March 26, 2008 10:37AM
Time to Listen to Ron Paul?
By Elizabeth MacDonald
Time to listen to Texas Congressman Ron Paul, the lone voice of reason in Congress today who’s got to feel like he’s shouting into a field of cotton with his repeated warnings about the dangers of a collapsing dollar, while the administration goes AWOL on the problem.
The dollar just hit a record intraday low against the euro on reports that consumer confidence levels have dropped to levels not seen since the post-Watergate era. It is down 7% year to date against the Chinese renminbi, it’s weaker than the Japanese yen and the Canadian loonie.
The joke is the greenback is now only stronger than the Mexican pesos and the Zimbabwe dollar, an overstatement for dramatic effect, to be sure.But since hitting a peak in 2002, the dollar has lost about a quarter of its value against a trade weighted basket of currencies.
A weak dollar acts as an anvil around the neck of the US economy and consumers. Rising inflation is essentially a tax on consumers, so are rising energy prices, and that double whammy threatens to undermine the purchasing power of the rebate checks due out in May–backed by printing even more dollars.
A bellwether event of significant import to our nation’s finances happened this past January 1 with little notice. That’s the day the first baby boomer was allowed to retire. A new federal report wearily warns once again for the umpteenth time that the nation faces some $60t in Social Security and Medicare unfunded liabilities alone.
We’ve heard time and again conservatives say deficits don’t matter. To say that deficits don’t matter is like saying ketchup is a vegetable or trees cause pollution.
The $406b the US pays annually in interest on the $9t in federal debt alone would rank as the world’s 30th largest economy.
That annual interest cost surpasses the gross domestic product of Belgium, and is bigger than the GDP of Denmark and Hungary combined. The $406b would cover the annual cost of investigating Medicare fraud.
Stack all those one dollar bills making up our $9t deficit (and that doesn’t include the $60t in unfunded liabilities for Medicare and Social Security) and you would reach the moon and back. “Printing money cannot create wealth, if it could counterfeiting would be legal,” economist Brian Wesbury has said.
Even Milton Friedman, the Nobel Prize-winning economist and a forceful advocate for laissez-faire economics, got so sick of the way central bankers were willy nilly printing money in the ‘70s, he advocated that the government should replace the Federal Reserve with a computer. “Money is too important to be left to central bankers,” he quipped.
Broad zoom: The US economy has spent all of a year and four months in a downturn over the last two and a half decades. During that time we’ve seen a market crash of 22% in 1987, the S&L crisis, four wars, three financial crises (Mexico, Asian flu and Russian debt crises), the blow up of the hedge fund Long Term Capital, two asset bubbles (dot com and telecom). Since the Bush tax cuts of 2003, the US economy added the equivalent of China’s GDP–and government spending has boomed.
Now Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has both cut rates at a breakneck speed and pumped a massive amount of monetary stimulus into the markets to cure the credit crisis. I still think he is doing his level best to fix a crisis not entirely of his own making. The question now is, will Bernanke yank the liquidity punch bowl when the economy returns to trend growth in 2010 or 2011 as the central bank projects?
Let’s hope so, because the case for a weak dollar is, to me, well, weak. Namely, that a lame greenback softens the housing and credit crises as it fuels profits at US exporters whose goods are now dirt cheap in the eyes of foreign customers. Strong foreign sales at places like Boeing and Caterpillar reportedly added 1.4% to US growth in the second quarter of 2007. But exports make up just 13% of GDP. Consumers make up a larger 70%.
It’s no surprise consumer confidence is as weak as it was in the ’70s. LBJ had promised this country it could have both guns and butter in the ‘60s, so the Federal Reserve gunned the printing presses to pay for spending on entitlement programs and for the Vietnam war. For the first time, too, politicians got their mitts on taxpayers’ Social Security funds, after Democrats passed a so-called “unified budget” in the late ‘60s.
All that spending caused the dollar to nosedive in the 1970s amidst an oil embargo that sent oil costs, priced in dollars, soaring. Paul Volcker, then Fed chairman, enacted rapid rate hikes hitting 21% by 1979, and the Treasury went so far as to sell $6.4b in “Carter bonds,” largely denominated in Deutschemarks, to prop up the dollar. Gold got ripped off its mooring of an average $35 an ounce in the ‘70s, and in 1980 it hit a record $835 an ounce, around $2,250 in today’s prices.
Gold acts as a dew line for inflation. We essentially have a good handle on how much gold there is in the world and potentially below ground. When gold rises in price, it signals we are printing too many dollars, which indicates a concurrent drop in the greenback’s value. Over the last seven years, gold and oil prices have risen in lockstep, up 239% and 267% respectively. If the dollar had also risen in value at the same rate, oil would be selling at about $30 a barrel.
But now central bankers say that because of the weak dollar, they’ve seen capital losses carved out of an estimated $3.34t worth of US dollars they hold in foreign currency reserves; Japan holds the most dollars, China is second. The fear is they may unload these plunging greenbacks en masse to cut their losses and run–which would really tip the US into a protracted recession. Already reports out of China show government officials there willing to rotate future planned investments out of US treasurys into other investments.
Countries pegged to the dollar are rightly saying, too, that we are exporting inflation to their shores. Saudi Arabia is a land that has had nearly zero inflation since 1998, but recently inflation soared to 7% annually, despite the fact the country is flush with petrodollars.
Congressman Paul rightfully warns us when he says the US government has “systematically undermined” the US dollar by expanding “the money supply at will for financing war or manipulating the economy with little resistance from Congress–while benefiting the special interests that influence government.”
It’s not just the US gunning the mints. Goldman Sachs figures that three-fifths of the world’s broad money supply growth came from emerging economies over the past year or so. Three-fifths. That’s gigantic.
Goldman Sachs says the growth in Russia’s M3 measure of broad money grew 51% over the last year or so, India by 24%, and by 20% in China, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Brazil. That’s three times as fast as the US and the rest of the developed world, and it’s faster than their GDP growth rates. It’s the fastest pace in decades.
All that loose money is pouring into commodities, stock exchanges around the planet as well as bond markets–it’s largely why our long-term bond yields have been historically low, spurring a dramatic increase in mortgage borrowing, as mortgage rates typically track the 10-year Treasury note.
Watch out here–emerging economies are just as susceptible to minting lots of money due to political pressures, including things like paying for wars, or calming local populations clamoring for higher pay and more jobs.
What can be done stateside?
The administration needs to state more emphatically that it supports a strong dollar. A stronger dollar would draw liquidity back into the credit markets, lower inflation risks, cut oil prices and restart economic growth, notes Bear Stearns economist David Malpass.
Presidential candidates vilify NAFTA and free trade, when the weak dollar is partly to blame for problems like jobs lost to overseas operations, Malpass adds.
“Empires fail because they run out of money, or more accurately, run out of the ability to spend or inflate,” Congressman Paul warns. “We need to control spending, immediately, before it is too late.”



April 15th, 2008 at 9:52 am
Ron Paul is my hero, thanks for finally putting this article together.. Too little too late though..
Some great quotes from Paul that expose the establishment..
Congressman Paul rightfully warns us when he says the US government has “systematically undermined” the US dollar by expanding “the money supply at will for financing war or manipulating the economy with little resistance from Congress–while benefiting the special interests that influence government.”
April 14th, 2008 at 9:35 am
Thank you for printing this warning. Dr. Paul has been painted repeatedly by the press as a fringe candidate, but my experience has been the opposite. There are thousands of thinking people out there who understand that the Cosntitution of the United States is more than just a document in a glass case in a museum. It is the wall that protects our freedoms. Paper money is a dangerous thing. Once people realize that there is nothing backing it up other than the faith of the people, and when this faith is violated by a government that has no will-power or backbone, then the currency will fail. I am re-reading Adam Smith’s treatise Paper Money and I was struck by the similarity between today and the oil embargo of the 70s. For almost about 30 years the US dollar has held its former position as the key currency of the world only because there was no alternative. That is a dangerous position. We need a sound energy policy that eliminates our dependency on foreign oil, resulting in massive trade deficits, we need to cut government spending and tax, we need sound money tied to something solid, that gives real backing to our money, and we need to stop letting the press and party loyalists chose our President for us. Thank you Elizabeth. Thank you RON PAUL.
April 7th, 2008 at 8:09 pm
Ron Paul always makes a lot of sense. A lot of people like him. Trouble is that he is like if Paul Revere had been shouting “The British are coming” 30 years after they had come. When I view those nut-houses called the US Senate and House, I know that the America we knew is well beyond hope. We use our own so-called democracy to destroy ourselves. The visual image that always comes to mind is of the bull being slaughtered in the movie Apocalypse Now. Everyone is grabbing their hunk of flesh and making a run for it.
Freedom’s just another word for nuthin’ left to lose. (from Janice Joplin song I believe)
Ten years from now, selling Alaska to the highest bidder will be sounding like a good idea. The price will be much lower then than it could fetch today.
April 6th, 2008 at 11:38 am
David H. wrote, “The truth is Ron Paul has no solutions and his ideas would harm the nation and result a weaker economy”.
Rewritten, “The truth is Washington, Franklin, Hamilton, Madison, and others have no solutions and their ideas would harm the nation and result in a weaker economy”.
The solution is the U.S. Constitution. Paul’s arguments over the decades have been that our nation needs to discontinue ignoring it. One question is why other Presidential candidates aren’t arguing the same?
April 4th, 2008 at 4:10 am
E-Mac. Bravo! I am amazed and delighted at how many positive responses you have gotten to your Ron Paul article. Ron Paul would truly restore America’s place as a world leader - industrially, morally & politically. America is currently the laughing-stock of the world and is a crying-shame for a country. Our status as world leader will be gone quickly. China, India, Russia, Korea and others, will overtake us. We have very little manufacturing. Our streets are riddled with crime,drugs and gangs (why don’t Barack, Hillary, and McCain talk about eradicating crime in our country?). The world hates us for what we are doing in Iraq. Our dollar is about as valuable as toilet paper. Ron Paul (and his MILLIONS of suppporters) would put America back on the road to prosperity & greatness. With Hillary or Barack or John McCain we will get only more taxes, more control & more deterioration as a nation. May God bless America. May God bless RON PAUL.
April 1st, 2008 at 1:20 pm
Perhaps this has been the actual plan of Fox News the whole time? It would be interesting to seem them pull a 180 and endorse Ron Paul.