Fine Gold Versus F.I.N.E. Central Banks


Gary Christenson Gary Christenson

Gary Christenson

July 5th, 2017 Comments

Gold is one of nature’s finest creations.

Find Gold Bars vs Central Banks

On the other hand, central banks create trillions of fiat currency units – dollars, euros, yen, catalogs, whatever – from nothing and use those currency units for purchases … Apple stock, salaries for a thousand Ph.D. economists, office buildings, lobbyists, politicians, gold bullion, etc (like gold bars and coins).

It is unfair that the Fed creates trillions of dollars from nothing and values those dollars equally with other dollars created from the efforts of millions of businesses and individuals.

UNFAIR? Of course, it’s unfair. That’s the point! With their “unfair” ability to create fiat currency that spends the same as existing currency, central bankers increase their power and wealth at the expense of citizens. They own or control governments, congressmen, CEOs, commercial bankers, and more.

Don’t expect this to change. Those in power like things as they are.

Gold or fiat currency? Honest money or “funny” money?

From (the brilliant) Alasdair Macleod:

"Gold matters, because, excepting silver, it is the only form of money that has survived since individuals discovered the convenience of money over barter. It is beyond the control of governments, as they cannot issue it without acquiring it first. It is subject to the constraints of its quality, so that as a medium of credit it cannot be debauched, only defaulted upon. Its relative inflexibility and its soundness are the primary reasons governments do not like monetary gold, and force their preferred alternative on their citizenry. The vested interest of government is, therefore, to discourage, or even ban the use of gold as competing money.”

Fine Gold or F.I.N.E. Central Banks?

A F.I.N.E. central bank can be defined as a Freaked out, Incompetent, Neurotic, Excessive central bank.

Freaked out: Central banks have devalued currencies, “stimulated” economies by massive “printing” of currency units, forced near zero and “negative interest” rates upon economies, and a hundred other deceptive, destructive, and devaluing practices. They are freaked out because ordinary people realize central banker economic models and policies only benefit the wealthy.

Central banks are enormously helpful to the financial and political elite. The “game” is not over but their edifice constructed on fiat currency, lies, and bad policy is wobbly.

Incompetent: The Fed has devalued the U.S. dollar by about 98% since 1913. Central banks lowered interest rates to near (U.S.) or below zero (Europe) since the financial crisis of 2008, and yet the economies of Europe and the U.S. remain weak or have contracted. If central banks are expected to support their economies, they appear incompetent. However, if their purpose is to extract wealth from the citizens and

Neurotic: QE1, QE2, operation twist, “whatever it takes,” serial bubble blowers, try something to see if it works, and flip-flop often.

Excessive: The Fed added $4 trillion to its balance sheet since 2008. Total central bank “creations” approach $15 trillion. Excessive indeed!

Fine Gold or F.I.N.E. Central banks?

And the consequences of central banker actions will be … what they always are: Devaluation of currencies, transfer of wealth to the few, increased debt, etc. It has been reported that global debt is now $217 trillion. Choices:

  • Debt will increase forever. (Doubtful!)
  • Default. Sorry, we aren’t repaying that debt.
  • Default. Sorry, we are devaluing the currency units by “printing” trillions more, which will create consumer price inflation, hyperinflation, and collapse, but hopefully after the next election. Extend and pretend, “Keep this sucker running for a few more years,” not in my lifetime, etc.

History shows that fiat currencies always collapse. Will today’s euro, pound, dollar, and yen be different?

The end-game according to Alasdair Macleod:

"The outcome is inevitably cyclical. Prices will start rising at a greater rate, and interest rates must rise to keep pace. Unaffordable nominal rates in the near to medium term are a racing certainty. We can assume that a new financial and economic crisis will follow, in which case over-indebted businesses will go bust, asset values crash, and banks will move from insolvency toward bankruptcy, just as the deflationists fear. The response from central banks will unquestionably be to flood the financial system with yet more money [the fiat stuff] to keep the banks alive, and insolvent businesses afloat. Quantitative easing to support asset prices and to fund government spending will have to be reintroduced at a greater level than seen heretofore."

A preview of what is coming:

Gold for the preservation of assets and purchasing power is necessary. Otherwise, why would China and Russia substantially increase their gold hoards every year?

Gary Christenson

About the Author:

Gary Christenson is the owner and writer for the popular and contrarian investment site Deviant Investor and the author of several books, including Fort Knox Down! and Gold Value and Gold Prices 1971 – 2021. He is a retired accountant and business manager with 30 years of experience studying markets, investing, and trading. He writes about investing, gold, silver, the economy, and central banking.