If you’re after a perfect example of everything that’s wrong with mainstream economic thinking can I suggest you go out and buy today’s Australian Financial Review (AFR).
Once you’ve bought it, take it home, lay it on the table and then slowly turn to page 26.
But before you start reading, grab a notepad and a pencil and then settle down to read the article by “Market monitor” Glen Mumford.
Why the notepad and pencil? So you can take notes. So you can write his arguments out for yourself in your own handwriting. We’ll guarantee that when you read it back and try to make sense of it you’ll be amazed that anyone could make the kind of mindless argument that Mumford makes.
But with any luck you’ll resist the urge to stop reading at the end of the second paragraph. A paragraph that goes:
“Perhaps Dr Strangelove was on the right track all those years ago when he told us to stop worrying about the bomb. Instead, we should learn to love it.
“Maybe it’s time US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke and his policy-setting colleagues did the same with inflation.”
And perhaps Mr. Mumford would do well to recall that the Dr Strangelove character was also a raving lunatic. A raving lunatic with an involuntary twitch that caused him to do a fascist salute.
But then, likening central bankers to fascists is rather appropriate we think. Not that Mr. Mumford would have intended the comparison.
Our good friends at Wikipedia provide a neat definition of fascism:
“Fascism… is a radical and authoritarian nationalist political ideology. Fascists seek to organise a nation according to corporatist perspectives, values and systems, including the political system and the economy… Fascists believe that a nation is an organic community that requires strong leadership, singular collective identity, and the will and ability to commit violence and wage war in order to keep the nation strong. They claim that culture is created by the collective national society and its state, that cultural ideas are what give individuals identity, and thus they reject individualism.”
If – as your editor does – you consider taxation as a form of violence against the individual then the definition of fascism can easily be used as the definition for so-called Western democracy.
We like Mark Latham’s idea of encouraging voters this Saturday to just spoil their ballot papers. Make no mistake, it won’t matter which party wins the election, the result will be the same – money from your pocket going into the grubby paws of Canberra bureaucrats.
But anyway, keep reading Mr. Mumford’s article, because it gets worse… much worse.
I won’t go into any further detail here because it just contains more of the same old story from the mainstream – inflation good, deflation bad. Rising prices good, falling prices bad.
However, I will quote one more comment from the article. Last week we wrote how the Federal Reserve was institutionalising money printing by vowing to keep the Fed balance sheet at the current level.
It was going to do this through buying more longer dated US treasuries when its existing holdings of mortgage-backed securities matured. In other words, rather than removing liquidity from the market – as all the mainstream commentators this past year insisted the Fed would do – the Fed will keep the money in the system.
Which, apparently isn’t good enough for the likes of Glen Mumford:
“Instead of talking about ‘maintaining’ its [the Fed's] balance sheet, it needs to embrace a major expansion; at least $US1 trillion ($1.1 trillion) more – possibly a whole lot more.”
No explanation of course where the magical $1 trillion will come from. Mumford doesn’t explain that it will just be created out of thin air.
And there’s no explanation of why the next trillion will be any more successful in helping the economy than the previous trillions. But that’s probably because like the rest of the mainstream drones, Mumford doesn’t have a clue.
It’s like the gambler who insists they’ll have one more bet. Except the gambler doesn’t have any money left and so instead has to pinch it from the wallet of a friend – “It’ll be OK, I’ll pay him back after I’ve won…”
Except the casino gambler never wins, not over time anyway.
The sad difference with the casino analogy is that it’s the Fed doing the gambling, except it has never used its own money, because it doesn’t have any. The only money it has is what it has taken through taxation via the government, or what it has created from thin air.
Either way, it has built its balance sheet through stealing from the pockets of the nation. Either directly or indirectly.
Already the US Federal Reserve holds over USD$777 billion in US government debt.
Yet Mumford thinks that isn’t enough. More must be done. An extra USD$1 trillion if Mumford has his way.
To be honest, I’m just as dumbfounded by all this as you are. To me it just doesn’t make sense that such economic idiocy has been embraced by the mainstream commentators. I mean, let’s see exactly what the US government and the US Federal Reserve have conspired to do…
As you’re aware, the US government has consistently spent more money than it has taken from taxpayers.
Therefore it has a budget deficit. Similar to you having a budget deficit if you spend more than you earn in wages. The difference being that you have to earn your money through the exertion of your labour whereas the government takes the money from you on the, erm, exertion of your labour!
So, because the government consistently spends more than it takes in tax revenue it has to come up with another way of getting cash. So, it sells bonds to investors.
Those foolish investors unwittingly use the money that they’ve earned and which they could otherwise have invested in private enterprise or saved in the bank, or even spent on something for themselves, and give it to the government. The government then spends it on wasteful projects or on the lazy, inefficient and useless public servants.
In return for lending the government money, the government promises to pay interest on the loan. For instance 5% per year over three years. That’s roughly how it used to work anyway.
However, the more it spends on wasteful projects that don’t produce a profit, the more the government has to borrow to spend on new projects and to maintain the old ones.
Another analogy would be if you kept borrowing money to buy new cars without selling the old cars. You’d still have to maintain the old car – servicing, fuel, rego, etc – plus you’d have the cost of buying and maintaining the new car too.
The problem with borrowing money is that typically lenders (investors) will – annoyingly – want to know how much else you’ve borrowed. The more you’ve borrowed the greater the fear by investors that you’ll find it harder to repay the loan.
Plus, the more you borrow, the greater the incentive you’ll need to give investors to encourage them to lend the money.
What kind of incentives would an investor look for? That’s right, a higher interest rate.
That’s obviously a big problem when you’re already several trillions of dollars in debt and you know you’ll need to borrow several trillions more.
The last thing you’d want to do is cause interest rates to rise.
For most borrowers it would be tough luck. That’s the consequences. The outcome would be that you’d slow down your spending or you’d just go bust.
Luckily for the government – and unluckily for the citizens, government’s have no such constraints.
The government can just tap their pals on the shoulder at the money printers – in this case the Federal Reserve – and ask them to buy the government debt.
And for the government, the central bank is the perfect buyer. It has no profit motive – despite being a private company – so it doesn’t care what interest it receives, and secondly it has the ability to create as much money as it wishes in order to buy the bonds issued by the US Treasury.
What impact does that have on the market and interest rates? Naturally enough it artificially pushes the interest rate lower.
You can see that from an interesting chart produced by the guys at Zero Hedge:
Just to explain, the chart above shows the historic bond yield curve between 1990 and 2010 for the three month to thirty year bonds.
As you can see yields at the short end of the curve (3 months to two years) are close to zero. Even a seven-year US bond is only providing an income of 2% per year. Forget about the 5% I mentioned above. You can’t even get that for a 30-year bond!
Would you want to lock your money away for seven years with only a 2% return? Or how about 30 years for a 4% annual return?
I know I wouldn’t. But the Fed would certainly do it because it doesn’t care what return it gets. All it cares about is keeping the paymasters happy – the government.
And now, thanks to the latest decision by the Fed, we can expect to see the longer end of that yield curve starting to fall even further. That’s because the Fed intends on buying up even more ten-year bonds.
According to Mr. Mumford’s nice little chart in today’s AFR, the Fed already holds about 17% of the bonds with a maturity of greater than a 10 years, and about the same percentage of those with a five to ten year maturity.
But with mainstream investors seeking supposed safety in the sovereign bond markets, it led our Slipstream Trader Murray Dawes to say this earlier today, “We’re on the edge of crisis time. Look at this”:

In a nutshell the chart shows you the spread between the US 10 Year Note and the US Treasury Bond fast approaching the levels last seen towards the end of 2008 when the market went into meltdown.
What it tells you is that bonds are in big demand, despite the already crazy low yields. Yields, that if history repeats could see the final rush to safety force yields even lower.
And according to Bloomberg News:
“Money managers are moving more money than ever out of stocks and into bonds. About $185 billion was sent to bond funds through July 31, the most on record, according to the Investment Company Institute.”
Institutional investors are loading up on government bonds because they’ve convinced themselves that if the worst happens, the US government won’t default on its debt. Not directly anyway.
Chances are it will do so indirectly as it tries to inflate its way out of trouble.
What does this all mean?
It means financial markets are in big trouble. It means that while the mainstream numpties trumpet on about the strength of the economy, and the greenshoots of an economic recovery, their actions are speaking much louder than their words.
Their actions are telling you what they really think about the market. And I agree. And that is that there’s big trouble brewing.
The problem is, what the big investing boys consider to be safe haven assets – bonds – are actually no safer than holding your money as cash under the mattress.
If the US Fed does as we suspect it will, and expand its balance sheet almost to infinity then the likes of Mumford and the other mainstream commentators are certain to have their inflationary dreams come true.
As Mumford wraps up his article: “The only way to avoid this [deflation] is for the Fed to stop worrying about inflation and instead look at embracing it a little. Love it, even.”
Cheers.
Kris Sayce
For Money Morning Australia


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Thanks, Drew. All mad Zionists do. There is a pertinent and important debate about the fascist, Zionist approach to all manner of things, and this debate is alive and well in Israel itself, among the Jewish people themselves. That is what I was referencing. If you notice, what these Jews and Rabbis are saying is in tune with what that Ex-Jew mad priest is saying. From where I stand, that man, like Max Keiser, is a hoot. But it does not mean that they are not making a valuable contribution to our enquiries and debates in this forum.
And, as far as I can tell, there isn’t anything particularly hateful in what these mad hatters are saying towards the Jewish people, as such, although they do have a thing or two to say about mad Zionists approaches and agendas.
Can you not see the distinction between Judaism and Zionism, or between the Jewish people and Zionist zealots? And if you do, then why are you trying to shut down the conversation? I do not understand.
Nick – that is a fantastic link.
Drew, PF – you guys have been trying to do the very same thing that Robert Fisk identifies towards the end of that video.
The chief danger in using your favoured strategy to silence and shut down any criticism of human rights abuses by a fascist Israeli state in the grip of mad Zionism, is also well articulated by Robert Fisk. I would encourage you both to listen to what he has to say a few times, until its import sinks in.
The future of the Jewish homeland, if it is to survive, is most likely to be assured by the current “lunatic fringe” of peace loving Jews who want to live in piece and harmony with their Palestinian neighbours, just as they did before the mad Zionist takeover.
PF @ 20 – That is very interesting. As I only came across the ditch in 1990, I was not aware of this sorry episode in Australian lending history. It sounds really tragic. People taking out Swiss loans at a time when currency risk would have been very poorly understood, just before the dollar was floated. Do you think that this was just a historical accident, or as Nick suggests, insiders knew about the likely effects of the float and moved early to take advantage of the gullible? Who benefited, and how?
Nick – your take on this?
No-one benefitted cb – we had never experienced a floating currency and we were all quite naive including both the banks and borrowers.
Interest rates were around 12% to 20% at the time and borrowers were desperate for some relief, so Swiss francs at about 3% seemed like a gift from the heavens to most involved.
Local bank managers who were quite ill equiped to give advice in offshore currency loans were selling them to farmers who were desperate.
It all turned sour, and I was glad I hadn’t been involved. Really I was just lucky, if I had constant pleas for swiss money from desperate farmers I probably would have made the same mistakes as others eventually.
Only banks borrow offshore now (and corporates off course) and banks pay to hedge the currency risk.
A lesson well learned.
I can see the distinction between Judaism and Zionism. However, I don’t think the authors of the Zionist News website (that you keep directing people to) can. It is clearly aiming at spreading hatred of Zionists AND Jews.
But please re-read my post. I never tried to shut you down. Just suggested a change of tack – because the endless array of links you’re posting doesn’t seem to be creating much intelligent debate.
Anyway, I’ve got nothing intelligent to say on this topic of Zionism, so it’s up to you what you do.
cb..history is written and the truth is hidden.
a small eg. Google who won the gold medal in the 2000 Sydney Olympics that Cathy Freeman ran. History books will show you that she did.
There are no links to say that a black girl, French runner, that defeated Freeman in all prior races around the world, came to the Olympics in Sydney and within 24 hours was on a plane back to France in a cloud of secrecy. She never competed again. Enough to retire on one could say. get my drift?
Australia was in the “reconciliation” euphoria and the world was watching.
Two weeks earlier I was told of events yet to unfold. I stood in sheer shock as the news unfolded before my very eyes.
But again, I can’t provide you with links. Some things just aren’t meant to surface. Same as Kennedy assassination, Port Arthur Massacre (details of which are locked up by law for many decades.)
Alas that is the reality we live in.
Nick – I remember it very well.
The French girl didn’t want to face the new drugs testing regime at Sydney, so she left. It is no co-incidence that she never competed again.
No one paid her out.
Ahh PF, Do you really think they will give the real reason? This is the art of deception cb and I are referring to and why the links provided earlier regarding the “self defence” and “occupation”.
Again, I will not argue the point as it is like you trying to tell me that the apple I am eating is an Orange. I’m holding it, I’m eating it. I was told of events prior, I saw events unfold. It enforced my understanding of many other things.
PF, Nick – Wow, I must have been really busy in 2000 to have missed that story. But, as you say, some things are meant to never surface. Such is the world we live in, and ignorance is bliss. All are happy in a fools’ paradise.
By my reckoning, there are two main types of ships, the Mothership and the Ship of Fools, while the rest of them are stranded. A simple view for simple minds. How do you like it, and what do you make of it?
Thanks, Drew. As always, appreciate your thoughts. It is a complex matter and there are many undercurrents and heated emotions that makes this ground unstable and potentially treacherous.
Thankfully, I have nothing personally at stake in the debate. My interest is mostly intellectual, although I cannot help feeling for people who suffer avoidable hardship and misery.
But, like your good self, I have probably said all that one can constructively say on the topic. Besides, the golden rule in oppressive, communist dictatorships for the ordinary man has always been never to discuss either religion or politics, and just leave the bastards to it.
Sadly, there are more and more signs that we are coming into an era where this golden rule of Soviet era communism is going to become the creed of people who heretofore fancied themselves being free.
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