Will Roaring '20s Return For Gold?

 | Feb 26, 2021 11:51AM ET

The 2020s might be less roaring than the 1920s, which seems like good news for gold.

The United States is strongly polarized, with blue versus red, liberals versus conservatives, and so on. People are divided along many lines, but the biggest division line is between those who count decades from 0 to 9 and those who count them from 1 to 10. It is intuitive for many people to adopt the first method, especially that we think of decades as ‘the 20s’, ‘the 30s’ and so on. However, the catch is that there was no Year Zero, so the first decade of the common era was years 1 to 10. Following this logic, the current decade started on Jan. 1, 2021, not Jan. 1, 2020.

So, I feel fully entitled to investigate how gold will behave in the new decade. The issue is especially interesting as some analysts claim that we are entering the Roaring '20s 2.0. Are they correct?

On the surface, there are some similarities. The 1920s were a decade that followed the nightmare of World War I and the Spanish Flu GDP grew more than 40% in that period) and rapid technological innovation fuelled predominantly by the rising access to electricity and big improvements in transportation (automobiles and planes).

Fast forward one century and we land in the 2020s, which is a decade following the nightmare of the coronavirus pandemic . There are hopes for an acceleration in technological progress driven mainly by the rising scope of remote work, digital solutions, cloud computing, artificial intelligence, Internet of Things, 5G networks, robotization, super-batteries, electric vehicles and so on. And given the pent-up demand and months spent in lockdowns, consumers are ready to congregate and spend!

However, there are good reasons to be skeptical about the narrative of the Roaring '20s 2.0. The era of post-war prosperity was fuelled by the return to the normalcy in the sphere of economic policy. I refer here to the fact that after WWI, there was a successful transition from a wartime economy to a peacetime economy. In contrast, in the aftermath of the Great Lockdown .

In particular, both the government spending and the inflation .

In other words, the tighter monetary and fiscal policies led to an environment of economic prosperity. Also helpful for the U.S. were developments such as trustbusting and an economic recovery in Germany after its hyperinflation – all developments that will not replay in the 2020s.

In contrast, neither the fiscal policy nor the monetary policy are going to normalize anytime soon, even if the COVID-19 pandemic is brought under control. The national debt has risen by almost $7.8 trillion under Trump’s presidency – a level that rivals Italy’s. The debt-to-GDP ratio has soared, as the chart below shows. And Joe Biden doesn’t worry about deficits – instead, with his plan of $1.9 trillion economic stimulus, he is going to balloon the public debt even further by increasing government spending.

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App