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altBen Bernanke The Ghost Of Christmas Future hspace5 vspace5
alignright emAt the rate were going, it could be four, five years
before we are back to a more normal unemployment rate,em Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke,interviewedon em60 Minutes.emYou
might have thought that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernankecould
have waited until after Christmas to spring the bad news. After
all, the nation is not looking for a rock in its stocking following
two bad Christmases. Yet Bernanke announced his message of bad
cheer Dec. 5on the CBS programem 60 Minutesem.So why did Bernanke
deliver this cold truth in somber tones about Americas continuing
economic crisis Perhaps because he understands that no one in the
Federal government has admitted the truththat the nation is in for
years of tough times.That is not the message we are hearing
fromPresident BarackObama. Almost two years since the presidential
election, Obama still praises the core strength of the U.S. economy
and says he is on target with his promise to rebuild America. Weve
got to do everything we can to accelerate this recovery and keep
our economy moving forward, the President recently said.Not true,
wroteem Project Syndicate emlast week. Instead, Obama has so far
managed to only describe the world that he wants he has not been
able to bring it about.What America needs far more than
Presidential proclamations is jobs. Last week we learned that the
United States unemployment rate had climbed to 9.8 percent in
November, up from 9.6 percent the previous month. That puts it
within a hair of the 10.1 percent peak it reached in October,
2009.The Obama administration has pushed for unprecedented
interestrate reductions and has instituted stimulus plans to the
tune of trillions of new dollars. Still, banks are freezing credit
and Americans are not going back to work.It is true that
unemployment, even touching near 10 percent, is not the worst
America has experienced. I was just getting started as an
investment writer during the rolling recession of the early 1980s
when unemployment hit almost 11 percent. But that rate of
joblessness was created by a proactive Federal Reserve led by
Chairman Paul Volcker. That Fed pushed shortterm interest rates to
almost 20 percent. That was the price the Fed was willing to pay to
squeeze out the inflationary excess of the 1970s. It was a tough
pill to swallow, but the medicine was digested in less than two
years and the United States, led by the steady hand of Ronald
Reagan, was then on firm footing.Today, unemployment is again
almost that high, and not because the President or the Fed has
taken tough action. Quite the opposite is true. Bernankes Federal
Reserve is the most permissive in the central banks 97year history,
and makes the 1970s Fed led by Chairman Arthur Burns look
frugal.Bernanke has driven effective interest rates to zero, and is
standing by the Feds recent controversial decision to initiate a
600 billion Treasury bondbuying program. It is the second round of
socalled quantitative easing, which is meant to stimulate the
economy by keeping rates at zero.According to Bernanke, the Fed may
not be done yet. Responding to the em60 Minutesem question about
the possibility of additional quantitative easing, Bernanke said
Oh, its certainly possible. And again, it depends on the efficacy
of the program. It depends on inflation. And finally it depends on
how the economy looks.How the economy looks I dont know how the
economy looks from Bernankes ivory tower, but from my office it
looks terrible. And according to my best friend, who has spent
nearly four decades hauling heavy loads across North America,
things look even worse from the cab of his truck. He tells me that
not only is the construction business not picking up, but
interstate traffic is also light. Even the lineup at the
U.S.Canadian border is shorter than he has seen in decades. Yet he
considers himself to be one of the lucky ones this Christmas. He is
still working, while nearly one in five construction workers in the
U.S. doesnt have a job.p styletextalign centerimg classaligncenter
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alt pBusiness cant seem to recover. And the Feds actions read like
a howto book for a Latin American dictator. That means the economy,
including the construction business, isnt likely to pick up any
time soon.There is, however, a good reason why Americas economic
performance has been so slovenly, says the British newspaper emThe
Independentem. This is not a postwar crisis. It is like a prewar
crisis, a crisis which unfortunately shares many traits with the
Great Depression in the 1930s. House price declines, defaults, bank
failures, low interest rates, hopelessly weak credit expansion,
high unemployment, depressed levels of economic activity The
ingredients were all there in the 1930s and theyre back again
today.What is different is that the Federal government and the
Federal Reserve are doing the opposite of what they did during the
onset of the Great Depression. Back then the Federal Reserve raised
interest rates and Washington slashed spending. Today the United
States is taking on debts than would have been unimaginable a
decade ago.China and India, along with more traditional allies like
Japan, have bought into Obamas plans by lending the U.S. Treasury
Department trillions of dollars. The world is hoping that this
universal bailout will rescue the U.S. economy and that Americas
deep recession wont become a world depression. But unless these
countries start to see things turning around, they may hit the
panic button. Then it will be every nation for itself, and no
country or corporation will be willing to throw good money after
bad.That of course would mean sweeping deflation like that
experienced during the Great Depression. The result could be
unemployment that could exceed 30 percent. That would mean mass
foreclosures and waves of bank failures. The economic crisis could
get so bad that Washington might even forsake the Constitution and
subject Americans to martial law.The good newsif you can call it
good newsis that we dont have to face such catastrophe this
Christmas. For now at least, the world is still backing Obama and
Bernankein the greatest bailout ever attempted.strongThe Ghost of
Christmas FuturestrongMy late dad C.V. Myers always insisted that
the dark forces of deflation will always be stronger than the
ability of central banks and governments to inflate weak
economies.The National Inflation Association NIA believes the same.
After Mr. Bernankes em60 Minutesem interview, the NIA wrote, It is
more likely that in 4 to 5 years from now, U.S. unemployment will
rise to Great Depression levels. Bernankes policy of printing money
and creating inflation will not create jobs because the money the
Fed creates is going to fund nonproductive and wasteful U.S.
government spending. The only jobs being created are artificial
government jobs.strongAction To TakestrongOver the next six months
we should find out if the NIA is correct. The only way to protect
ourselves against either extreme inflation or extreme deflation is
with physical gold. Physical silver and resource stocks will do
great if we end up with inflation. If money and credit are being
destroyed instead, I think you should only hold bullion and a few
of the biggest gold corporations in the world. I like both
strongBarrick Gold Corporationstrong NYSE, ABX, 53.47 and
strongNewmont Mining Corp strongNYSE, NEM, 62.00.Both Barrick and
Newmont are at alltime highs, but I think both will go higher yet
given either extreme inflation or crushing deflation. Keep in mind
that during the Great Depression shares in bluechip gold mining
stocks soared. Homestake Mining stock rose continuously from 80 per
share in October 1929 to 495 per share in December 1935. That was a
total return of 519 percent excluding cash dividends during the
most devastating bear market ever.Except for a few special
situations and major gold producers like those mentioned above,
most of your money should be either in physical gold or physical
cash. And I dont mean in a bank account either. I dont know what is
going to happen, but if things get very bad I dont think we can
trust the banks. When it gets right down to it, we cant trust the
chairman of the Federal Reserve.I hope I am wrong, yet fear that I
am correct. All of which makes me feel like Scrooge in Charles
Dickens emA Christmas Carolem. When Ebenezers grave is revealed he
is overcome with foreboding. Frantically, he asks the Spirit of
Things to Come if these shadows are what will be or what may be.
The Spirit says nothing, either because it doesnt know or because
it wont say. As for me, I simply dont know.Yours for better
times,em John MyersMyers Energy and Gold Report em
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