07 October 2013

Jeffrey Sachs Interview at The Guardian About Economics and Ethics


I have started this interview after an introductory discussion, some words about the World Bank and its role in the world, and some innovative work that Sachs and others have been doing to improve the life of people in sub-Saharan Africa.

He begins to move now into a more general discussion now of economics and ethics after some explanatory comments on the Millenial Village movement in Africa.



If you wish to hear something more, here is a link to a talk which Jeff Sachs gave at the London School of Economics about the ideas in his book, The Price of Civilisation.


05 October 2013

Owners Per Ounce of Silver and Gold at the Comex


For those who say they are influenced by COMEX statistics, there is a noticeable divergence between the availability of gold and silver for delivery there at these prices, especially when compared to historical trends and averages.

One of the non-COMEX factors that someone with the bigger picture view of things would note is that unlike gold, there is no great store of silver bullion in the hands of banks that can be leased out to backstop speculative shortages that might occur. So while the situation in silver may appear to be benign, in fact in many ways it is still a bit thin.

However, there is an obvious flight of inventory in gold going from the speculative West to the accumulating East. And there does not seem to be the same phenomenon underway in silver. I base this not on the COMEX, but on looking at most of the ETFs and exchanges that publish public data from around the world. Keep in mind that the COMEX is largely speculative, and not a major delivery mechanism for gold and silver.

People like to view things that support their biases. But the facts are what they are.

There is something very odd going on with regard to the inventory of gold bullion available for sale, that does not square with its sharp decline in price.




An Empire of Money and Privilege in Decline: Portrait of a Tragic Policy Error


"Everybody, sooner or later, sits down to a banquet of consequences."

Robert Louis Stevenson


"They don't have intelligence. They have what I call thintelligence. They see the immediate situation. They think narrowly and they call it 'being focused.' They don't see the surroundings. They don't see the consequences."

Michael Crichton

The Fed is faced with a problem that is best represented by the first two charts below.

Velocity of money is a simple ratio measure of money supply and GNP. It intends to represent the number of times a unit of money is exchanged in a transaction over a period of time.

As you can see, the velocity of the two broad money supply measures is dropping to historic lows.

Is this because the great mass of  people are 'hoarding money,' which implies that one should lower real interest on savings, even taking them more deeply into the negative through monetary inflation in order to encourage spending through fear of de facto confiscation?

The third chart gives some insight into the true nature of the economic problem. Most of the income gains this century and for the past two or three decades of the past have been flowing to the top few percent of US households. The median household, the middle if you will, has been steadily losing ground in large part to Fed and political policy decisions driven by a mistaken ideology and a top down or trickle down approach to prosperity.

If the Fed pursues monetary inflation, without taking strong steps, even through the use of its bully pulpit and actions as regulator, to correct the severe policy imbalances that lopsidedly favor the wealthy financiers, it will drive the US middle class over an economic cliff and destroy the very system which it is attempting to save.

That is the basis of the tragic policy error of the Fed and the ruling class.  Jeffrey Sachs has noted it in a recent talk to the Philly Fed shown below, and Bill Black has some particularly scathing words today for the 'Hyper-meritocracy Led by Criminal Morons.' I might have said  self-delusional narcissists or even sociopaths rather than morons.  The majority of those who enable the abuse of power are merely careerists.

One can make the strong case that the primary responsibility for this is in the political leadership. But one cannot also deny that as policy influencer and regulator the Fed has favored, quite actively, the growth of imbalances and social and economic injustice by pursuing a blind allegiance to a mistaken theory of deregulation and oligopoly of banking capital. 

An audacious oligarchy needs someone to rescue them from themselves.  And this will not be an easy task because the system is corrupted and the powerful have been  blinded by greed.  The current political deadlock in Washington is a symptom of the problem.  There is always an element that believes in a long range plan consisting of repression as required, disinformation, and plundering the weak.

The monied class do not 'create jobs.'   Genuine organic and systemic demand for good and services creates jobs, and those who have the means respond to that demand.  It is a virtuous cycle that begins with consumer demand, and the willingness and the ability to pay for it.  Yes there may be a role for inorganic demand such as stimulus to 'kick start' an economy caught in a policy error trap, but it is the reforms that allow for organic growth that make it sustainable.

Moving offshore to find new demand for markets while abandoning one's domestic base to decline and failure, in the true colonial fashion of past economic empires, is a form of neurotic failure. It often lights a fire in men's minds, and becomes a sort of self-fulfilling cultural suicide.  And perhaps this is embodied in the latest corporatist deal which is the infamously secretive Trans-Pacific Partnership.

How fitting that, having overturned most of the financial reforms of the past century, we stand here now on the brink, on the 75th anniversary of the New Deal, with essentially the same set of problems facing us that brought the world down so low in The Great Depression, and opened the door to the madness that followed.







"I believe we have a crisis of values that is extremely deep, because the regulations and the legal structures need reform. But I meet a lot of these people on Wall Street on a regular basis right now. I’m going to put it very bluntly. I regard the moral environment as pathological...

If you look at the campaign contributions, which I happened to do yesterday for another purpose, the financial markets are the number one campaign contributors in the U.S. system now. We have a corrupt politics to the core, I’m afraid to say, and no party is – I mean there's – if not both parties are up to their necks in this. This has nothing to do with Democrats or Republicans. It really doesn’t have anything to do with right wing or left wing, by the way. The corruption is, as far as I can see, everywhere.

But what it's led to is this sense of impunity that is really stunning and you feel it on the individual level right now. And it's very very unhealthy, I have waited for four years, five years now to see one figure on Wall Street speak in a moral language.

And I've have not seen it once. And that is shocking to me. And if they won't, I've waited for a judge, for our president, for somebody, and it hasn't happened. And by the way it's not going to happen any time soon, it seems...

The final point, of course, is separating the politicians from the crooks, but maybe that’s so close together that they can’t actually be separated. Maybe it’s just the same community."

Jeffrey Sachs, Fixing the Banking System For Good, Philadelphia Fed, April 17th, 2013

04 October 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - A Plausible Explanation


There was intraday commentary about some ideas that another fellow and I had in the course of our conversations about gold inventories and price. You can read it here.

Except for the cloak room analogy this is essentially the common thread of what I and several other people have been thinking since the beginning of the year. The cloak room analogy does a good job of explaining the odd behavior of gold and silver inventories with price action.

It would not be surprising to see some Nixonian weekend action to accomplish this repricing, probably done in conjunction with the G20 for political 'air cover.'   Picking the time for this sort of event is highly improbable. 

I find it hard to believe that the G20 would allow the US to get away with a big revaluing of the dollar lower unless there was some complementary action in return.  A unilateral devaluation of a currency is a de facto form of partial default on debt and a subsidy to exports.

So read the theory, and make up your own mind. But if you keep it as a 'model' of what is happening in the markets, it covers quite a bit of ground reasonably well.  I will do so as well, and adjust it as things happen and more data becomes available.

There was no movement in the dealer (registered) COMEX gold inventory yesterday, but a 35,808 ounce chunk of HSBC stored customer(eligible) gold has left the building, and may be headed East.

Have a pleasant weekend. See you Sunday evening.