Big Oil and Bigger Debts: Have America’s Spending Habits Locked the Planet Into a Dead End Dirty Energy Future?

A Fundamental Paradox

As we race into the third decade of the 21st century, the need to move America off of fossil fuels and into a clean energy future has never been more obvious. At the same time, achieving this goal has never been more challenging or in question. While the American people are generally in favor of moving off of fossil fuels and into a higher-tech, clean-fuel economy, the American government has been slow to respond to popular sentiment. Indeed, the Trump administration, in particular, has been downright hostile to the idea. Why this paradox, from a nation that literally led the world in both environmental consciousness and technical innovation throughout the 20th and into the early 21st centuries?

The answer is complex. However, there may be one very deep and intractable piece of the puzzle that I believe has not been fully explored by anyone. (At least I haven’t been able to find much written in this vein.) That piece, in my opinion, is what I believe is a link between how the world purchases fossil fuels (primarily crude oil), and our exploding national debt. In this column, I’ll introduce you to my argument that the world is forced to keep the debt-riddled American economy from collapsing, and from dragging the rest of the world economy down with it, via the way that America forces the world to purchase crude oil. I will argue further that promoting an ever increasing use of fossil fuels (mainly crude oil) by nations around the world is a primary strategy by which American leadership has attempted to bolster and stave off the collapse of our increasingly ill and fragile economy. Please understand that this is a speculative piece, and feel free to let me know if you are aware of other research already conducted on this topic, or thoughts you may have after reading this. I welcome constructive feedback on this issue which I hope to bring to wider attention.

What’s Old Is New Again: A Brief History Of Alternative Energy

 The history of alternative energy is surprisingly long, stretching back to the 1820’s and is nearly contemporaneous with the dawn of the fossil fuel age. The fossil fuel age more or less began in 1823, with the invention of the internal combustion engine by Samuel Brown. This set the stage for the building of large and fast machines that would use coal or crude oil in massive volumes, should massive volumes of coal and oil and a way to mass produce the machines ever become easily available. Shortly after the debut of internal combustion, scientists discovered photovoltaic compounds which release energy when exposed to light. The methods used to harness these compounds became the precursors of our modern solar power cells. Just a few years later, in 1839, William Robert Grove invented the first hydrogen fuel cell. These latter inventions, along with clever use of passive solar collected by parabolic mirrors and harnessed to run steam engines, would have created a global clean energy economy except for one thing: the almost simultaneous discovery of deposits of easily available, high quality crude oil in the northeastern U.S.

In a twist of fate that must have seemed literally Heaven sent, a huge, shallow pool of easily exploited, high-quality crude oil was discovered in Titusville, Pennsylvania in 1859. How convenient so soon after the internal combustion engine had been developed! The well in Titusville was the first American well that had been deliberately drilled for oil, and the first oil pumping operation ever conducted on a commercial scale. At that time, while combustion engines were not yet widely known, crude was eagerly being sought as a lighting oil replacement for whale oil as the whaling industry declined. Thanks to the Titusville oil discovery and numerous additional discoveries across the northeast, the Midwest and Texas in subsequent decades, America not only had enough to satisfy its tiny but growing domestic demand, but enough extra to become an oil exporter.

Not surprisingly, the availability of cheap and easily pumped crude in America encouraged Americans and our trading partners – mainly the more developed economies of western Europe – to turn their attention to the potential of the automobile and produce increasing numbers of horseless carriages with gasoline-driven engines. At the same time, electric cars, which had been invented around the same time and had the advantage over gasoline-driven vehicles of being clean, quiet, and starting without a manual crank, were available and preferred by the wealthy and urban women of the day. The invention of the electric starters for gasoline cars, however, removed one advantage of electric vehicles, and the superior range of gasoline-driven engines removed another advantage as roads outside of the cities were improved and better roads beckoned everyone to get out and travel. The final blow to electric vehicles arrived when Henry Ford turned the assembly line model of killing and dismembering animals in slaughterhouses on its head, and adapted it to constructing automobiles. The assembly-built, gasoline-powered Model T was born as the alternative to the handcrafted cars of the day, and with its cheap price compared to the electric car, the Model T made the oil-powered lifestyle available to the masses. The rest, as they say, became history.

Interestingly, as the fossil fuel-driven industrial economy was developing in earnest in both America and Europe, French solar steam engine developer Augustin Mouchot had a fit of prescience in 1880 and is credited with asking the following question: “What”, he queried, “would happen to European industry when its coal reserves (coal, in his day, being the new and dominant fossil fuel primarily fueling the European industrial revolution) are used up?” In hindsight, the answers were to exploit every European coal deposit down to the lowest quality lignite; offshore industry to poorer parts of the world where labor is cheaper and environmental standards are lower, and import fuel. In many respects, it’s the latter strategy, increasingly exercised over the decades by both Europe and many other countries around the world as development expanded, that has helped to both fund America’s raging debt-fueled economy and create what I see as the “save the climate”/”fund the national debt” conflict. Were there to be a mass international movement from conventional to alternative sources of energy, what would happen to the American and the global economies? I believe the effects on both would likely be catastrauphic due to triggering the deep and massive fiscal crisis towards which the world has been lurching for some time, now and which the world’s central banks have collectively been engaged in fighting with increasingly extreme and bizarre methods.

It’s The Climate, Stupid

The first solar power company in America was developed in 1908 by American solar energy system developer Frank Shuman. It didn’t persist, however, because, as discussed above, high quality, easily exploited fossil fuel (particularly oil) deposits made dirty energy abundant and cheap. This wasn’t just the case in America, however. During the decade before WWI, Western powers (especially the British) began taking an interest in the Middle East because of its potential oil reserves. In 1901, British entrepreneur William D’Arcy effectively kicked off the middle eastern oil rush by negotiating a concession with the Persian (now Iranian) government to search for oil in its territory. Eight years later, after large oil deposits were found near the border with modern day Iraq, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company was incorporated in London. Investors were lured in by the prospect that the British government planned to convert their warships from coal to oil, making British consumption of oil “almost limitless” (https://www.bl.uk/maps/articles/oil-maps-of-the-middle-east)  In subsequent decades, more oil fields were discovered in areas across the Middle East, and with each new discovery, new oil companies were founded with the backing of investors from Britain, continental Europe, and, of course, America. Determining the boundaries of each oil concession was a prickly task that became the primary force determining the boundaries of the modern day Middle Eastern countries with which most of us are familiar.

Several decades later, however, beginning in the 1950’s, concerns about Peak Oil and unchecked human population growth outstripping energy sources began to raise concerns about fossil energy. Interest in finding alternative sources of energy began to develop. A growing environmental consciousness through the 1960’s and 70’s sparked landmark legislation including the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts (both of which are now in serious danger because of the Trump administration). The dangers of fossil fuel usage were beginning to be appreciated, and the shallow, easily mined pools of oil in the United States started running dry. Continued untouchable dominance of “cheap” fossil fuels seemed in question. Yet, forty to fifty years later, and after a massive boom in advanced technology, at the end of 2018 alternative energies still made up only about 17% of domestic energy production. (Globally, the figure is closer to 20%, which is still pretty low, but better than in America.)  

Still, Donald Trump has unleashed several strong attempts to dismantle America’s alternative energy and energy conservation research capabilities. In 2017, for example, Trump attempt to de-fund the Advanced Research Projects Agency – Energy, a rare bipartisan program that started under the Bush administration to fund early-stage alternative energy technologies. Then, in 2018, Trump came out with tariffs aimed squarely at the solar industry and followed up with a plan to slash the Department of Energy’s Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency programs by 72% for fiscal 2019. While this was happening, in 2018, the level of carbon dioxide in the global atmosphere climbed above 407.4 parts per million (ppm), a level higher than the peak carbon dioxide level seen on earth during the last 800,000 years. If this isn’t significant enough in itself, the way in which it’s occurring should be ringing alarm bells. Over the last 60 years, human activity (mostly energy usage) has caused not only the total carbon dioxide level to jump up, but also the rate at which carbon dioxide is accumulating in our atmosphere, to increase. https://twitter.com/RonPaul/status/1225508124867596289?cn=ZmxleGlibGVfcmVjc18y&refsrc=email Carbon dioxide is now accumulating at a rate that’s about 100 times above normal (www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/climate-change-atmospheric-carbon-dioxide).  In other words, human activity is distorting the natural fluctuations in atmospheric carbon dioxide by dramatically increasing both the total amount of carbon in our atmosphere and how fast it’s getting there. The effects of this change (in combination with other unsavory distortions we’re causing) are downright life-threatening for humanity as a whole: significantly rising sea levels; an increasing number of storms of unprecedented strength and destructiveness; changing weather patterns around the globe; longer droughts and deeper floods; increasing spread of dangerous insects and diseases; widespread death of coral reefs and shelled marine animals due to ocean acidification (and attendant collapse of fisheries and marine ecosystems); and declines in many climate-sensitive species of animals and plants. (Otherwise OK?) While there is no one complete solution to the massive problem of too much carbon in our atmosphere, one of the largest and most effective steps that humanity, as a whole, could take to reverse the trend would be to change from using fossil fuels to using energy sources that don’t emit carbon (and preferably don’t simply substitute  other, equally dangerous substances, such as radioactivity, for the carbon).

It seems logical that the United States, as one of the most powerful, educated and technologically advanced nations, should be taking the lead on moving beyond the old fossil fuels paradigm and into a safer future, but we’re not. Why is that? There are actually a variety of reasons. One is our distributed style of government in which the various stakeholders must come to a consensus before anything can be done. For example, if an energy project requires the modification of energy infrastructure across state lines, voters in one state can block the changes required to implement the initiative arising in another state. Or, just one powerful constituency in Congress can prevent passage of legislation backed by even a large citizen majority. Another major reason why America is falling behind on the need to make the leap to clean energy is because many parties have invested heavily in our current, though old, energy infrastructure. It’s understandable that they would rather not lose their ongoing sources of income, and no strong constituency in the government has looked at developing ways to ease their economic transition to alternatives. A third reason is because fossil fuels are heavily subsidized by tax breaks and tax dollars, making them look less expensive than alternative energy sources when customers receive their power bills. And who wants to save the earth when they’re going to apparently be charged extra for doing so? In this paper I’d like to propose a fourth reason which I will argue is the most important reason of all, but least understood: because turning off the fossil fuel (mainly crude oil) taps would effectively crush the U.S., and by extension, global, economies.

No, Not the Climate: It’s The Economy, Stupid

While there’s nothing technological stopping America from developing a clean energy economy and growing a thriving alternative energy equipment export business (i.e., we don’t lack for the brain power, equipment or material resources), I will argue that the structure of our economy, being uniquely dependent upon the sale of oil (from any country, not just from our own supplies) to fund our national debt, is preventing us from making the leap to a clean energy future and sustainable economy. As I see it, we are stuck in an impossible dilemma: if we do continue to base our economy on dirty fuel, and press other countries to do the same, we will trash our environment. But if we don’t continue to consume massive quantities of crude oil and force other countries to do the same indefinitely, then we’ll lose our primary tool for servicing our national debt:  the payments made to our Treasury from the dollar reserves held by foreign governments and institutional investors. Here’s roughly how the oil economy works: Foreign governments are forced to use U.S. dollars to purchase crude oil from any nation that sells it (why is explained below). When their businesses sell their goods and services to us, they receive dollars in return and exchange those dollars for their national currency. Their central banks then tuck a portion of those dollars away in a reserve pile, from which they make payments for crude oil and settle their international debts. While not being used, most of the reserve dollars are squirrelled away in a sort of savings account, composed of U.S. Treasury bonds and notes that governments purchase as a means of protecting and earning a little bit of interest on the dollars they’re forced to accumulate. Other large foreign and domestic institutions, such as pension funds and investment funds, likewise purchase Treasurys as a means of making a bit of interest (or yield) on their investable capital. And the American worker pays the taxes and fees that refill the Treasury after the Treasury repays investors their original investment when the bond matures, plus the interest owed. (Ahem, taxpayers! Think about the implications of this as the amount of our debt – and the interest owed on that debt – increases!)

At the present time, our debt is so great that without the Fed artificially suppressing the interest rate on it, it would be too expensive for us to service even the minimum required payments. (Makes one wonder what’s going to happen after about 2024, when the bulk of the Boomers will be retired and the Social Security Trust Funds will run out? That’s going to add approximately $5 trillion to our national debt in one fell swoop. Add on free healthcare, free tuition and free housing, and we might start to have a problem….?) Anyway, the point is that if foreign and institutional investors don’t keep increasing the amount of oil they consume, and thereby don’t keep needing more and more dollars to buy it with, and therefore don’t need more and more Treasury bonds in which to park their excess dollars, then how are we going to get enough money to fund our continually growing debt? There’s always the time-honored method of raising taxes, fees and inflation to strongarm it out of the working people, of course, but as the population has aged, the welfare state has expanded and good manufacturing and science jobs failed to re-materialize broadly across the landscape after decades of decline, there are simply fewer people and fewer high-paying jobs from which to squeeze the dollars necessary to cover the gap, at least in an honest way.

This state of affairs has led the Fed to resort to ever-more exotic tricks to keep the dollars flowing – for example, like creating trillions out of the nothingness and pouring them into the repurchase market to keep the banks from running low on capital and thereby ceasing to function. If foreign countries don’t buy our dollars and debt fast enough, the Fed will lower interest rates (perhaps into negative territory) which will artificially boost the stock markets and create huge profits for bond holders – until the Fed is forced to raise interest rates again because nobody will buy our bad deal. The stock market will then tank. Holders of trillions of low- or negative-interest government bonds will be wiped out as new Treasury bonds offering higher interest rates flood the bond market. Foreign countries that hold our dollars will lose confidence in them as they plunge in value, and all of the “too big to fail’ banks WILL fail as the holders of their $76 trillion or so of global debt derivatives begin to default on them. Finally, both the countries and the commercial institutions that buy our Treasuries (and thereby fund our debt), will stop investing in us and maybe even engage in a “run on the Treasury” as they turn their existing Treasury holdings in and demand payment before our dollars become completely worthless. (An equivalent problem already happened once in our history, forcing Richard Nixon to take our dollars off the Gold Standard as I’ll discuss below.) The entire global economy, led by America, will plunge into The Greater Depression, and there will be very little hope of recovery within most readers’ lifetimes.

That almost makes the extinction-level environmental problems facing us if we stick with using fossil fuels look manageable, doesn’t it?

Alternative Energy – What’s the Big Economic Deal?

Despite the continual pooh-poohing by most of our country’s entrenched economic and political leadership, there is a very strong economic case to be made in favor of transitioning from fossil fuels to alternative energy as the field develops. Wind and solar are reaching price parity with conventional fuels in many markets, and are getting ever closer to reaching the performance potential of conventional energy sources (with current gains being increasingly driven by improvements in battery storage). Investment levels in alternative energy are growing, while the costs associated with project development and management are decreasing. These combined trends will provide financial support for a greater array of technologies and suppliers to enter the market. Increasing integration of non-related technologies such as blockchain, AI and automation, will synergistically boost the deployment of renewable energy sources by decreasing their costs and easing their integration into the energy infrastructure.

According to accounting firm Deloitte,

            “ The prospects for short-term solar and wind energy growth appear favorable, with about 96.6% of net new generation capacity additions (about 74GW) expected to come from these two sources in 2020. With several states increasing their renewable portfolio standards (RPS) in 2019, the industry will likely see mandatory RPS-driven procurement growth through the mid-2020’s, while voluntary demand will continue to hit new levels. As of late 2019, at least 10 utilities have announced 100% decarbonization goals, and we’ll be watching for that list to grow in 2020.” (Motyka, Marlene 2020 Renewable Energy Industry Outlook, Deloitte U.S.)

Independent assessments of demand for renewable energy show the market projected to reach $2.15 trillion globally in 2025. This statistic is impressive enough, but what’s even more impressive is the amount and quality of associated economic activity the alt energy field generates. According to statistics compiled by The World Bank, the U.S. wind and solar industries create about 13.5 jobs (direct, indirect and induced) per million dollars spent within each industry. Likewise, the companion industry of energy efficiency creation (i.e., retrofitting), creates approximately 16.7 jobs per million dollars spent. A million dollars spent in the oil or natural gas industries, by contrast, generate about 5.2 total jobs. When looked at by the investment firm AltEnergy Stocks, almost identical ratios were found, and a 2015 study by the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity concluded that for every $1 million invested in energy efficiency retrofit programs, 66 job years of combined direct and indirect employment were created. What’s more, the jobs offered by the clean energy industry tend to be of better quality and more broadly geographically distributed than traditional fossil fuel jobs. (www.greenbiz.com/article/how-many-jobs-does-clean-energy-create)

Another important, and generally overlooked, positive economic aspect of alternative energy is the potential for savings it offers on health care costs associated with reduced air pollution levels. Given the skyrocketing nature of health care costs and insurance premiums, this public benefit isn’t insignificant. According to research published this year by the MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research, if a swathe of just 10 states across the Midwest and rust belt (Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, West Virginia, New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware) increased their current commitments of generating 13% of their energy from renewables up to 19.5%, they would spend about $5.8 billion but save about $13.5 billion in reduced health care costs by 2030. If they each increased the percentage of energy generated by renewables to about 26%, the cost to implement would be about $9 billion, but the savings in health care costs alone would amount to about $20 billion. Most of the savings would come from the reduction in the rates of lung cancer, heart attacks, and strokes precipitated by fine particulates (soot) in the air. The states chosen for study all have higher levels of soot in their air due to the fact that they generate more power than most states from coal. One would think that the savings in terms of both money and lives would provide a compelling argument in favor of moving forward with more clean energy in “dirty sky country”, but, sadly, neither argument is guaranteed to hold sway to those in leadership positions. While 22 states and seven local governments have bended together to sue the Trump administration over his rollback of Federal protections for clean air, Ohio Governor Mike DeWine signed a bill that significantly reduced his state’s portfolio commitment to clean energy in order to subsidize nuclear and coal. One wonders if perhaps the nuclear and coal industries, in conjunction with the Trump administration, may have offered Mr. DeWine a “health care bonus he couldn’t refuse” for making sure that the people of Ohio will have to pay dearly for the privilege of breathing dirty air and being exposed to the joys of nuclear waste?

What’s a ‘Petrodollar’ and how Does It Differ From…. Well, A Dollar?

A ‘petrodollar’ is simply an ordinary U.S. dollar used to purchase oil from any oil-exporting country (ex. – Saudi Arabia, Iran, Venezuela, or, currently, even the United States itself, which recently became and oil exporter for the first time since the 1960’s). So, when an entity such as a large multinational corporation or a soverign government purchases oil from an oil exporting nation and pays for that oil in U.S. dollars, those dollars become labelled as ‘petrodollars’ when used in that transaction. When used for other purposes later on, they may simply be called  dollars again, or may continue to be called ‘petrodollars’ if the purpose is to remind us that they were once used as an instrument by which to purchase oil.

Why Do Purchasers of Oil Pay For It In (Petro)Dollars?

This question might better be phrased as, “Why MUST purchasers of oil pay for it in dollars?”, because dollars are required, globally, for oil purchase transactions to take place. The answer to this question takes us all the way back to 1944, just after the end of WWII. At the time, the United States was so economically productive that our goods and services combined represented about half of the world’s industrial output. America was the industrial powerhouse of the world, and our central bank was also serving as the central “safe house” where many nations of Europe were storing their gold for safekeeping during the war. (Remember that the Nazis plundered everything of value they could lay their hands on as they raged across Europe.)  When the war finally ended, delegates from 44 nations came together at a conference held in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, and pledged to allow the value of their nation’s currencies to be tied, or “pegged”, to the value of the USD. The USD was itself at that point tied, or “pegged”, to the value of gold.  One dollar was valued at 1/35 of an ounce of gold. Another way of saying this is that an ounce of gold was worth 35 dollars. The dollar was therefore both a store of known value, and a source of relative economic stability over time because gold was a safe and stable store of value over time. “Pegging” the value of one’s national currency to the value of the dollar therefore indirectly provided the security of pegging it to gold, without the need for each nation to acquire, or repatriate and care for, its own gold stockpile. Pegging to the dollar instantly gave each national currency a relatively high degree of stability and credibility for very low cost and effort – an arrangement that was sorely needed in chaotic and deeply indebted post-WWII Europe.

It was via this “pegging” that the USD not only helped to stablilize the currencies of most of the industrialized world, but also became the communally-accepted medium of exchange by which the nations participating in Bretton Woods could settle international debts and facilitate international trade. Debts could easily be paid and trade deals easily negotiated when the central banks of participating nations all had stockpiles of a mutually acceptable third-party currency (in this case, the USD) with which to pay one another. These stockpiles are known as reserves, and the currency being stockpiled is known as the reserve currency.  At the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944, the USD became the world’s reserve currency, and it remains so to this day. And this role of the USD in the world economy was what set the stage for locking the planet into the embrace of the oil monster.

From Reserve Currency to Petrodollar In Three Acts

Act 1 – WWII and Bretton Woods

In the beginning, the Bretton Woods arrangement worked reasonably well to facilitate international trade and keep economies stable. However, it contained a fatal loophole that the signatories apparently either hadn’t considered, or thought they wouldn’t need to deal with: the agreement failed to specify that the United States could not print additional dollars for each ounce of gold it held, and then devalue each dollar be worth less than 1/35 of an ounce of gold. But that is exactly what the United States did. For you see, we, too, had debts to repay after WWII and the two easiest ways to pay off those debts were either to openly cheat the people out of their money and confiscate it directly (by raising taxes), or surreptitiously cheat the people out of their money by decreasing the value, or purchasing power, of each dollar via inflation. Inflation, properly understood, isn’t the increase in cost of any good or service, but the increase in the total amount of currency in circulation. The effect is that more dollars circulating in the economy means each dollar soon loses an amount of ability to buy goods or services proportional to the number of new dollars coming into the system. Debtors love inflation because it helps them pay off their debts in two ways: first, it creates additional dollars that the debtor can amass and count towards the total number of dollars he owes. And second, it makes each dollar worth less than the dollars the debtor borrowed, so the debtor is paying off his obligations with notes that have less value, or purchasing power, than the notes he originally borrowed. In the process of paying off a loan with less valuable currency, the debtor effectively makes a profit! Such a deal! Not so good for the lender, of course, but when you’re lending to Uncle Sam, you’ve got to expect that he may be willing to sweep aside ethical niceties like fairness when he can generate a profit by screwing you.

Thus it came to be that in the United States, the debts incurred for the costs of fighting WWII were gradually paid off primarily through a combination of tax increases and inflation. (Inflation essentially wipes out the value of a debt by creating more and more currency units while decreasing the value of each unit. This is a classic method used by governments to pay off huge debts by making them worthless. Essentially, they reclaim prosperity by cheating their lenders.) Anyway, the period of financial repression caused a great deal of upset and resentment among the people, of course, but overall, the economy continued to expand and improve. At that point (unlike today), America was bursting with a vigorous young work force; retirees workers rarely lived more than three years beyond retirement; medical technology was simple and relatively inexpensive; natural resources were abundant (and the environment was considered expendable) so manufacturing was profitable and easy, and there were few publically-funded social welfare services. Perhaps most importantly, though, government was still relatively small and unable to micromamange (and thereby drive up the cost on) everything from your doctor’s visits to student loans. So the overall economy still grew despite the drag of financial repression. Of course, with each dollar gradually becoming worth less than 1/35 of an ounce of gold as the United States inflated away its debts, financial repression also hit every country that had pegged its currency to the dollar. In other words, America not only inflated away some of the value of its own people’s money, we also inflated away the some of the purchasing power of each of unit of foreign currency, as well. That did not make our allies very happy campers.

Act 2 – Viet Nam, The Great Society and Nixon Ends Covertibility of Cash for Gold

 Had America stayed the economic course after recovering financially from WWII and ending financial repression, both the domestic and the global economy probably would have grown beautifully and the world would be in a very different place than we are today. But alas, not long after America pulled out from under her debts from WWII, war hawks within the upper levels of government began to lay upon us a new source of debt: Viet Nam. Social doves responded by demanding an essentially blank check for an open-ended domestic social welfare spending regime that came to be called “The Great Society”. (It may have been more aptly named “The Ever Growing Entitlement With no Exit Strategy” Society.)  Maybe in their zeal to “do good”, nobody on either side stopped to ask “how’re we gonna pay for all this?” Or maybe there was simply too much money and power to be had by the right parties on both sides if their plans went forward, and damn the consequences to the rest of us. Or perhaps both. Whatever the cause, however, the net effect of the new war combined with the new social entitlement economy was to put America firmly back on the path of debt. Back came the need to impose various forms of financial repression (most notably deliberately-induced inflation) on a more or less permanent and ongoing basis.

By 1971, debts from both Viet Nam and early Great Society program expenditures became a problem. While the hyperinflation feared during the late 1960’s never materialized, the United States Government did flood the markets with paper dollars again to inflate the debts away. America was simultaneously producing so much paper and burning through so much gold just to keep the debts from exploding that many of the other nations who were holding dollars in their reserves became nervous. How much would the value of their reserves drop because of all the additional money printing? How long would it be before America had spent all her gold reserves, and could no longer exchange gold for paper? European countries became understandably nervous and began converting their reserve dollars for gold while they thought they still could. The net effect was a “run on America’s gold” akin to the old-fashioned runs on banks. The final straw arrived when, late in the process, the U.K. effectively gave America a vote of “no confidence” by redeeming most of its dollar holdings for gold. In response, in August of 1971, President Nixon suddenly ended the convertibility of paper currency to gold. He took this unprecedented step – in lieu of reforming our spending habits (sound familiar?)-  to protect America’s remaining gold reserves. The value of the now-unbacked dollar plummeted. While that was bad news for domestic consumers and holders of dollar reserves, it did have the positive effect of boosting our manufacturing base because it drove down the cost of our exports, making them more competitive with goods manufactured in countries with cheaper labor and raw materials. For a while.

Act 3 – The Arab Oil Embargo and Befriending the House of Saud

In October of 1973, when Egypt and Syria attacked Israel in the Yom Kippur War, President Nixon agreed to assist Israel by sending them a shipment of arms. Even though he refrained from taking further action to imply that he understood and sympathized with Egypt’s position, in the eyes of the Arab countries, lending any help whatsoever to Israel was considered a serious offense against the Arab world.  To express their displeasure at the United States for assisting their enemy, the oil exporting countries, which had recently formed a coalition they called the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), cut off oil sales to the United States and other allies of Israel. The resulting shock caused the price of oil to quadruple in six months. This caused damage to the U.S. economy, angered and frightened the American people, and encouraged the U.S. to seek some means of insuring that the flow of oil would never be interrupted or compromised again.

President Nixon, assisted by his globalist Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, hit upon a simple but brilliant plan. In 1974, Nixon and Kissinger together ended the oil embargo by negotiating a deal with Saudi Arabia, the largest producer and swing voter of the OPEC bloc. In exchange for providing military protection for Saudi Arabia’s oil fields, becoming Saudi Arabia’s exclusive supplier of military arms, and protecting Saudi Arabia from Israel, all the U.S. asked for was that Saudi Arabia sell its oil exclusively in U.S. dollars and invest its oil profits in U.S. Treasury obligations. To the Saudis, the deal was practically a no-brainer. Over time, and until recently, it  paid off handsomely for them. Among other things, it meant that the U.S. lent its influence to try to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and helped protect Saudi Arabia militarily during an unstable era which saw the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the fall of the Shah of Iran, and the Iran-Iraq war. It was only two years after the Saudi deal was inked, in 1975, that the rest of the OPEC nations fell in line and agreed to the same terms with the U.S. as Saudi Arabia was getting. The genius of the deal for America was that it effectively replaced the backing of the USD by gold, with the backing of the USD by oil – the most valuable and heavily traded commodity in the world. Our dollar was now back from the beating it took under Bretton Woods, and better than ever. It was now undergirded by something even more precious than gold: a fungible and seemingly inexhaustible supply of energy. And the best part is that since Saudi Arabia is obligated to purchase U.S. Treasuries with their oil profits, this allows the rest of the world to effectively subsidize our debt through their purchases of Saudi oil (and remember that Saudi Arabia was, and still is, the world’s largest oil producer). How great is that?? We get to spend basically without limits, while every other country picks up our tab for as long as the oil keeps flowing. No wonder our government wants to keep the oil taps open, and priced in U.S. dollars. And they will do anything necessary, including lying to us, starting wars, killing innocent civilians and destroying the environment to keep this sweet deal in place. For if it were to go away – say, be replaced by energy not controlled by the U.S. or priced in our dollars – not only would America’s economy be destroyed, but the entire global financial system will collapse in a hurry.

 The very best part of the deal was that, after the OPEC agreement was signed, nobody on earth could buy or sell oil without the United States being involved somewhere on the deal. Remember the term reserve currency? Countries can’t obtain reserves of USD’s needed to buy oil, without selling their goods or services to us. Thus, nations are motivated to sell reasonably-priced gadgets to the U.S. and Americans are given permission to consume instead of producing. It works because foreign countries must manufacture and sell goods and services to us in order to build up their dollar reserves. (For example, if Japan needs more oil, they assemble some Toyotas, ship them to our shores, and get paid in dollars. Voila! They can now use those dollars to purchase crude from any producer in the world.) This is an example of how Americans get to “help” the world by consuming instead of producing. Hey! It’s practically a free lunch – for us! Never mind that, as a side effect, turning us from producers to consumers also turned our industrial states into the rust belt, and eventually shifted our entire economy into a low-skill, low-education, low-opportunity, dead-end service economy wasteland. Who cares! We now had a way to fund an ever-growing welfare-warfare state, impose democracy upon any portion of the world needing our help to become politically enlightened, and make sure that citizens who once would have been expected to take care of themselves and their families, could now shift ever more of their burdens onto “the village”, courtesy of their “helpers” in the State. It was a state of affairs that brought so much warmth to the cockles of every social engineer’s heart that they soon made opposition futile. Indeed, currently, a number of “social welfare” organizations are currently fighting efforts to reduce social expenditures, under the argument that America has all the wealth needed to keep every current benefit flowing and even increasing if only the corporate and political Scrooges would stop crying wolf with our budget deficit. It would be a lovely idea if there were actually any truth to it.

Petrodollar Recycling

An interesting thing about petrodollars is that they never really leave the U.S. economy permanently. Petrodollars are acquired as dollars by foreign companies selling goods or services to the U.S. The U.S. pays them in dollars, which they exchange with their government for local currency. The dollars then sit in the foreign government’s reserves until needed for purchasing oil (or some other purpose, but the focus of this paper is on following the oil economy specifically). The dollars are then sent to an oil-producing nation in exchange for oil. Some of those dollars may be sent elsewhere by the oil producing nation to purchase other goods and services, and some will be saved for a time in reserves, but some will be recycled back to the U.S. when the oil producer purchases U.S. Treasury notes or bonds, or when the oil producer agrees to hire U.S. companies to come into their country and provide goods or services. The original agreement with the Saudis, for example, specified that the Kingdom was to re-cycle some of the petrodollars back to the U.S. in the form of contracts to U.S. firms for construction and other services.

The recycling of petrodollars through spending them on U.S. Treasury securities or goods and services provided by U.S. firms, provides a convenient and rather ingenious way of creating liquidity and “foreign” capital inflows to bolster our financial markets. And the really great part of this arrangement is that it boosts our markets without creating significant inflation, and it comes back to the U.S. interest free. The petrodollars coming into the markets aren’t significantly inflationary because they aren’t newly created currency, they’re dollars that were created and  introduced into the U.S. money supply some time in the past, and have simply been circulating in and out of the markets ever since. As for the interest free part, well, that’s extremely significant because it’s not our national debt per se, as heinous as it is, that poses the main problem for our government (and, ultimately, for us as the taxpayers who fund our government). The worse problem is actually the interest, because it compounds. For every dollar spent that increases the debt, our government must promise to pay whoever purchases that debt their money back, plus interest. That interest compounds over time, making the total burden of repayment grow exponentially rather than linearly. As economist Daniel Amerman points out, with a total current overt national debt burden of $23 trillion and counting, plus upcoming debt bombshells such as the expected depletion of the Social Security Trust Funds in approximately 2024, and the Fed signaling that they will be deploying another round of QE as a preemptive, rather than reactive, response to the threat of recession, forcing interest rates down as far as possible is a matter of economic life and death for the United States. According to Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projections, our government plans to spend approximately $12.2 trillion more than it takes in via taxes over the next 10 years. That equals about $102 billion it plans to pull from the financial system each and every month, and this is assuming that there will be no wars, massive natural disasters, or significant increases in any of our social spending programs. From where will it get that $102 billion per month?

Although it hasn’t come out and said so, the practical reality is that the Fed will be effectively forced to create a large chunk of that money. About $7.2 trillion, to be exact, if the Fed continues on its present course of creating $60 billion per month. (That may need to rise, as the overnight repurchase, or repo, market that provides liquidity to the banks, has just shown in the last few days a need for cash greater than the daily amount the Fed has currently decided to supply.) That leaves $5 trillion (at least) that will need to come from somewhere else. Who will purchase American debt at what Amerman describes as the “irrationally low” (in other words, seriously below free market determined) interest rates the U.S. must impose to keep our current debt plus interest obligations from spiraling completely out of control and creating a global crisis of confidence in our currency? Currently, our government is using laws created under the Basel III international economic agreement, which require “systemically important” banks to have massive “extra” reserves of cash on hand for “safety” in case something goes wrong within the financial system (a distinct risk) and triggers a run on any of the banks. The Fed is currently using those “extra” reserves as the place from which to pull the additional cash the American government requires, and is replacing that cash – which the banks may need in a hurry some day – with Treasury obligations (essentially, IOU’s). (See Dan Amerman’s recent work for an extensive treatment of this issue.) While this will work as long as the banks have enough “excess” deposits to fund government needs and never have to touch those reserves for their own purposes, why not have other funding sources, as well?

Another way to get the huge amount of cash our government will need to find its growing debt at low interest rates might be to keep other nations tethered to fossil fuels and the petrodollar treadmill. As long as other countries must acquire dollars to purchase oil and would benefit from earning even small amounts of interest on their dollar reserves, they will continue to purchase our Treasury obligations (while complaining, of course). And, the more oil they consume, the more of our growing debt they can be counted on to fund.

So how much of our debt, measured in terms of Treasury purchases, do the oil producing nations of the world currently fund? While a very important question, it’s one that can’t really be answered because of the way the U.S. Treasury keeps records of Treasury purchases by the OPEC countries. Under the original agreement with Saudi Arabia, the value of the Kingdom’s purchases of Treasury obligations was to be kept secret. Until 2016, the Treasury helped keep this secrecy by omitting individual Treasury holdings for the OPEC nations from its annual reports, and lumped the purchases from all the primary exporters into one total figure. In May of 2016, however, a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) was filed and the U.S. government was forced to disclose the individual Treasury holdings of the separate OPEC members. Saudi Arabia’s holdings came in at a modest $116 billion, but there is some evidence that the Saudis hide a fair amount of their actual banking activity by funneling it through places like Panama and the British Virgin Islands. (www.marketslant.com/article/petrodollar-regime-crumbling-how-will-us-economy-react, 25 April, 2017). With Saudi Aramco’s IPO finally accomplished and coming in at $25.6 billion (amid accusations that the company achieved its total $1.7 trillion valuation primarily by pressuring friendly local investors and limiting the amount of stock it’s selling), there is reason to believe that the Saudi’s claim that they hold $750 billion in Treasurys. This would be consistent with the idea that Saudi Arabia and its petrodollars do constitute a fundamentally important source of economic support for American debt.

Don’t Fight the U.S.

Perhaps the most important rule that foreign governments caught in the shell game that is our petrodollar economy must understand, is “Don’t Fight the U.S.”. When it comes to protecting the right of all soverign nations to sell, purchase and pay for their energy needs in our currency, America is vigilant to the extreme. This is what the leadership of every foreign government that has foolishly tried to exercise the right to trade for oil in the currency of their choice, has found out the hard way. In PetroSpeak, “Keeping the world safe for Democracy” means “Keeping the world safe for propping up the U.S. economy and standard of living, regardless of what that does to anybody else around the globe”.

Three Prominent Examples Of Those Who Fought The Law- And How The Law Won

1. Mommar Qadhafi, Lybia and the Pan-African Experiment

Since the 1980’s, the heads of several countries have attempted to buy or sell their soverign energy resources in the currencies of their choice, and both they and their people have punished back into their places by the U.S. military. The first, and perhaps most extensive and best known example of a foreign leader who tried to defy the United States, was Momar Qadhafi. Under Qadhafi’s influence, in 2004, 53 African nations agreed to a plan decades in the making, to require that anyone purchasing African oil must do so using a pan-African gold currency bsed on the Lybian Golden Dinar. Qadhafi also created a massive pipeline that brought water to arid regions of Lybia and created allowed the development of large areas where grain could now be grown. This project was entirely paid for via the gold held by the Lybian central bank; no foreign loans (and thus no debt with strings attached) were necessary. Emails recovered from Hillary Clinton’s private email server revealed that NATO’s strikes on the Lybian aqueduct, the factories necessary to manufacture new pipe and repair materials, and the general attacks on Qadhafi and his country had nothing to do with “humanitarian concerns”, but everything to do with suppressing the opportunity for financial and political independence across Africa. In this case, Lybia’s main target was actually France and overthrow of the French franc as the dominant currency of North Africa; however, as Lybian oil, like all other oil, was priced in petrodollars, the U.S. had no problem joining France and the other NATO nations in demonizing and overthrowing  Qadhafi, and even embedding Al Queida troops among the revolutionaries. https://theecologist.org/2016/mar/14/why-qaddafi-had-go-african-gold-oil-and-challenge-monetary-imperialism The poetic justice of the situation is that, while the overthrow of Qadhafi did indeed solve the problem of losing most of the African oil producers to political independence and a gold standard, protecting our debt-based economy inadvertently helped give rise to terrorist organizations that now target us and encouraging waves of immigration from countries that either saw their developing agricultural infrastructure destroyed (Lybia), or that never really had the opportunity to develop modern agricultural infrastructure (most of the other countries that bought into the Lybia’s idea of a Pan-African economic bloc). In addition, the suppression of Lybia helped open up Africa as an economic vacuum into which China has been pouring resources as part of its “Belt and Road” initiative. This raises the ironic spectre that the battle won yesterday over keeping African oil priced in dollars, may have paved the way for oil to be purchased in Yuan, tomorrow.

On Feb. 3, the United States Commerce Department just finalized a rule to impose anti-subsidy duties on products from countries that it determines undervalue their currencies against the US dollar. In other words, the U.S. will slap tariffs on goods from countries whose currencies our government considers to be “too cheap” relative to the dollar. Countries with “cheap” currencies can sell a lot of goods and services to the U.S. because, well, their goods and services are priced quite reasonably in terms of the dollar. But at the same time, we have difficulty selling to them because our goods and services are expensive in their currencies. This leads to trade deficits, which are considered bad, but running a continual trade deficit is an obligation for a country with a reserve currency because other countries must build up reserves (dollars, in our case) in order to purchase oil. As we’ve seen, when other countries use these reserves to purchase U.S. Treasurys, they directly fund the growth of the debt upon which our economic expansion depends. And when they turn their reserves into petrodollars, those dollars return to our economy in ways that boost our GDP without triggering inflation. So what happens if the United States effectively punishes countries by artificially raising the prices for their goods if they try to sell more to us by cheapening their currencies against our dollar? Aside from creating a great deal of global ill will, we will effectively reduce the capacity of foreign governments to build up dollar reserves and purchase our debt. https://theecologist.org/2016/mar/14/why-qaddafi-had-go-african-gold-oil-and-challenge-monetary-imperialismhttps://theecologist.org/2016/mar/14/why-qaddafi-had-go-african-gold-oil-and-challenge-monetary-imperialism

2. Saddam Hussein: Iraq Gets Testy

After the threat of Gaddhafi was neutralized, Iraq rose to challenge American economic and political dominance by beginning to export its oil for euros. Saddam Hussein was becoming dissatisfied with the declining value OPEC was receiving from American dollars that kept decreasing in value because of inflation. On November 6, 2000, the government of Iraq announced that it would no longer accept U.S. dollars that it sold for oil under the UN’s Oil for Food program. It chose, instead, to accept Euros rather than dollars. This wasn’t a bad choice, as the Euro was the only currency that could potentially rival the dollar for global dominance. Naturally, the policy makers in our government became alarmed and began to look for reasons to sell the American people on war against Iraq. The Bush administration trotted out alarming stories of WMD’s and extreme cruelty of Saddam Hussein to his own people, providing cover for the real impetus behind removing Hussein: to replace him with a puppet agreeable to keeping the old economic order and maintaining the basis for American economic growth and dominance. Secondary reasons for instituting regime change in Iraq included gaining more direct control of Iraq’s oil fields, and sending a clear message to Iran, OPEC’s second largest oil producer, to back off of its own considerations of switching to the Euro for pricing its oil exports. Selling significant quantities of oil in Euros would effectively have boosted the value of the Euro against the dollar, and pushed many oil importing countries to stockpile reserves of Euros instead of reserves of dollars. (www.thefreelibrary,com/Beyond+American+Petrodollar+Hegemony+at+the+eve+of=Global+Peak…a)199069569) 1/26/20

If that were to happen, how would we continue to fund our ever-increasing debt, and thereby keep our economy growing and maintain our global military dominance?

Prior to invading Iraq, the United States announced that only the allies who joined us in war would be privy to receiving the lucrative contracts that would be doled out to rebuild the Iraqi oil fields. Germany and France, who had rights to huge new Iraqi oil fields, objected on the basis that a successful American military invasion would dash rising reserve currency prospects for the Euro. Russia objected because it had recently secured rights to exploit a large new oil field and China protested because American control of Iraq’s oil would close off prospects for Beijing to negotiate for vast quantities of cheap oil the Chinese leadership felt they required for rapid economic development. And these nationalistic fears of what would happen if the U.S. took over Iraq were not unfounded.  A mere two months after the invasion, during the “reconstruction” of Iraq, the U.S. terminated the U.N.’s Oil For food program in Iraq, converted Iraq’s euro accounts into dollar accounts, and declared that Iraqi oil would once again be sold only in U.S. dollars.  Hurrah! Another country of the world was now made safe for democracy.

Or maybe not quite. Despite the “warning” inherent in the United States’ invasion of Iraq, Iran has been causing trouble for the petrodollar since 2007, when it decided that Japan should pay its energy bills in Yen instead of dollars. More recently, Iran has been planning to create an oil exchange, or bourse, in which all interested parties could buy and sell oil in Euros. This makes sense from both an Iranian and European perspective, as Iran is the fourth largest oil producer in the world and lies within reasonable proximity of its main customers: The EU, China and India. Indeed, Iran has such a lucrative trade with its current customers that it feels no burning need to sell oil in the faraway markets of New York or London. An Iranian oil exchange, or bourse, would not only benefit Iran at the expense of America, but it would also be open to Russia, which would probably take advantage in order to sell its oil directly to Europe in Euros. Therefore, an Iran that refuses to sell oil in petrodollars would be not only a severe and direct economic threat to the United States, but also the nucleus of an entirely new bloc of potential enemies (Iran plus Russia plus China plus India, even if the EU remained relatively neutral. If Iran gets away with creating and controlling the lion’s share of the global oil trade and wields its power in Euros instead of dollars, where will that leave America financially, politically and militarily?

3. Nicholas Meduro Thinks Selling Oil In Other Currencies Can Rescue The Venezuelan Economy

Despite the foregoing string of attempts by the United States to economically and militarily crush any soverign nation that dares to step away from trading oil exclusively in dollars, Venezuela is the latest challenger to make the attempt. In April, 2017, Venezuela began to slide into economic and social turmoil, prompted partly by socialist efforts to overhaul the Venezuelan economy and partly by the efforts of President Nicholas Maduro and his cabinet to install a new legislative body to re-write that country’s constitution. In September 2017, President Maduro and senior Venezuelan officials came under sanction by the Trump White House for their activities. In response, Venezuela began publishing prices for oil in Chinese Yuan and the Venezuelan state oil company, PDVSA, reportedly asked joint venture partners to open accounts in Euros and to convert existing accounts into Euros to avoid the sanctions. Trump’s attempts to embargo Venezuela included forbidding U.S. citizens and businesses from purchasing Venezuelan debt (this crippling their economy further, as ours would be crippled if foreign countries stopped purchasing our debt), or making deals with PDVSA. As the sanctions drove Venezuela even deeper into economic crisis, Maduro attempted to repatriate fourteen tons of Venezuelan gold from the Bank of England where it was being held as collateral against several international loans worth several billion dollars from several global banks. The U.S. government leaned on the B of E to withhold Venezuela’s gold, which it did. Deprived of this resource, in December 2018, Venezuela hit upon a new scheme in which they would begin selling their oil in a cryptocurrency backed by oil and minerals. Many analysts and experts, however, seriously doubt that the petro-backed crypto is a legitimate currency, and is actually backed by anything. Currently, Venezuela’s oil sales are beginning to recover from U.S. sanctions, but most oil transactions are now either made as swaps (crude oil is swapped for finished oil products like gasoline and diesel fuel) or sold in repayment for old, existing debts. Since Venezuela’s crypto Petro was sanctioned in March of 2018, almost nobody uses it. On January 20, at least 1 million barrels’ worth of oil exports were put on hold as the Venezuelan government began to demand that certain shipping port fees be paid in crypto Petros instead of Euros. How this will affect the Venezuelan economy remains to be seen, but the important outcome for our purposes is that, even if the United States has yet to fully succeed in forcing Venezuela back into the petrodollar fold, we have at least succeeded in preventing them from undermining the global trade in petrodollars. At the same time, we’ve driven Venezuela into the arms of Iran and strengthened their “sympathy” ties with Russia and China, so perhaps we’re dimming our long-term prospects to fight more immediate threats to the power of the petrodollar and its role in preventing our economy from collapsing under the weight of our debt (over $23 trillion currently, and with trillion+ annual deficits projected out to at least the end of the 2020’s).

Effectively Becoming Our Own OPEC

For better or worse, like most intimate relationships, the love fest between the United States and Saudi Arabia – still our largest petro partner – has recently begun to sour. Stress between the two partners began to show In September of 2016 when Congress passed Public Law 114-122, the Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism Act. This law allows U.S. courts to prosecute foreign governments, or officials employed by foreign governments or acting on their behalf, if they cause injury or death to American citizens on American soil pursuant to acts of terrorism or crime. This law was specifically targeted against Saudi Arabia, to appease the American public who perceived that the Saudis literally walked away from aiding and abetting the 2001 terrorist attacks. In response, the Saudis claimed offense, and threatened to retaliate for passage of the law by cashing in all their Treasurys to badly damage our economy. When all was said and done, however, neither side really did much of anything. Later in 2016, upset over the role of the Saudis in supporting the Yemeni government in Yemen’s ongoing civil war, the U.S suspended its arms deals to the Kingdom in December. This has not sat well with the current Saudi leaders, who have since entered an arms deal with Russia, in violation of the original 1970’s petro agreement.

As the relationship between America and Saudi Arabia deteriorates, and America cuts off oil exports from places like Iran, aren’t we threatening the petrodollar and, by extension, risking the blowing up of our own economy (and taking the world down with us)? Well, we would, if we hadn’t recently become a major oil exporter, ourselves. What’s happened is that we’ve pretty effectively replaced the oil produced by Saudi Arabia with our own oil, and effectively begun to substitute the support for our debt coming from Treasury purchases via foreign petrodollars, with a stream of income coming from oil being purchased directly from the U.S. The idea is that if other countries don’t want to continue to let us boss them in exchange for the privilege of playing on a playground that we control, well, then, we’ll flood the entire playground with our marbles so nobody else has room to play with their own marbles. (Insert the sound of raspberries being blown, here.)

In a related move, on Feb. 3, the United States Commerce Department just finalized a rule to impose anti-subsidy duties on products from countries that it determines undervalue their currencies against the US dollar. In other words, the U.S. will slap tariffs on goods determined to be “injurious to U.S. industries” from countries that are determined to have devalued their currencies in an effort to make their exports more economically attractive than comparable American goods. Countries with “cheap” currencies can sell a lot of goods and services to the U.S. because, well, their goods and services are priced quite reasonably in terms of the dollar. But at the same time, we have difficulty selling to them because our goods and services are expensive in their currencies. This leads to trade deficits, which are considered bad. However, running a continual trade deficit is an obligation for a country with a reserve currency because other countries must build up reserves (dollars, in our case) in order to settle international debts and purchase oil. This conundrum is known as Triffin’s Dilemma, named after Yale economist Robert Triffin who correctly predicted that the Bretton Woods system was doomed to fail. As we’ve seen, when other countries use these reserves to purchase U.S. Treasurys, they directly fund the growth of the debt upon which our economic expansion depends. And when they turn their reserves into petrodollars, those dollars return to our economy in ways that boost our GDP without triggering inflation. So what happens if the United States effectively punishes countries by artificially raising the prices for their goods if they try to sell more to us by cheapening their currencies against our dollar? Aside from creating a great deal of global ill will, we will effectively reduce the capacity of foreign governments to build up dollar reserves and purchase our debt. While artificially propping up U.S. exports, we’ll be simultaneously reducing the will and the capacity of the world to purchase oil and thereby underwrite our economy.

Bad Timing

This decision to slap fees on “injurious” goods being sold by countries that are undervaluing their currencies, comes when America is running a $23 trillion national debt, and projecting to run trillion-plus annual deficits (or more, if we roll out programs like ‘Medicare for All’ and student loan forgiveness) for at least the next decade. And this doesn’t count the $5-$6 trillion that will be added to the budget deficit around 2025, when the Social Security trust funds run out, or the nearly $1 trillion dollars that the Fed has so far sucked out of the “excess reserves” from our banking system, loaned to the government to spend, and replaced with Treasury bills (effectively IOU’s). Given that the real (inflaton-adjusted) rates of return on U.S. Treasury bills and bonds is now negative because the interest being paid is less than the rate of inflation (even the official rate of inflation, which probably severely underestimates how much inflation you pay for the stuff you purchase every day), who wants to invest in Treasurys? As Dan Amerman points out, to purchase an instrument that pays back less in interest than the interest one would receive in a competitive free market, is irrational. But the catch is that, until other countries can replace all of their oil usage with alternatives, it’s also required.

In addition to being coerced by the need to purchase oil, another main reason why anybody still buys our Treasury obligations is because the return on most corporate and European soverign bonds is even worse. If investors try to flee to corporate bonds, they’re taking a huge risk with their money because an increasing number of both domestic and foreign corporations are now rated as ‘junk’, or nearly so. Speculators love ‘junk’ bonds because if the companies issuing them manage to survive to payout time, the payouts can be quite handsome. But for average, safety-conscious investors or major institutional investors like pension funds, junk bonds are more risky than they’re worth. U.S. Treasury obligations may now be returning less money than they cost to purchase, but when the best competing alternatives are either extremely risky or paying even worse inflation-adjusted returns, where’s an investor to turn?

The other main reason anybody buys Treasurys is, as we’ve been discussing, they need a safe and liquid source of dollars with which to purchase oil. As bad as the United States is to deal with, because we can print dollars, we at least have the virtue of being extremely unlikely to default on out obligations. We may inflate the value of each dollar to almost nothing, but we won’t default. Relatively speaking, inflation sucks, but compared to the risks of default when investing in other economies that must themselves borrow to cover their debts, it’s not quite so bad. So, there!

As America’s global partnerships (with Saudi Arabia, Europe and other friendly countries) become strained, enemy countries (mainly China and Russia) work on developing alternatives to paying for oil in dollars, and major oil suppliers and consumers alike look to creating new alliances to challenge the Petrodollar, America’s answer to these changing conditions has been to attempt to increase our own economic security by reducing the need of foreign countries to hoard dollars and pay for our debt through Treasury purchases. Now they can simply buy oil directly from us, in dollars, and we keep the profits. That’s an easier and more straightforward method of bringing in cash to fund our debt, and it incurs not low, but no interest payments from us. Thus, it doesn’t grow the interest payments on the national debt. Brilliant! Except that since we’re still planning to increase the sum total of our debt and our annual deficits, we still need the rest of the world to continue to consume ever greater quantities of oil to finance our deficit spending. They hydrocarbons will still go into the air, more people will die of cardiovascular and respiratory issues, and climate change will accelerate. The fundamental problem with alternative energies is that they’re not solid and exportable objects, like fossil fuels (or uranium). With little to no export capability, alternative energy sources cannot be traded, and so cannot be priced in U.S. dollars. We lose a vast source of funding for our debt, and to add insult to injury, foreign nations become more independent and self-sufficient. The United States loses not only a source of income, but also a massive economic leveraging tool with which we can direct the world towards greater freedom, greater democracy, and greater self-determination. How would nations that could become self-sufficient in their energy production, spend less money on American-led development, and create a cleaner environment for their citizens, possibly get along without us? That would be a horrible conundrum for our leadership, for sure, but also for the rest of us, as we grappled with the harsh reality that our economy could no longer be sustained. Our stock market would tumble, bond prices would tank, and the nest eggs that we’ve created from our high home process would evaporate. If the transition happened quickly enough, our inability to raise the cash to pay off our debts might set off a wave of defaults that would sink the global economy. If the global transition to alternative energy  happened more gradually, however, the rest of the world might be able to absorb the effects of the U.S. gradually crumbling, but the effects here at home will be increasingly horrific for most of us. And when looked at that way, I wonder how eagerly most average taxpayers would still embrace alternative energy and saving the planet over the fairly long-term economic consequences of leaving dirty fuels behind?

CONCLUSION

I must emphasize that the theory that I’m putting forth here – that the U.S. government’s general hostility towards alternative energy is driven in significant part because of the potentially catastrauphic effects a global switch to alternative energy would have upon our economy, the national debt and even the global economy (but with the primary concern being for our own hides, of course) – is purely speculative. It is based upon my own semi-educated attempt to “connect the dots” of domestic and international economics, the national debt, energy policy, and political history concerning energy and monetary issues. There is, to my knowledge, no “smoking gun” showing a direct and irrefutable connection between American energy policy and our national debt. That is, at least to me, a theoretical linkage for which I have attempted to make the case in this paper. To the extent that I understand the facts and interrelationships involved (which is an open question), I think a reasonable case can be made. To the extent that Donald Trump and any future presidents continue to simultaneously push both increases in domestic spending with no regard for the national debt, and increases in the domestic and global use of fossil fuels (particularly crude oil and especially American crude), I think my case is strengthened. If we see a dramatic changeover from fossil fuel use to alt energy usage by larger economic powers, no simultaneous uptake in oil consumption by smaller economies and corresponding significant drops in foreign government Treasury purchases followed by the Fed raising interest rates, then my case will be strengthened. But even if something in my analysis is dramatically wrong, please consider it for what it is – a speculative inquiry and thought exercise – and use it as a springboard for looking at the issue in a different way and coming to your own conclusions.

Somebody From The Fed Admits That You’re Just A Chicken Destined For Uncle Sam’s Soup Pot


Former Fed Official Says Government Can Borrow a LOT More Share this Article:  

Note of disclosure: This article isn’t mine. I simply felt that it was quite excellent, and, since it was available for sharing, I grabbed it from the Money Metals Exchange web site for those who don’t follow MME. The information contained herein should be known and understood by everyone. Please enjoy.


Narayana Kocherlakota, the former President of the Federal Reserve bank of Minneapolis wants you to know the Federal Government can never borrow too much money.

Our government already borrowed $23 trillion and deficits are expected to exceed $1 trillion per year. He knows many Americans feel anxious about the federal government going bankrupt, and he has a simple solution.

He just wrote the following in an editorial published by Bloomberg:   Policy makers and voters often express concern about the level of the federal deficit, which topped $1 trillion last year, and the national debt, now more than $23 trillion. But, unlike a household that owes money to a bank, the U.S. government has the ability to tax its creditors. This power means that the federal government can afford any level of debt that is owed to American taxpayers.   There you have it. Government can tax Americans for whatever is needed.

The solution is so simple any dim-wit could have come up with it. As a matter of fact, one did…
Federal Reserve bankers have always received unnatural reverence for their wisdom and piety. It’s refreshing when one of them puts their patently stupid, indeed evil, ideas on public display.
The people running our central bank come from the same stock as the liars, schemers, and sociopaths who run the Federal Government and Wall Street. The sooner Americans figure that out, the better.

Toward that end, we have some follow up questions for Kocherlakota:

Have you considered the track record of nations that borrowed and spent without restraint? We can find lots of examples of nations that collapsed when leaders like you arrogantly assumed they could get away with borrowing, spending – and taxing – in confidence destroying amounts.

What do you expect will happen to the Treasury market when your tax is imposed on creditors? Do you expect them to continue lining up after they discover they must both lend money and then bear the cost of its repayment too?

What if creditors – the people who buy Treasuries – tend to be better politically connected than people who don’t buy treasuries? Will politicians really impose a massive tax on these people? Or is it possible they will stick it to the poor and middle class instead when they get cornered and have to raise taxes?
Of course, Kocherlakota is well aware his cabal of central bankers and politicians is already taxing Americans heavily and lying about it. The tax is called inflation, and it is severely underreported.

The Federal Reserve is printing money to buy federal debt. Officials there pushed interest rates to epic lows and kept them near there for most of a decade. As a consequence, the Federal Reserve Notes Americans saved are worth a lot less.
The purchasing power was transferred to Washington and Wall Street, the recipients of all the monetary stimulus. The effect is exactly like income tax and the myriad other federal taxes people pay.

All that borrowed currency is fueling the massive expansion in government. Financial services gobble up an ever larger chunk of the nation’s GDP and wealth inequality just keeps getting bigger.

Kocherlakota published his “solution” for unlimited government borrowing in a misguided attempt to put people at ease. But have a look at the comment section below the editorial. Those who gave it a serious read were aghast, thank goodness.



Just a question from your blog editor: What happens after the government finally starves we, the golden geese, to death? And, shouldn’t that be considered a form of animal abuse?

The Pension Crisis Is Here. Seven Possible Solutions, And The Problems With Each

The day I graduated with my Masters’ Degree, I remember my parents beaming proudly and Dad giving me some quintissentially fatherly advice. It came straight from the psyche of a first-generation American parent who grew up in poverty but worked hard and eventually made good on his life. While clapping me on my shoulder, he said, “Go out there, kiddo, get a good job, and make sure it comes with a nice pension!”

In his day, pensions (of the defined benefits sort) were an employment staple and source of pride for a wide swath of American employees. For better or worse, however, pensions gradually started disappearing during my early adulthood. As the economy became financialized, people started living longer, and cheaper labor from faraway places came within easy reach, the idea of paying American workers to live comfortably for decades after they stopped being productive became seen as being an unnecessary a drag on business and the economy.

I never got the opportunity to act on Dad’s advice. Times were changing in the science research industry like everywhere else, and the great job with the pension never materialized for me. I used to feel very frustrated about that. However, given what’s happening in the pension system today, I now think that I may have dodged a bullet. For most American pensioners, there is no longer any guarantee that the “benefits” that they worked, sacrificed for, and planned on for support during their “golden years”, will be there for them when they’re needed. Our pension system (combined public and private) is currently approximately in the neighborhood of $5 trillion in debt, and the vast majority of pension plans are significantly less than completely funded. This, in itself, might not constitute a crisis, but the road to making up the deficits and creating the future cash flow necessary to guarantee delivery of all promised benefits is very steep, very rocky, and very difficult to navigate. The good news is that both the pension funds and the government are finally becoming focused upon finding solutions. The bad news is that the situation may be beyond hope of a resolution that will please everyone and be a net positive for our economy. Below, I examine seven possible solutions to our current pension crisis and the likely consequences of each for the wider society (including you and me).

How did this happen?

In a nutshell, most pensions were fully or even more than fully funded prior to 2001. Funding was a relatively easy and sure-fire process when all the pension managers had to do was collect the historically average (about 7%) rates of interest on safe, risk-free investments such as U.S. Treasury bonds and bank savings accounts. (Remember when savings accounts actually paid measurable interest?) Helping to keep the pensions afloat was the fact that the major wave of boomer retirements hadn’t started in earnest. When the tech bubble burst and the economy crashed in 2001, however, the Federal Reserve dropped Treasury interest rates to 50-year lows in an effort to re-stimulate the economy. Of course, as Treasury rates dropped, so, too, did interest rates on savings accounts, corporate and municipal bonds, and all manner of investments including traditionally “safe” vehicles. Pensions were bound by legal obligations to protect their clients’ interests by keeping their clients’ funds invested in the safest groups of assets, so, as the income streams from those assets rapidly dried to a trickle, the pensions got hammered. And there weren’t many options for recourse. When the Fed later dropped interest rates even further to historic lows to save the economy from the fallout of the crash in 2008, pension funds got hammered again. How do you make money on investments when investments are paying next to nothing in interest?

While it’s true that many pensions still have a portion of their funds invested in 30-year Treasury bonds paying a respectable 7, 6 or 5%, the last of these bonds will reach maturity between now and about 2029 – not long after the Congressional Budget Office predicts that the Social Security Trust Funds will be all used up (!) The pension funds will then be forced to cash in bonds paying decent cash flows for new bonds that pay almost nothing, or even less than nothing. They’ll effectively be hammered for a third time. In the meantime, they’ve been forced to abandon their obligations to invest safely. In a desperate bid to scrounge up yield wherever they can find it, pension funds have broadened the mix of their holdings to include foreign government bonds, corporate bonds, real estate, stocks and other more risky investments. Sadly, for all of their effort and the chances they’re taking with their clients’ money, what they’re finding is that this potentially toxic mix of assets is still paying far less than what the funds require to keep solvent. By some estimates, the pensions currently still making all or nearly all of their payouts will be unable to meet their fiscal obligations within the next ten to twenty years, assuming we have no recessions or catastrophies such as war between now and then. By other calculations, many pensions, including large multi-employer pension plans, could become unable to pay their obligations as soon as 2025. With the sheer number of Boomers retiring and expecting to live primarily on their pension benefits, this is a national nightmare in the making.

So What Is The Government Doing About This?

Whenever something goes massively wrong in the economy or society, we generally look to the government for solutions, which is rather silly because it’s generally the government that created the problem in the first place. In true predatory fashion, however, government is usually only too happy to oblige the wishes of the public in this regard. After all, that’s the easiest route by which government can take over our lives. Predictably, the behavior of the pubic and the public’s “servants” in the pension debacle is proving to be no exception.

As of August, 2019, with little media fanfare, the U.S House of Representatives passed the Rehabilitation for Multiemployer Pensions Act (H.R. 397). Support for the Act was bipartisan but heavily lopsided with mostly Democratic support. At the same time, the Senate reintroduced comparable legislation that was first introduced in 2017. So far, the Senate bill has only Democratic support. These bills would fund a pension bailout via creation of low-interest U. S. Treasury loans made especially for purchase by troubled pensions to cover their outstanding expenses. A special new department within the United States Treasury would be created just to handle this loan program. Supportive Democrats pointed out that the loans would allow pensions to cover their obligatory payments for many years to come. Some Republicans pointed out that the loans would only kick the can down the road and do nothing to fix the structural problems that got pensions into their predicament in the first place. What, apparently, nobody pointed out (or what the media may have kept quiet) is that such a bailout would require an increase in pension funding to the tune of – you guessed it – approximately $5 trillion or more.

If congress does create a loan program to bail out the pensions and the pensions take it, the question then becomes, how will the pensions get the money in the future to pay off those loans? Where will all the monies to repay the loans, plus pay the interest, plus fund investments for generate more cash to meet future needs, come from? Finding all that money is a lot to ask for in an environment consisting, on the one hand, of very low – possibly negative – interest rates on safe investments, and, on the other hand, of high risk investments which are also spinning off low yields. Throw in possible malfesance by the largest global banks which stand accused of cheating the pension funds of yield on domestic and foreign government bonds, and every which way the pension funds turn, there seems to be something standing in between them and the profit they require to cover their current and future obligations.

Seven possible outcomes

The bottom line is that there are, as I see it, only a limited number of possible methods of “solving” the pension crisis, and none of them are good. Here are the seven different possibilities that I see:

  1. Pension funds may use the proposed Treasury loans, if they come to pass, to pay pension benefits in full for a while, then take out even more loans to continue payment after the first ones are used up. The eventual effect of paying off loans with more loans will be an unavoidable, catastrophic pension default when investment income drops too low to cover more than the repayment of multiple rounds of principal plus interest. Not only will the pension recipients then be finally, fully out of luck, but should Congress then choose to forgive all the loans, taxpayers and the pensioners themselves will be collectively be on the hook for repayment. According to Olivia Mitchell, Director of both the Pension Research Council and the Boettner Center on Pensions and Retirement Research, if we assume a figure of $5 trillion (collective public and private) pension shortfall and divide that by the roughly 158 million workers in America’s current labor force, that works out to a current deficit of $32,000 per worker. Now here’s the question for us: how many of us can afford to simply lose $32,000 from our savings? An how many American workers can continue to pay $32,000 (or more as pension adjustments for inflation climb) from our salaries and savings every future year that pensions continue to operate in the red?

2. An alternative to taking loans to continue paying out full pension benefits, would be for the pension funds to simply cut benefit payments. This is already happening in some states including New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Oregon. Theoretically, states experiencing shortfalls could use the difference between what is owed and what is being paid out, to slowly decrease their debt to zero. Such a move would allow pensions to continue to exist and at least partially fulfill their obligations while fundamentally retooling for today’s economic realities. Of course, benefit cuts are extremely unpopular with current pension holders and are likely to damage the credibility of the organizations (unions, businesses or government entities) that promised their workers lifetime income beyond retirement. It’s therefore an option that most pension funds don’t want to engage in unless more politically palatable options simply don’t exist.

It’s worth asking here how much of America’s internal migration is being driven by retirees fleeing from high-cost, reduced-pension states to lower cost of living locales? It’s not unreasonable to suppose that underfunded and failing pensions may be helping to drive the recent business and population booms, and their accompanying inflation, in formerly stable and “sleepy” places which never expected significant outside growth. The surprising reality is that residents of many small cities and towns that used to be socially stable, lower-cost and very livable, are now facing rising prices, taxes and crime as an indirect cost imposed by failing pension funds from elsewhere.

3. A third alternative to solving the national pension crisis would be to rob Peter to pay Paul. In at least one state, for example, lottery proceeds are being partially re-directed to shore up pension deficits. This not only cheats lottery winners and programs that are supposed to benefit from the lottery, but sets a very bad precedent. Environmental programs? Road and bridge repair? Public school modernization? Local parks? Police and fire coverage? Will we kiss these lottery-funded programs all goodbye to pay the pensioners their due?

4. States could simply raise taxes across the board and use the resulting revenue to fill the gap. Alternatively, states could shift existing revenues from currently funded programs and use them to shore up pension payments. According to a study by J. P. Morgan Bank, though, even if pensions could assume a (rather optimistic by today’s standards) a steady 6% return on investments, half of states would still need to devote 10% of their total current tax revenue to make pensions whole! Is this a real option for YOUR state?

5. Pension funds may also attempt to close their funding gaps by investing ever greater portions of their assets into ever more risky investments. Accepting more risk of loss is the only way to potentially acquire more gain in the absence of risk-free yields. The net effect of so many institutions all simultaneously taking increasingly desperate chances to chase yield, is the raising of the risk that some or all of them may fail, while tanking the stock, bond, and housing markets at the same time, In essence, this cure may be worse than the disease.

6. Yet another way to get a handle on the problem, and one that’s being tried in a few places, is to employ a simultaneous cut in pension payouts to beneficiaries with mandatory increases in pension contributions and retirement age for current workers. This strategy seems a bit more fair in that it requires everyone to sacrifice and feel some pain together, but because it’s painful, it’s not likely to be embraced by anybody.

7. A last, and very sneaky, desperate measure that unions, in particular, could take to boost their current cash flow, would be to expand into areas where union presence is currently sparse. New members might be recruited with relative ease in virgin territory if unions sow dissatisfaction with current employment norms and a promise of a “better deal” for workers (Hey! Something for nothing!) This would constitute a type of Ponzi scheme in which the dues of new members could be used to pay the pensions of more senior members, Such an arrangement would allow unions to fulfill their obligations – for a while – and delay the problem of how to pay current workers then THEIR pensions are owed for years, or possibly for decades. In the meantime, the odds of the pension funds being able to make the money needed to pay then current workers’ pensions are likely to be dropping as the growing Federal debt mandates that interest rates be kept artificially depressed lest the cost of paying the debt and its compounding interest, explode beyond all capacity to service. What will happen to current and future union workers, and to the economies of the union-heavy states, if the money being paid out into pensions by younger workers is continually being drained away to shore up the pensions of retirees now living elsewhere?

Don’t look to the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation for salvation

The Federally chartered Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation (PBGC) was created to insure America’s pension funds against crises, much as the FDIC was created to insure bank deposits against bank insolvencies. Unfortunately, and ironically, the PBGC is racing towards insolvency, itself. According to the 2018 PBGC annual report, the agency has so far taken over 58 failed single-employer pensions and paid out over $150 million in financial assistance to 81 different multiemployer pension sponsors. The PBGC is now, like the pension funds it’s covering, going further and further out on the limb of risk to generate the yield income it needs to backstop troubled pensions. With no safe sources of yield available to fully support the guarantor of pension safety, how much more safety will the PBGC be able to offer the pension funds, and by extension, the pensioners who depend upon those funds?

The final act

Although Congress has finally decided to get serious about “fixing” the pension crisis, there is a strong case to be made that the structural problems are too deep, complex, numerous and entwined to allow for any palatable solutions. At the root of the issue, and the subject for another blog, is how the skyrocketing Federal debt is keeping a lid on interest rates, and how this, in turn, is preventing the pension funds from obtaining the risk-free interest yield they require to remain solvent. The debt is also creating so much financial drag that it’s also putting a damper on how much the real economy can grow through honest expansion of manufacturing and other high-paying jobs. The bottom line is that, even if Congress DOES choose to bail out pensions by creating a separate class of low-interest Treasury bonds for pension funds to purchase, YOU, as a taxpayer, are going to be affected even if you have no pension.

While Uncle Sam is unlikely to ask you to your face for money to bail out failing pensions, he and the pension fund managers will use stealth tricks (review 1-7, above) to part you from your money so they can funnel it to the pension funds without you ever knowing that they were doing it, or why. You will experience higher taxes, inflation, fewer but more costly municipal services, a degraded environment, an increasingly crowded or an emptying out and decaying municipality, a higher retirement age, or a cut in your retirement benefits – or some combination of the above – as an indirect, but very real, result of our current pension crisis. In other words, the pension problem is now a problem for all of us. And don’t count on Congress or anybody else to be able to ‘fix’ it. We’re probably just going to have to live with it until the last recipients of the glorious “defined benefit” pensions goes of to meet their maker. In the meantime, the best we can probably do is understand, and individually plan for, the consequences of our failing pension system. It’s not going to be fair for anybody except those old enough to have been able to collect their benefits in full before compensatory measures started being put in place, but as Mom used to say, “sometimes life just isn’t fair”. But understanding how and at what levels the pension crisis is contributing to other problems we’re faced with, at least gives us a fighting chance to figure out how to constructively come to grips with them on an individual level. Or perhaps we could eventually collectively reverse the problem at a national level if we could get ourselves socially and politically organized to do so, but good luck with that. I’m not going to hold my breath.

If you’d like more detail about the topic of the pension crisis, you may wish to link to a paper I recently wrote about it. Just click on the ‘download’ button below. I created the article specifically to explore the effects of union pensions and pension deficits on the cost and future quality of life in Idaho, but the data and principles are about pension funds in general and their effects on our entire country. This blog was a condensed excerpt from that article.

The Stock Market Is At Record-Breaking Highs. Time To Be Wary?

This is the first post on my new blog. I’m just getting this new blog going, so stay tuned for more. Subscribe below to get notified when I post new updates.

As I write this, the stock market as a whole (Primarily the Dow, but also the NASDAQ and the Fortune 500) has just reached another record-shattering high. As the longest bull market in history rages on, the threat of war comes and (apparently, at least for the moment) goes, and the trade deal with China evolves through a complicated set of thrusts and parries with no discernable progress, the stock market just keeps climbing… And climbing… And climbing. Despite the notable lack of widespread, systemically healthy and sustainable growth in American business and manufacturing, the stock market still behaves as though the 1950’s have returned. A year of incredible increases only lightly dampened by a couple of short-lived, panic-inducing drops have propelled the market heavenward and its main indices are currently poised to reach nosebleed heights that only cranks and visionaries once believed possible. Currently, if reports by seasoned traders like Jim Cramer are accurate, and if the data on buying of stocks says anything about human behavior, then investors have gone… excuse me for saying this… completely nuts. Apparently, the sky is no longer the limit on how far the market will rise in the minds of the masses of stock market millionaire wanna-be’s. That leads to the million (literally) dollar question: should anybody be investing in the stock market right now? Should you?

IT DEPENDS.

Before choosing whether to commit your money to stocks at this time, there are several factors to consider. Any decision is personal and should depend upon whether an investor understands the real reasons behind the incredible performance of the market during 2019, what’s driving it now, and whether said investor has the time, education and propensity to keep abreast of cues indicating when the party is likely to come to an end. It also depends upon an investor’s appetite for risk, and whether he or she possesses the self-discipline necessary to be honest about what’s going on, and then act on the numbers rather than on emotion or market sentiment. Oh, and it also depends upon how much an investor can comfortably stand to lose if their timing or judgement are less than perfect.

In my personal opinion, based upon my own research, analysis and experience (although remember that I’m not a trained economist or financial advisor, so proceed on my outlook with caution), right now – during truly volatile times and in the heat of a market mania – it’s probably a good time for the average investor, like you and me, to “stay out”. There’s a feeding frenzy currently underway, and the little guy is chum for the sharks. Manias are infamous for luring in the unwary, who don’t understand market mechanics, and the lazy, who think that investing consists of dumping their money into the laps of their financial investors without thoroughly understanding the products they’re being sold or how to make genuinely informed decisions about risk, return, and underlying performance metrics. When your best friend’s cousin’s ex is “riding the rocket and making a killing in the market”, that should be your cue to consider getting out of the water because the tide is likely to turn – violently, and soon.

AN ADDITIONAL CONSIDERATION

Besides the off-putting characteristics of market manias, there is one additional unique and problematic aspect of the current market that potential investors may want to consider. This is the fact that the market’s enormous gains may not be a sign of good health, but actually the symptom of a great underlying crisis and the (so far) successful ongoing attempts of the Fed to control that crisis. Dan Amerman offers a compelling theory that, since the popping of the tech bubble in 2001, the economy and the markets have been dominated not by free forces, but by cyclical eruptions of economic crisis and subsequent attempts by the Fed to contain those crises to fend off serious economic depressions. (To read his considerable work on this subject, please visit his web site at Https://www.danielamerman.com). By his analysis, it’s quite reasonable to suppose that the markets are rising primarily because they’re being artificially propped and pushed up via increasingly desperate attempts of the Fed to prevent free market forces from imposing a very natural, and necessary, periodic correction. In the section below, I discuss how the Fed actually IS intervening in the markets in a shockingly spectacular way, perhaps to prop up the markets, or perhaps to actually take them down surreptitiously. In either case, the Fed’s current massive and continual market intervention, largely unknown to the public, may serve as another warning sign that there’s danger lurking below the surface. So, proceed with caution!

OTHERWISE OK?


If you still think you want to jump in and brave the currently raging tide, at least educate yourself first about a fundamental aspect of the financial system called the repo (short for “repurchase”) market. The repo market is a lynchpin that holds the financial system together. And right now, it’s not working very well. Having some basic knowledge of what this market is and how it’s supposed to function – versus how it’s currently being manhandled and (mis?)managed by the Fed -is critical if you want to gain useful insight into how the banking system works and why the stock market is behaving as it is.

Briefly, the “repo” market is the market in which banks lend money to each other overnight. If a bank thinks it will be short on cash for operations the next day, it offers collateral (usually Treasury bills, or sometimes mortgage backed securities or other items agreed upon by both parties), to other banks in exchange for a loan. They then repay the loan, with interest, the next day. ( Repos can actually be of varying lengths of time, but overnight is the most common.) The interest rates on overnight repo loans are normally kept within guidelines set by the Federal Reserve. On the night of September 16, 2019, however, the lending between banks nearly stopped and the interest rates briefly spiked from about 2% (which was in the Fed’s desired ballpark), to almost 10%. Banks were suddenly afraid to lend to one another! The banking system was seizing up! A banking collapse was unfolding! And nobody a the helm of our financial system – the Fed – knew why or even saw it coming!

When the Fed realized what was going on, it reacted swiftly to prevent the banks from becoming too low on their cash reserves and having to keep their doors closed in the morning. They instantly created $53 billion in electronic cash out of the nothingness, and poured it into the repo market. And on each and every night since then, the Fed has been doing the same thing, in varying amounts. It’s extremely difficult to calculate exactly how much the Fed has created, since the money that was created one day, has to be paid back the next day (or whenever the term of the repo expires.) So after the first couple of weeks or so of money creation – after the first 14-day repos expired – much of the money going into the repo market from the Fed is actually recycled money. How much that is is difficult to calculate, although an excellent article from Wolf Street (“The WallStreet Journal (and Other Media) Should Stop Lying About Repos”, 1/10/20, http://Www.wolfstreet.com) indicates that it would be less than the $8 hundred-something billion total that’s been floated in some publications. Still, some days, the amount of money that the Fed has injected (new or recycled) hasn’t been enough to satisfy demand so the Fed does have to create more cash or risk letting the system begin to die. Since Sept. 17 until today, approximately $413 billion has changed hands in the repo market, and the data clearly shows that the market is completely dependent upon the free flow of sufficient repo offerings.

Why should I care?

The issues with this are several and far-reaching, therefore best covered in a separate article. For now, I’ll just touch on what I see as the two primary consequences without much detail. First, the repo issue indicates that the Fed has now become the lender of FIRST, rather than LAST resort, indicating that the system is not functioning as intended. It’s really become a centrally controlled instead of a free market. And second, the repo crisis is a sign that there’s a vast ‘black hole’ somewhere in our financial system and it’s either sucking cash out of the banking system or re-directing it within the system to places from which it can’t escape and circulate properly. Or maybe both problems are operating simultaneously. Nobody seems to know why a hole may have gaped into existence, though theories abound. They range from overly restrictive regulations preventing banks from unleashing their reserve holdings, to deliberate manipulation of the repo market by J.P. Morgan bank trying to force the Fed to start QE4, to simple incompetence by Fed middle management, and even to deliberate sabotage of the markets by Fed employees wishing to derail Trump’s election chances. (The latter two theories, though they may sound far fetched, actually have a lot of merit. You can access the excellent article about them here: http://danielamerman.com/va/ElectionHacking.html) What we DO know is that the Fed’s current commitment to pump “whatever it takes” (their words) daily into the repo markets – plus a few billions extra as a guesstimate cushion, because the Fed has no idea how much newly-created money the banks (and hedge funds, which also participate, to a lesser extent, in the repo market), will need on any given day – will go on at least through April, per Fed statement. And the evidence IS clear that this repo money is what’s keeping the market afloat, the banks open, and by extension, the economy running.

SO WHAT HAPPENS IF THE MONEY SPIGOT CLOSES?


Should the Fed now try to stop backstopping the repo market every day, or should they grossly miscalculate how many billions the repo market will need in fresh or recirculated cash for several days in a row, the market will quickly begin to crash. And there will be precious little to prevent it from blowing down below the average (inflation adjusted) valuation of the stock market from the 1960’s through 2001, when the Fed unleashed its first experiment with quantitative easing in the wake of the bursting of the tech bubble. Remember that most things, over time, revert to their means, so if the mean (as in the average valuation for stocks) has been elevated for a while, the system will generally reset by diving back below its long-term mean. That way, it balances out overall in the long run. That’s just an iron law of statistics. Holders of stock could therefore experience massive drops in the value of their holdings very quickly, with no mathematical hope for most investors anywhere near retirement to ever recover their losses. Sadly, there’s likely to be very little time for investors to react once the markets start to fall when the Fed decides that it either cannot, or will not, prop them up any longer. The bottom line is that if the Fed can’t muster enough electronic cash (recycled or out of the nothingness) quickly enough, or if it can’t fix the repo problem in some other way, then there will be no stopping the black hole (whatever it is) from wreaking carnage on the entire global economy. Whether that day will be tomorrow, in April (when millions of businesses and taxpayers will be simultaneously pulling cash out of their bank accounts to pay their taxes), shortly before the November elections, or in a year or two, isn’t knowable right now. However, what IS knowable is the fact is that serious, and probably unrecoverable, damage will be done to investors who don’t get out of the way quickly enough once the house of cards begins to fall. So forget the (pending?) war, the trade deal, the impeachment chatter and all the other news that is currently only serving as a backdrop to obscure the main event, which is the Fed’s interventions into the repo market. The continued functioning of the repo, and by extension the stock, markets, and, by further extension, the economy, is now entirely dependent upon the actions of the Fed. Knowing that, is this really the time you want YOUR money invested in the market? It may be better to stay out of the water at least until you can read which way the tide is flowing.

Hello! Welcome to Economics Watchdog

Hello, and thank you for dropping by to visit my blog site, EconomicsWatchdog.com. I hope you’ll find my posts to be entertaining, thought-provoking and, most of all, useful as I try to help you make some practical sense of what’s actually happening in our crazy world of economics today.

For those who don’t know me, please let me introduce myself. My name is Jennifer, and I’m a social scientist by training (A.B. Social Science, A.M. Behavioral Science, The University of Chicago). Although my natural interests trend towards things like biology, aviation, gardening and cooking, and I came into an interest in economics rather late in life, I had the great fortune of meeting economist Daniel R. Amerman, CFA, about six or seven years ago and became inspired to understand this beast called our economy. Economics is, after all, a social science at heart (strip away the fancy math and at its foundation lies the full, sometimes questionable splendor of human social behavior). So, it’s not an unreasonable choice of subject material for somebody like me – especially since, like you, my husband and I have to worry about the very practical issues of retirement, estate planning, and just keeping our financial heads above water over the long term. And it seemed to us like that was become more difficult as they years passed, though we didn’t know why.

Since my husband and I became students of Mr. Amerman, I’ve become quite engrossed on a journey to understand practical economic theory through the lens of his unique perspective. I’ve also developed an appetite to use my research skills to apply what he teaches to problems and issues of my personal interest. I love to write and teach (I’ve also been an FAA-certificated flight instructor and commercial airline basic indoc and ground instructor), and this blog is a series of essays that I, as a lay person, am writing to teach myself how to understand many mysterious (to me) aspects of economics. I’ve found that, generally, the best way to help oneself learn is to take on the task of teaching the subject material to others. This blog is therefore intended to help you understand the big issues in our economy and what their practical implications are for you, through listening to me sort out the issues for myself. Think of this blog as sort of a series of eclectic economics self-education essays and you’ll get the idea. I’ll participate in the seminars, pour through the research articles, and talk with relevant people in the field to get the information we need to see what’s going on, so you don’t have to. Those are the things I actually enjoy doing. Then I’ll try to put it all together in ways that help you figure out what it all means to your life. Sound reasonable?

Good! Then I hope you’ll get started by diving into my posts, and letting me know what you think.

DISCLAIMER: I want to make it perfectly clear that I am NOT a professionally trained economist, financial advisor, or other fried, dyed and turned-to-the-side financial professional. I am a social scientist with a strong background in biology and animal behavior, which gives me an unusual perspective that sometimes comes through in my writing. The ideas, analyses and opinions expressed in my posts are entirely my own. I do draw heavily from a foundation of study of Dan Amerman’s work, but please don’t blame him if you disagree with something I say. Those wishing to access his work for themselves can find his web site at http://www.danielamerman.com. Another body of work from which I draw is the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee web site at http://www,GATA.com.

Nothing I write should be construed as legal or professional advice, although I hope that my thinking might be better than that of some of the papered and pedigreed ‘experts’ who sometimes can’t see beyond the boundaries of their own ideologies. Thanks for giving me an honest try.