More Paper, Less Gold

 | Mar 03, 2015 12:39PM ET

One interpretation is that we are living in the best of all possible worlds. Another is that we are being led to financial slaughter.

A few thoughts:

  • 1913: The Federal Reserve was created and dollars have been devalued ever since. (more paper, less gold)
  • 1933: President Roosevelt confiscated gold owned by American citizens. (no more citizen held gold in the US)
  • 1971: President Nixon terminated the convertibility of dollars into gold. (much more paper, less gold)
  • 2000: The NASDAQ crashed along with the retirement dreams for many Americans. (paper assets crashed)
  • 2001: The Patriot Act and the War on Terror…... (more paper)
  • 2008: Financial crash, crisis, and bailout for Wall Street….. (much more paper)
  • 2008: Quantitative Easing, bond monetization, printing currency, and effectively zero interest rates are used to recapitalize banks at the expense of savers, pension funds, insurance companies and the productive economy. (more paper)
  • 2010: QE2 (much more paper)
  • 2012: QE3 (much much more paper)

Quick summary: more paper, less gold

The dollar has lost approximately 98% of its purchasing power since 1913.

Governments and central banks have dramatically increased their power and importance since 1913 and particularly since 1971.

Several $Trillion in sovereign debt now “pays” negative interest rates.

Savers in the US, Japan and Europe lose purchasing power every day to understated inflation, devaluation of currencies, and near zero or negative interest rates.

Total global debt is approximately $200 Trillion. There appears to be no plan to repay that debt. Perhaps it will increase exponentially forever or will it default? Which is more likely?

Gold produces no income and actually costs money to store– and now, the same is true for cash in some countries. Why choose paper assets when gold and silver are real and have maintained their value, on average, for 5000 years, while unbacked paper currencies have inevitably crashed and burned.

Fiat currencies are inevitably printed to excess, purchasing power declines and assets increase in nominal price. Consider the increasing prices shown on these log scale monthly charts of the S&P 500, crude oil, gold and silver for the last 30 years.