it is at the 1923 stage of things

it can't revert to a currency nobody believes anymore (the Drachma or the 1922 Papiermark)... because there is no faith in such a currency. least of all among Greeks

but it is using a currency that is harder then that (the EUR or the 1923 Rentenmark)

it might change, yes. like in 1924, when the new Reichsmark was introduced after the Rentenmark was stabilized

Wed, 12/16/2015 - 12:36 | 6930835 KnuckleDragger-X
KnuckleDragger-X's picture

Full faith and credit seems to have some small limitations, but not to worry, we have a plan......

Wed, 12/16/2015 - 12:06 | 6930656 DeadFred
DeadFred's picture

The difference this time is we really aren't using paper money now. To have ALL fiat money go down at the same time may only require the demise of faith in electronic money. As a gas station owner would you fill up the truckers tank if you doubted payment from his credit card company? Without fuel in his truck who will resupply the two weeks worth of food found in a typical urban area? There isn't enough paper fiat around to run the economy and it would take time to distribute more, and who would distribute it if the derivatives bomb had shuttered all banks (or God forbid the EMP). The Western fiats could easily all collapse at once but would that spread to the rest of the world? It's beyond my paygrade to analyse that. 

Wed, 12/16/2015 - 19:26 | 6932621 Dwain Dibley
Dwain Dibley's picture

What you're calling "electronic money" isn't money at all, it's bank debt, that's what all fictions called "deposit accounts" consist of, your bank's ledger accounting entry of how much actual Fiat Legal Tender Money the bank owes you.  When you use a debit card or a credit card, you're actually drawing upon the bank's line of credit.

Let's say you go down to your corner store to pick up a few things. You don't have any money with you so the store owner lets you take the stuff after he totals it and you sign for the amount, promising to pay later. Did you just use a 'electronic money', or 'digital credit', or 'digiatal dollars' to pay for the stuff you got from the store?  No, you incurred a debt obligation that requires payment at a future date.

It works the same way when you use your debit card. All you're doing when you use a debit card to make a purchase is, transferring your obligation to pay the store owner, to the bank, payment has yet to be made. The bank deducts the amount from its debt to you, as represented by your account with them, and adds that amount to the debt it owes to the store owner, as represented by his account with the bank. There was no money or currency of any type, digital, electronic or otherwise, used or exchanged in that transaction, just a transfer of an obligation to pay, which has yet to be met.  The same applies when you use a credit card, you're accessing that bank's line of credit, which is generated from the asset (capital) submitted by you to them, your credit card application.

The notion that we're using 'digital (electronic) money' or 'digital  currency' or 'digital  dollars' as a medium of exchange is nothing more than a trick of the mind, a figment of our imaginations, a self deception, it's how we rationalize the transaction.

See: http://carl-random-thoughts.blogspot.com/

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