++++++ UPDATE
QE3 is 40 billion every month and it is open ended.
The stock market, of course, reacted positively but not an
awful lot. However, what the stock
market does, except for commodity prices, has little direct impact on the
everyday consumer.
Economists say this QE is powerful commitment to pump (read
print) money into the economy until job growth picks up significantly. That is not going to happen until the banks
start lending again and they will not do that as long as the congress and the
president present mixed signals that result in economic uncertainty. Small businesses will not seek loans, expand,
or hire for the same reason.
Watch for commodity prices to increase. It may not be a quick and rapid increase but
it will begin as soon as the speculators become organized.
Sometime in the probably not too distant future, the Weimar
cycle will begin anew right here in America.
++++++ ORIGINAL TEXT
The cause of the immense acceleration of prices that
occurred during the German hyperinflation of 1922–23 seemed unclear and
unpredictable to those who lived through it, but in retrospect was relatively
simple. The Treaty of Versailles imposed a huge debt on Germany that to be paid
only in gold or foreign currency.
Not by treaty but by willful deficit spending the US now has
a huge national debt similar to Germany in the 1920s.
The German government attempted to buy foreign currency with
German currency, but this caused the German Mark to fall rapidly in value,
which greatly increased the number of Marks needed to buy more foreign
currency. This caused German prices of goods to rise rapidly which increase the
cost of operating the German government that could not be financed by raising
taxes. The resulting budget deficit increased rapidly and was financed by the
central bank creating more money (Quantitative Easing in today’s terms).
The dollar is suffering from the effects of the first two
rounds of “Quantitative Easing” (QE1 and QE2) which is the same as printing
money and diluting the value of the dollar.
When the German people realized that their money was rapidly
losing value, they tried to spend it quickly. This increase in monetary
velocity caused still more rapid increase in prices which created a vicious
cycle. This placed the government and banks between two unacceptable
alternatives: if they stopped the inflation, this would cause immediate
bankruptcies, unemployment, strikes, hunger, violence, collapse of civil order,
insurrection, and revolution. If they
continued the inflation, they would default on their foreign debt. The attempts
to avoid both unemployment and insolvency ultimately failed when Germany had
both.
Does any of this sound familiar?
Today the Federal Reserve appears set to launch a third
round Quantitative Easing monetary stimulus.
Whether or not there will be another QE will announced today at
1230. If it happens, and it likely will,
it could be either for a fixed amount of dollars or open-ended. A fixed amount would be bad enough but an
open-ended unlimited program would be the same thing that Germany did back in
the 1920s.
Read up on Germany in the 1920s and 1930s.
Are you ready for anything? (Are
You Ready For Anything? of 31 August in Scope Magazine)?
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