Interesting view from Asia Times’ Henry C. Liu.

A bear market in the US economy would hurt Canada.  Perhpas it is time that Canadians thought about greater independence

Here is a link to Henry Liu, who outlines the case for China allowing its yuan to appreciate in order to let China free of the negative effects of US dollar hegemony.

www.atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/JG30Cb01.html

I think that a similar case could be made for Canada, so that wages here could rise, and so that our economy could become less dependent upon exports.

Snip:

‘ Dollar hegemony separates the trade value of every currency from direct connection to the productivity of the issuing economy to link it directly to the size of dollar reserves held by the issuing central bank. Dollar hegemony enables the US to own indirectly but essentially the entire global economy by requiring its wealth to be denominated in fiat dollars that the US can print at will with little in the way of monetary penalties.

‘World trade is now a game in which the US produces fiat dollars of uncertain exchange value and zero intrinsic value, and the rest of the world produces goods and services that fiat dollars can buy at “market prices” quoted in dollars. Such market prices are no longer based on mark-ups over production costs set by socio-economic conditions in the producing countries. They are kept artificially low to compensate for the effect of overcapacity in the global economy created by a combination of overinvestment and weak demand due to low wages in every economy.

‘Such low market prices in turn push further down already low wages to further cut cost in an unending race to the bottom. The higher the production volume above market demand, the lower the unit market price of a product must go in order to increase sales volume to keep revenue from falling. Lower market prices require lower production costs which in turn push wages lower. Lower wages in turn further reduce demand.

‘To prevent loss of revenue from falling prices, producers must produce at still higher volume, thus further lowering market prices and wages in a downward spiral. Export economies are forced to compete for market share in the global market by lowering both domestic wages and the exchange rate of their currencies. Lower exchange rates push up the market price of commodities which must be compensated for by even lower wages. ‘The adverse effects of dollar hegemony on wages apply not only to the emerging export economies but also to the importing US economy. Workers all over the world are oppressed victims of dollar hegemony, which turns the labor theory of value up-side-down.

‘In a global market operating under dollar hegemony, the world’s interlinked economies no longer trade to capture Ricardian comparative advantage. The theory of comparative advantage as espoused by British economist David Ricardo (1772-1823) asserts that trade can benefit all participating nations, even those that command no absolute advantage,  … .

‘… . … .  World trade is now a game in which the US produces fiat dollars of uncertain exchange value and zero intrinsic value, and the rest of the world produces goods and services that fiat dollars can buy at “market prices” quoted in dollars. Such market prices are no longer based on mark-ups over production costs set by socio-economic conditions in the producing countries. They are kept artificially low to compensate for the effect of overcapacity in the global economy created by a combination of overinvestment and weak demand due to low wages in every economy.
‘Such low market prices in turn push further down already low wages to further cut cost in an unending race to the bottom. The higher the production volume above market demand, the lower the unit market price of a product must go in order to increase sales volume to keep revenue from falling. Lower market prices require lower production costs which in turn push wages lower. Lower wages in turn further reduce demand.

‘To prevent loss of revenue from falling prices, producers must produce at still higher volume, thus further lowering market prices and wages in a downward spiral. Export economies are forced to compete for market share in the global market by lowering both domestic wages and the exchange rate of their currencies. Lower exchange rates push up the market price of commodities which must be compensated for by even lower wages. The adverse effects of dollar hegemony on wages apply not only to the emerging export economies but also to the importing US economy. Workers all over the world are oppressed victims of dollar hegemony, which turns the labor theory of value up-side-down.

‘In a global market operating under dollar hegemony, the world’s interlinked economies no longer trade to capture Ricardian comparative advantage. The theory of comparative advantage as espoused by British economist David Ricardo (1772-1823) asserts that trade can benefit all participating nations, even those that command no absolute advantage, because such nations can still benefit from specializing in producing products with the lowest opportunity cost, which is measured by how much production of another good needs to be reduced to increase production by one additional unit of that good.

‘This theory reflected British national opinion at the 19th century when free trade benefited Britain more than its trade partners. However, in today’s globalized trade when factors of production such as capital, credit, technology, management, information, branding, distribution and sales are mobile across national borders and can generate profit much greater than manufacturing, the theory of comparative advantage has a hard time holding up against measurable data.

‘Under dollar hegemony, exporting nations compete in the global market to capture needed dollars to service dollar-denominated foreign capital and debt, to pay for imported energy, raw material and capital goods, to pay intellectual property fees and information technology fees. Moreover, their central banks must accumulate dollar reserves to ward off speculative attacks on the value of their currencies in world currency markets. The higher the market pressure to devalue a particular currency, the more dollar reserves its central bank must hold. Only the Federal Reserve, the US central bank, is exempt from this pressure to accumulate dollars because it can issue theoretically unlimited additional dollars at will with monetary immunity. The dollar is merely a Federal Reserve note, no more, no less.

‘Dollar hegemony has created a built-in support for a strong dollar that in turn forces the world’s other central banks to acquire and hold more dollar reserves, making the dollar stronger, fueling a massive global debt bubble denominated in dollars as the US becomes the world’s largest debtor nation. Yet a strong dollar, while viewed by US authorities as in the US national interest, in reality drives the defacement of all fiat currencies that operate as derivative currencies of the dollar, in turn driving the current commodity-led inflation. When the dollar falls against the euro, it does not mean the euro is rising in purchasing power. It only means the dollar is losing purchasing power faster than the euro. A strong dollar does not always mean high dollar exchange rates. It means only that the dollars will stay firmly anchored as the prime reserve currency for international trade even as it falls in exchange value against other trading currencies.

‘In recent decades, central banks of all governments, led by the US Federal Reserve during Alan Greenspan’s watch, had bought economic growth with loose money to feed debt bubbles and to contain inflation with “structural unemployment”, which has been defined as up to 6% of the workforce, to keep the labor market from being inflationary. Central banking has mutated from being an institution to safeguard the value of money so as to ensure wages from full employment do not lose purchasing power into one with a perverted mandate to promote and preserve dollar hegemony by releasing debt bubbles denominated in fiat dollars. (See Critique of Central Banking, Asia Times Online, November 6, 2002.)’… .   The device for accomplishing this neo-imperialism is a coordinated monetary policy managed by a global system of central banking, first adopted in the US in 1913 to allow a financial elite to gain monetary control of the US national economy, and after the Cold War, to allow the US as the sole remaining superpower controlled by a financial oligarchy to gain monetary control of the entire global economy.

‘With the help of supranational institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the Bank of International Settlements, the US aims to negate national economic sovereignty with globalization of unregulated trade conducted under dollar hegemony. Unregulated trade globalization in the 21st century aims to neutralize national economic sovereignty to preempt national development financed by sovereign credit. Trade through export has become the sole operative path for national economic growth in a political world order of sovereign nation states that has existed since the Treaty of Westphalia of 1648. No national domestic economy can henceforth prosper without first adding to the prosperity of US-controlled global economy denominated in dollars.

‘… .   Central banking, in its support of dollar hegemony, operates internationally in opposition to the economic interests of sovereign nation states and domestically in opposition to the economic rights of the working poor by discrediting enlightened economic nationalism as undesirable protectionism.’

Ment17

<<sure i realize … what is the point of your saying this …please clarify post…>>

Nope, you didn’t realize      I was agreeing with you and suggesting that others probably do, also.  

Moggy   

Midas on Cramer

“Dennis G is actually a very likeable fellow. I give him grief because he refuses to get with the GATA program, which would help his gold trading.

On the other hand, there is MR. OBNOXIOUS, CNBC’s Jim Cramer, the fellow I would least like to spend time with on Planet Wall Street. What a pompous twerp.

I have been getting a bunch of stuff lately about his touting the “dump gold” position. Then this today from a Cafe member:

Excerpt from Jim Cramer today

“Looking, looking, for signs of a bottom. How can you not when you are surrounded by gloom? I want to start with gold. You need to focus on gold, because it is the enemy. It needs to go down. It must go down. And it is plummeting. I cannot emphasize enough that institutions watch gold like a hawk, and they will get bullish just on gold going down alone.”

Well, he is good for something anyway … most likely a sign of a bottom and for offering an explanation of why The Gold Cartel does what they do. This Planet Wall Street Muppet could not make it more obvious.”

….Bill Murphy is Batman…and Cramer is the Joker….FGC

SabreGold……………BQI……

Hey, I’ll tell you what.  I’ll bet you $10 that over the next 6 months, BQI outperforms on a percentage basis……………every single stock over $4 that you currently own……even if you do not hold them.  We are early in a 5th wave where reserves will be revalued massively higher.   BQI closed at $4.83.

irish

call me.

rno

GOT IT THANKS..CHAPMAN THE GREAT

http://tinyurl.com/5dkzdl

Midas on Gartman

This morning before the open The Gartman Letter cut its long Euro gold position. Perhaps TGL sensed the massive sell off shaping up in NY. Considering the volumes traded, Gold’s friends could take comfort that the damage was not worse. That certainly seems to be the opinion of the gold shares.

***

So Dennis G held on until gold collapsed and ended up selling with the rest of the funds, duped once again by The Gold Cartel gang, who were surely in there covering today. They have made fortunes over the years by beating up on the funds and have done so in coordinated anti-trust fashion.

Those who won’t deal with what GATA knows about the gold market are doomed to make the same mistake over and over and over!

Dear Bill:
Did I hear Gartman say its time to buy the dollar?

I have lost count on how many calls in the gold market he has blown in the last Year. What happened to traders using long term trend lines, that use fundamentals?

Its obvious to me he is now just another Muppet. They are desperate to get any bid under the dollar here.. but they are spitting into a hurricane in my opinion.
Best
Alex

TQ.Cannuck,Aguilla

Thank you for your concern. But, I got my bolts and nuts filed down by a Mennonite elder… he had to grease them first……. they were number 8 hardness…..ohh hell this just isn’t ever going to sound good is it…..
This market is not trading on the margin is it? Just a few gallon’s of gas short on a report and ZOOM up 5 buck’s in oil. A little 90 degree’s in Kansas and up 35 cents [two days] in corn…nawwww everything is in balance …RIGHT! Then the idiots bid up the Dow 220 more…Day One of “Beginnings of Hyper you know what”
Farmgals greenpeppers came up an inch today[6 bucks belize a pound] jesus…

strikerrod - I really really like that part about a “huge rally”

Which would be consistent with the Puke-O-Meter reading.

Hey, Aurum - I agree, but I am buying this stuff in bottles…

kinda hard to pull off. On the other hand, if you are wiling to pay my airfare, I am happy to travel to wherever I can obtain the real thing done right…

puptent @ 18:41 pm

Chapman’s got to be one of my favorite writers.  He does deserve to be called the “Great Chapman”.  Thanks for posting the link to his latest.

Cheers

PS  When writing your post if you hit “enter” after the tiny url then it will be a live link when you post it.

WANKA; thank you.

On a $900 cash price, a $5 difference seems very small as a proportion, especially on a contract 6 months out, and with JS forecasting $1250 by then.

It also seems to me that if the difference was $3 when gold was much lower, that the percentage difference is shrinking.   If this is the case, and is a valid measure of the contango, then it would seem that the basis is shrinking, and that means, according to Fekete, that gold is in short supply.  Here is more of his article from the same link as in my earlier post.

Permanent contango is a characteristic of the monetary metals indicating large above-ground stores relative to the annual output of the mines. But fiat currencies keep losing value through monetary debasement. It makes the basis of gold and silver fall, and contango disappear. The opposite condition, obtaining when the futures price goes to a discount against the cash price, is called backwardation. It is equivalent to a negative basis. It is an indication of the fact that the monetary metals are going into hiding.

‘The international monetary system is inevitably drifting towards the black hole of backwardation, and will ultimately succumb to its pull. Governments and central banks tell you that they are combating inflation. They do in the forlorn hope that they can escape the pull of the backwardation of monetary metals. But they cannot, because that pull is the global manifestation of countless individuals’ seeking shelter against deliberate monetary debasement in the ownership of monetary metals.

‘The point is that the only way to measure the more or less slow deterioration in the collective value of irredeemable currencies is the gold and silver basis. It is precisely the change in the basis that provides clues for hedging against the risk of monetary debasement. The outstanding fact is that the basis can be traded with greatly reduced risk, as compared with trading the price.’

‘… . … the threat of a short squeeze or, if the worse comes to the worst, that of a corner, is very real. Corner in precious metals also goes by the other name hyperinflation. Reams and reams of supply/demand statistics and all the COT reports in the world will not predict when it will hit. Only the basis will. It provides an early-warning system indicating, with the precision of a seismograph, the escalating shortages in silver and gold.’

‘… .  In summary, the present crisis is far from over. Far from being an oil crisis, it is not even a dollar crisis. It is a gold crisis. It is preying on American and other banks, punishing them for their failure to hedge paper assets with gold. The U.S. government is trying to bail out large multinational banks by stuffing them with more paper assets to bursting. In a recent move the Federal Reserve has made history when it swapped U.S. Treasury bonds for the so-called asset-backed securities held by brain-dead banks for which the market refuses to put in a bid. The trick won’t work. And it is doubtful that the only meaningful bail-out that would work, namely, opening the U.S. Mint to gold and silver as advocated by presidential candidate Dr. Ron Paul, is in the cards. To be sure, opening the Mint to the monetary metals should work. It would make U.S. Treasury gold available to American banks, to save them from insolvency. What they need is not augmentation of capital in the form of more paper credits. What they need is metallic hedges to prop up the value of paper assets. Opening the Mint would mobilize the world’s metallic reserves, presently in hiding, and put them back into the public domain to assume their traditional role as the foundation of the world’s credit system.’

================  end of snip

I am wondering if this  using of ‘ the world’s metallic reserves, … ,’ is an ideas similar to that ofJS with his gold certificate basis for a new foundation for theUS dollar.

backwardation @ 19:23 pm on July 30, 2008

quote : ” Backwardation, or a negative carrying cost, shows that demand is high and that the market wishes to price storage at a loss in order to draw inventories out into the market where they are needed ”

Hmmm .. this seemingly could be extrapolated to ” spend it or loose it ” …. ( ie ) attempting to save for later is something the market does not want

strange one

..

a persons opinion

The powers in and behind government used Fannie and Freddie to manipulate the American economic system. They were used to delay a major recession and now as a result we are facing hyperinflation, stagflation and a major depression worse than that of the 1930s.

This is going to rip apart the social fabric of America and the world as well. This has created an economic, financial and political nightmare. It has also created a speculator class, which has grown to unfathomable size. That is bad, but what is worse is that these speculators will eventually lose everything adding dynamics to the collapse.

news.goldseek.com/InternationalForecaster/1217435828.php

winedoc @ 19:45 pm on July 30, 2008

Could not agree more - while there may be a beer I like better than Newcastle I doubt it!

aurum