mercoledì 6 luglio 2016

Money series: what is money?




This post is part of the Money Series.
In a recent post, we have started to grasp the deep reasons of raising inequality in the western countries: in a nut shell, due to globalization and fiat money system, the western countries have undergone deindustrialisation, which has caused salaries to stagnate and debt to raise exponentially. At the same time, due to the huge mass of money created by commercial and central banks, the guys of Wall Street and of the financial City of London have seen their wages and benefits skyrocket.

In another post, we have discovered that amongst the many trends coming from the USA, there is the burden of debt taken by students who desire to get a degree: quite often, instead of finding a good job, they simply jump from one degree to another and remain unemployed or become waiters, bartenders or receptionists in call centers.

And, in another post, we have seen why countries like Italy, Spain or Greece have been suffering a lot since the crisis in 2008. Due to the stiffness of the euro system, creditor countries have literally "sucked" away wealthy from the peripheral countries. In other terms, not only the western countries have been struggling to escape from the grip of debt, but the euro zone countries in the Mediterranean belt have had to face extra problems coming from the adoption of a common currency. Italy, for example, has been experiencing the worst crisis since the unification, in 1861 (if we exclude two World Wars, but the TV news tell us we are in peace time).

From the examples aforementioned, we have started to catch a concept: money is not a trivial thing to understand.
If somebody is able to control how much money a country can dispose of, actually this somebody is able to make a country thrive or fail.

First of all, we need to understand what money is.
In essence, money is the means you have at your disposal

1.to be exchanged for goods and services, and
2.to be used as a store of value

In other terms, money is whatever is accepted between a large community of buyers and a sellers as a means of payment for goods or services: the place of exchange is commonly referred to as market. Therefore it is portable and it can be used as a store of value. And, due to the fact that you can use it for transactions of different quantities of the same stuff, it has to be divisible according to some metrics.

We are talking about large communities because an exchange between two persons may be a barter: there must be something that can be exchanged and exchanged several times, always being accepted and without losing purchasing power over the transitions.

Now let's clear up an important concept. According to my opinion, and I will keep this point in all my future posts in my blog, there are only three kinds of REAL money at present:

1. cash
2. gold
3. bitcoin

Let's discuss them one by one:

CASH: 
Cash, like banknotes and coins, is de facto the simplest form of money in circulation. It is used as a means of payment for transactions. It is portable. It is a store of value. Banknotes and coins are issued by the Treasury of a Country, in very limited quantity because nowadays most of the payments (over 97% of the total payments) are executed cashless, ie electronically.
The value of cash is based on the trust you rely on the government and economic situation of your country. If your country collapses, and you discover that to buy the same stuff you used to buy the day before you need the double of the notes in your wallet, well, cash become useless.
This is an extreme case, of course. But you need to understand the concept behind. Cash has a value because the government grants for its value.

Now there is an important point to catch here: cash does not return an interest. We will come back to this point in the future.

GOLD:
The most ancient form of means of payment and store of value, universally accepted. It is considered the definite money. Something that has "intrinsic value". This is not formally correct: whatever value is subjective but, since gold is universally accepted, both in time (present and past) and in space (different countries and states) then it is considered to have "intrinsic value". Of course if you are dying for lack of water in the middle of the desert, you don't give a thing of a gold bullion: you only want a bottle of water. But this is an example for academic purposes: when a grandmother gives her niece a present, it is generally a gold ring or a gold necklace , not a bottle of Perrier.
Like cash, gold does not return an interest.

BITCOIN:
It is an example of criptocurrency, at present the most diffused and used amongst the criptocurrencies.
Differently from cash (a promise to pay granted by the government) and gold (sound money), it is completely digital. It is a complex matter. For now, suffice it to say that there is no central bank that keeps control of the amount of bitcoins. The control of the payments is done via a decentralised set of servers. It has several pro's and some con's. The main drawback is that nowadays its market is tiny, very speculative, extremely volatile. Nevertheless you can purchase some things (both goods and service, like the subscription to an antivirus program for your pc) and it is especially suitable to grant anonymity (like cash) and for micro-payments (like cash) without paying fees to your banks. As far as I know, you cannot yet buy a car or a house in bitcoins.
Is it portable? well, not its classical meaning. You have a sort of "wallet"that is digital, and that is linked to your identity by means of a private and a public key. In any case, you can use it wherever you have a wireless connection with a smartphone. So, yes, it is portable, and thanks to your wallet, it is also a store of value. Bitcoin is, as a matter or fact, digital cash.

And, like cash, Bitcoin does not return an interest.


Today, cash is being banned. They say it is to contrast the criminal activities of drug dealers, tax evaders,  pimps and so on. Indeed, cash is such a small portion of the overall payments worldwide that this thing is ridiculous. There are many sophisticated and legal systems for eluding taxes; therefore the war on cash has another purpose, in my opinion. Cash grants for anonymity. Cash is not under direct control of banks. If there is a bank run, and the ATM's are closed (like in Greece in 2015), those who have cash are in a very strong positions with respect to all the others that have to queue in front of an ATM at five in the morning. By banning cash, if banks overnight shut down, you are shut down with them. So, in case of a bail-in, your savings can be sucked up to recapitalize the banks.
The simple idea of a bank-run would simply cease to exist. If cash is banned everywhere, which bank can you run to in order to take your money back if your bank is going bankrupt? Or if the government needs to raise funds from private citizens without formally raising taxes?
This is already happening: if you try to withdraw an important sum of money from your bank, this is seen as a very suspicious activity, even if you have worked hard for that money, for which you have paid all the taxes to the government, the town hall, the region, plus contributions to welfare, retirement funds etc. Just remember: when you deposit your money in a bank, that is not your money any more. It is a liability of the bank towards you. You become a creditor for the bank.


The main problem for a lover of civil freedom is that the control over the issuing of paper money (notes and coins) is centralized. This gives bankers and the government a huge control over your life. Bitcoin seems to overcome this problem: it is anonymous, it is decentralized. Plus, you cannot create bitcoin at will as you can do with paper money. This is important: the maximum number of bitcoins is mathematically fixed, so for sure the bitcoins in you digital wallet cannot lose value overnight once the bitcoins are sufficiently diffused and used by the people.

There are many other implication behind the ban of cash, but it is out of the scope of this post.
One point that I want to highlight is that the recent surge of gold is mainly due to the lack of confidence of major investors in the banking system. That is, lack of trust in the present credit system. This has driven also to a raise in bitcoin. Differently from bitcoin, gold is real, it is made of atoms, atomic numeric 79. Bitcoin is not electrons, it is even less than electrons: it is complex coded information. I do not fins in any books I have read about bitcoin this concept, ie that bitcoin is coded information. Ans, as information, it can be potentially hacked and needs hardware to be stored and used.

In one of the next posts, we will discuss what credit is, why it is different from money, even if we use the words credit and money interchangeably. Indeed, doing so, we are confusing the average street guy. And we will also talk of the other side of credit: the debt.


martedì 5 luglio 2016

Survivalship: is still the college worth it?




I do not know if you have ever paid attention to this, but how often are you told that you need to improve your skills to emerge in today world?

Quite often, I guess.

The problem, here, is that very often it is completely up to you to get the necessary skills to cope with today's world challenges. School/university does not help you.
Let's make an example.

Thirty years ago, if you were a simple undergraduate, you could find a decent paid job easily.
Today, even if you have a degree, it may become impossible. Or, even if you find it, the wage is so low that you struggle to get to the end of the month with your payments.

I have discussed the reasons behind the raising of inequality in Western Countries in this post.

Newspapers and magazines and TV news continuously hammer the average citizen with headlines like "unemployment is raising (in Europe)" or "unemployment is decreasing (in USA"), but there is a common line: wages are decreasing, or are stagnating, and in order to keep up with the payments, household debt is raising. This is due to decreasing productivity, we are said, in that we cannot compete with chineses and indians (it seems our fault, indeed) so in order to increase productivity, we can choose between two paths :
1. Decrease salaries, so that the final product of our factories is more attractive to foreigners
2. Increase technological innovation, including skills of the workers

The first solution, that is to stop increasing salaries, is the preferred one by mainstream economists and politicians: it is immediate. It also perfectly matches another policy: currency devaluation.
NOTE: currency devaluation is that process that makes your currency less expensive to  foreigners. This is vey on hype nowadays, and it is only possible in today's world ruled by central banks. In a Gold Standard, that was not possible. I will cover this topic in one of my next posts.

The second solution can be achieved only on a long term basis: it requires investments, it requires cooperation between universities and industry to educate and train young generations, and, above all, it requires political stability, in that if each newly settled government changes their idea every three to five years, the long term investment policy is not achievable. And, since governments are always broke, they typically do not invest as much as it is necessary. They need to raise cash here and now.

NOTE: you could object that productive investments only come from the private sector. It is not true.
Real huge technological breakthroughs have been achieved only thanks to government fundings: internet, GPS, nuclear energy, radar, touch screens, electric cars, telecommunications advancements etc. are products of large scale government investments. The reason is simple: only a government can take upon itself the risk of developing complex and challenging new technologies. I will cover this topic in one of my next posts.

In order to escape from this debt spyral (low wage --> high debt --> less resources to keep up with technological innovation --> lower wages --> higher debt --> etc) they are suggesting you to increase your skills.

At first glance, it makes perfect sense: to get a better job, you need to be better than the competitors.
But, as usual, the devil lies in the details.

Just ask yourself these two questions:

1. what will be the wage increase for this extra studying? In other terms, let's suppose you spend three to five years to study and get extra skills, and it costs you 50 thousand euros, how long do you need to repay your debts?(and just imagine that before even asking for a 300 thousand euros, you have already 50 thousand euros of student's debt on your shoulders...)

2. WHAT am I going to study to increase my skills?

What follows is based on what happens in the USA, that may become also a reference in the future in Europe (hopefully not, but I guess we will follow USA's policy, as usual)

Let's get to the first point, that is the "return on investment (ROI)" of your studies. In other terms, for each dollar invested in education, how many dollars shall I get? Well, the situation may become frustrating. "What is not in doubt is that the cost of university per student has risen by almost five times the rate of inflation since 1983, and graduate salaries have been flat for much of the past decade. Student debt has grown so large that it stops many young people from buying houses, starting businesses or having children. Those who borrowed for a bachelor’s degree granted in 2012 owe an average of $29,400". (see here)

In other terms, if we look at things from a different perspective, we understand that creating a private collage for an entepreneur in US can turn out to be very very profitable, especially thanks to government tax breaks and the fact that students get overburdened with debt to pay the education fees . For a student, it may not. A student can become a sitting duck. 

Education is expensive, there is no getting around it. In US, a four-year degree at a public university costs, on average, 37343 dollars, while an education at a private school will cost 121930 dollars, on average!

This brings us to the next point: What to study?

For sure, some degrees pay for themselves, others do not. And, according to this table, we discover that you may need up to 20 years to repay your student's debt if you choose a degree that leaves you with with a low salary but high student's debt, like a degree in veterinary medicine.

So, to get the RIGHT skills, at a decent prize, is mandatory.
Just think about your education as your most important asset. I mean professional education, your culture is another thing. Culture helps you live your life better, professional education gives you the means to sustain yourself and grants the free time to get yourself a culture.

Which are the college degrees with the worst ROI, ie the worst salary with respect to the bent-over- books years?


WORST (from the worst of the worst to the least worst):

  1. Sociology
  2. Fine Arts
  3. Education (teachers  - very sad, since they are the pillars for future generations)
  4. Theology
  5. Tourism
  6. Nutrition
  7. Psychology
  8. Communications (for ex. news reporter, marketing coordinator)
BEST (from the least of the best to the very best):
  1. Math
  2. Information Technology
  3. Human Resources
  4. Economics (be aware that there is the desk clerk and the banker..)
  5. Biology
  6. Engineering
  7. Marketing
  8. English (for ex. mean speech writers, communication managers and web content managers)
It is interesting to remark that attending private colleges is so expensive that, on average, it is better to go to public colleges. 
Now, let me give you an advice: average salary will grow less and less, and I explained the reasons  here. Due to deindustrialization and globalization, many jobs are moving from the Western Countries to the Asian countries, so there is less need for engineers, doctors, etc with respect to the growing population of graduates. There is going to be an oversupply of professional figures almost everywhere.

Therefore, be aware that to get better salaries, you will likely end up in moving to another country or state. Just try avoiding manufacturing divisions of big companies(which are delocalizing, will be massively affected by 3D printing and by the forecoming robot revolution); focus as far as possible on disciplines with high human added value or with an expanding market.

And, increase your financial IQ to understand where the world is going.

So, to answer the question in this post's headline: is the college still worth it? the answer is YES, but 
1, you have to pick up the right degree
2. knowledge is becoming "distributed", thanks to online training and teaching. And the quality is improving. So, if you are not rich, do not get too desperate, public colleges are better than private colleges in terms on return on investment and very cheap on line universities may be a very good choice in the future. 

Finally, I leave you with this graph: unemployment is less severe for college graduates, even if the salary is not as good as it once used to be.




domenica 3 luglio 2016

Italy: story of a crisis



I left Italy in the Summer of 2014.

I should say: I escaped from Italy in 2014. Maybe I am part of the "brain drain"since I have a degree and experience in the space business. But the point here is that I had a permanent job in Italy. I was not unemployed. I was not "young" (I was 40 years old), I had a family, a house without a mortgage, many good friends and a much-loved elederly father. If I had failed abroad, I had no parents to come back to. And I was asking my kid and my wife to learn a new language, find new friends, get used to new habits.

You know, I want to speak about economics applied to everyday life, and I have to start from the life of a guy I know best than anybody else: myself :-)

Differently from those who move from one country to another simply following the decisions of their companies, so their company is always the same, I was leaving a giant of the aerospace industry to move to another place.
So, to leave all these certainties, I had to had a very strong motivation.

Where was this motivation coming from?

The motivation in my case was the firm belief that Italy sooner or later would collapse. And that the labor crisis was eating my salary, the ability of my wife to find a better job. I wanted to have a better wage, work in a multicultural environmnent, count on my strength and skills to improve my life quality. I wanted to have extra time for myself, to study economics and finance to take care of my future retirement. To have extra time for studying was imperative: it makes no sense to give all your time/life to your company, or to find a second job for a living because money is never enough and you have to "downsize"; I simply HATE the idea of downsizing.

The main point of course is that had not Italy been in crisis, and had I not the strong belief that the crisis would have gone deeper and deepert, I would have never left my Country.

So, why is Italy on crisis? and like Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, not to mention Greece, which is only a shadow of the country it used to be before 2009?

There are many reasons, of course: some blame Italians for being too lazy, for having too many unproductive civil servants, for not investing enough in new technologies, for having a labor force that is enslaved to unions, for having too many and too small enterprises. Not to mention that they say Italians have mafia-spaghetti-mandolino issues (I have not seen a mandolino in my whole life, but let's make Americans happy with their classic views of Italy), they are corrupted, their justice does not work, their politicians are ineffective and ignorant.

This is what you typically find out if you read Italian press. We have to acknowledge Italians for being absolutely self-racist.

I have worked with many engineers coming from different countries, I have met many people in Europe and I think that Italians, on average, have the strenghts and weaknesses like any other other people. Not the SAME weaknesses and strenghts, of course.
But this is a personal consideration. I may be wrong. So let's use another metric.
Since so many countries are struggling in Europe, how is it possible that we share the same weaknesses, from Ireland to Finland to Italy to Greece? And how's that possible that 15 years ago all of us were in a better shape?

To me the answer is simple: the euro. The currency euro.

You see, a currency is not only the means you use to pay for your groceries or the gasoline. Those who control the currency, control an important part of our freedom and the range of our choices.

Let's start with two countries, that we call I and G. Let's suppose that they produce the same products, for example automobiles. In a free currency market, if I has a high rate of inflation than G, then the same product will cost more. In this situation, less people abroad will ask for the cars manufactured by I, and more people abroad will ask for cars made by G.

So, more people will be willing to pay cars, that are priced with G-currency. If demand is raising, G-currency will appreciate with respect to I-currency. As a consequence, G-cars will become more expensive than I-cars. There is an automatic balancing system, obtainted through the free currency exchange market.

When a currency is fixed between I and G, this balancing system does not work any longer. Country G will not see its currency, the G-currency, appreciate, if many people buy its cars,  and its cars will always cost less! for year and years running. At that point, also people living in I will buy only G-cars, because they will become cheaper and cheaper, year after year. And I will get de-industrialised because nobody will buy I-cars. Unemployment will raise. Taxation weight will raise since the country I will see the return from taxes collapse due to the crisis. Banks will see bad loans skyrocket  because unemployed people will not have money enough to pay for the mortgage. Therefore, real estate market will collapse.
Country I could, in principle, save the distressed banks and companies by increasing the public debt, but, maybe, country I is part of a political club that prevents I from doing that. If I want to get money, I must approve "structural reforms", that is cuts to welfare, cuts to education, cuts over cuts. Only at that point, country I has the right to ask for loans to the IMF, International Monetary Found, of course by paying interests on those loans.
In addition to that, also if country I could start spending public money to help its citizens get through the bad moment, the citizens would start again to buy G's stuff, because G's stuff is still more competitive, due to the mechanisms explained above.

Whatever you do, you end up badly.

Let's suppose that I is Italy, and G is Germany. But I could also be France, Spain, Portugal or Greece.

You do not believe me? look at this graph.


This graph shows an interesting point: starting from 1999 (when euro was born) Germany's trade balance exploded while the trade balance of Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy collapsed.

NOTE: the current account, in the picture, comprises the trade balance, which is by far the most important contributor to the current account. 


If you want to have a better insight, there it is.



So maybe now I have provided a good explanation of the reason I left Italy.

1. Italy is part of the eurozone
2. Italy saw its manufacuring industry collapse
3. The salaries were decreasing and the taxes, for those who still had a job, were raising
4. The real estate market was collapsing, and the welfare was getting worse and worse
5. Unemployment was raising
6. I was working in the manufacturing sector, in a company owned largely by a French multinational. So, they had to focus on investments in France, not in Italy. It was a sensible approach.
7. They had started sending me (and many other colleagues of mine) here and there, wherever there was a bit of demand for an engineer, even if I was overqualified. I started also working in night shifts. I was just a "hole filler". My company could do nothing else to prevent that. We were overstaffed for the amount of work we had been given for the following two years.
8. Should Italy decide to leave the eurozone, the financial markets would punish my Country by selling billions of Government securities all at once, sending Italy to bankrupt. Technically, this is called default. It already happened in 2011, and we know what happened afterwards. Three prime ministers in 5 years, and none of them had been elected. This is called the end of democracy.

In a nut shell: due to the euro constraints, the situation cannot improve for none of the countries depicted above, including France and Finland.

It is not my opinion. I wish it was my opinion.

It is mathematics. Like two plus two equals four.

And now? well, now the situation has vastly improved. I am still trying to sell my house in Italy, since the real estate market is ...well, distressed to use an euphemism. I will buy a house in the Netherlands when times are mature enough.
I think that had I started studying economics five years before, I would have made completely different choices. It is my only, big regret. It is never too late, I say to myself, and I always foster people who find themselves uneasy in their home country, to leave and face new challenges elsewhere. 






sabato 2 luglio 2016

Money Series: Origins of inequality

Who drives economic growth in the world?

Answer: the United Stated of America, by far.

In this post, I am going to explain why the importing countries ARE the drivers of economy in the world, and the deep causes of raising inequality in the western world.
There are many important concepts in this post, and, as far as I have read on internet, nobody has put so many different slides in one single post in an amateur blog to explain the origins of inequality from such a large number of different angles.

When newspapers say that Germany is the locomotive of Europe, they are dead wrong. It is the net importers in Europe that are the locomotive of Europe.

Here's why.

First of all, every country has imports and exports. When there was a gold standard, the trade balance had to...well, balance! if a country exported more than what it imported (the country was in trade surplus), there were compensating mechanisms that made its exports more expensive. As a consequence, after some time, the exports became more expensive and the exporting country became less competitive. Imports would rise, and a new balance was reached.

NOTE: we will examine the compensating mechanism in the gold standard in another post. Today I want to draw your attention to the trade imparities in a fiat money system, like the one we are living in today.

Today, this compensating mechanism no longer exists.
A country can increase indefinitely its trade deficit or surplus, for many many years in a row.

First, let's have a look at this graph:


NOTE: This graph is taken from here. The data are referring to 2014.

We can see that there are countries which are net exporters (that is in trade surplus, bars on the right) and countries that are net importers (that is in trade deficit, bars on the left, negative numbers). The USA, last line, are by far the most important net importer in the world (800 billion dollars in 2014 means that they could buy all the excess production from China and Germany combined!).
This means that if the USA should end up in crisis, and stop buying German vehicles and Chinese computers (and broadcasting equipment, telephones, integrated circuits etc), then for China and Germany the situation would be really bad.

In other terms, if the two most important net importers like UK (ops, did I mention Brexit??) and USA would stop printing dollars and pounds to buy stuff  (ie goods and services) from Germany and China, the world economy would collapse.

It is the net importers that drive the economy. If net importers, like USA and UK, stop creating money out of thin air and buy products and services from the rest of the world, there would be nobody to sell stuff to.
But, is it possible to buy stuff simply printing money?? It sounds like a free lunch, and we are told that that there are not free lunches in life.
The answer is..yes. With several "buts".

To understand how this is possible, let's have a look at the US trade balance historical chart. US are the big champion of trade deficit, and we are very intrigued to see if they have been in trade deficit only sporadically, or on a systematic basis.


WOOOOOOOWWWW!!
Since the mid Seventies the US has been always in deficit! they have always imported more than what they have exported. We can see that the peak in the deficit was reached just before the big crash in 2008.

Now I would like to show you another graph...the stagnation of US wages

NOTE: folks, wages in Europe have been following the same downward trend.


The graph is taken from here.

The dark blue line shows the productivity in US, that is how much product you create during your working time. You can think of it in this terms: if technology evolves, to build a car you do not need one month, but one week, with the same number of workers. In other terms, the productivity for a worker has increased four times.
You would expect that if you build a car four times faster, you are paid four times more. This graph shows that  this was not the case. The light blue line shows the increase of compensation, that is how much you are paid.
You can see that, starting from mid seventies (again the mid seventies!), there is a gap becoming larger and larger between productivity and salaries. Now, you may question: if cars are sold, and I am paid the same, who gets the  profit from the extra cars that have been sold?

Ehm....the answer is the corporations. And the guys of the Banks and Wall Street that work to give corporations enough credit to build new factories and enterprises.

How's that possible? Well, if I am right, then banks should have seen their balance, that is their assets literally explode from the mid seventies. The commercial banks should have created other money to let people buy all those imported stuff and, since wages were suffering, to give families extra credit to buy theirs homes with 10, 20 and then 30 year mortgages!
There is a metric that lets us understand if there is more money around. This metric is called M2 Money Supply. Just think of it as the sum of all the money in your bank account.

NOTE: The exact definition of M2 can be found here


WOOOWW! (again)

The money created by banks has literally exploded since the mid seventies. After mid Nineties it has become almost parabolic.

So, we can say that we have seen things from quite different angles. And we have some clues. From all these charts, we can say that something happend in mid Seventies that changed the rules, ie:

  1. The US became net importers (financing Japan and China boom in different decades) 
  2. wages started decreasing
  3. banks started having bigger balance sheets
It is no mistery that the guys of finance have become richer and richer, since they were managing more and more money. But do we have another metric to verify that inequality has become wider in US in the last 40 years, since the mid-seventies?
Indeed, such a metric does exist, it is called the Gini index: the higer it is, the bigger the gap between the richest and the poorest in a country. In other terms, the Gini index is a measure of inequality.

NOTE: the exact definition of the Gini index can be found here.


This graph was taken from here.

Indeed, we find a confirmation of our findings: the inequality has become larger and larger since the mid Seventies. Before that, inequality had been decreasng since the beginning of WWII.
At this point, we have all the evidences we need to understand that something in mid seventies happened. This let the US to run huge trade deficits: this has caused raising debts for families, increasing inequality, huge profits for people working in the finance sector.

Now you start grasping the surface of why we are so deep in debt.
Since the Seventies, wages have not risen at all, while profits for multinationals and the guys of Wall Street have skyrocketed. This has led a family father of the Seventies to apply for a 15 years mortgage to buy his house and a family father of the 2000's to apply for a 30 years mortgage.
Money has been vastly created, but much part of this money have gone to the richest.

The main event that led all of this happen, since the very beginning, was the abolition of the Gold Standard in 1971 by the USA. 

By abolishing the Gold Standard, trade balance had not to balance any longer: USA could print dollars and buy all the stuff they needed. In this way, they fell heavily into debt: normal workers had to survive, the guys who managed the money thrived.

Thanks to the invention of fax, of tele typewriter, by the beginning of 1970's it was possible for the guys in the finance to move capital from one place to another over the planet. So, it was possible to buy stuff on a large extent from overseas. These huge amount of freshly printed money let Japan first, and China later, to boom.

Unfortunately, if other countries are producing, the countries that buy the imported goods and services get deindustrialised. If are so eager of a Green economy, then you hae to accept the fact that your unemployment will raise, if you want to be competitive: becauses factories will move abroad.
This topic is very intereseting and a MAJOR impact on our lives.

But the key point I would like you to remember from this post is that it was the break up of the gold standard that triggered booms in Asia, deindustrialised Western Countries and make wages stagnate.

Home Sweet Home: when to ask for a mortgage?




Last time, in the Home Sweet Home series,  I wrote about the mortgage issue nowadays, ie that when the interest rate that a bank asks for your loan falls, it is convenient to stay on rent for some time, waiting for the interest to reach a "floor", a minimum, before buying a house.
A person may argue that if interest rates are falling, then more people are willing to buy a house, to real estate market is going to raise, so the benefits coming from a reduction in the interests are completely wiped out by a raise of the house price.
You may have a point on that, theoretically, but you have also to consider that:
1. The real estate market depends on the possibility for ordinary households to get into more debt: if your wages are stagnating, and taxes are raising because there is no growth but the government has to pay to keep the welfare system alive, and confidence in the future is low, not many families are willing - or can afford- to buy a new house and the stay at the window waiting for better times. The bust of 2008/2009 is still vivid in our memories.
2. Elderly people are getting older in nice districts and sometimes they die, often leaving vacant expensive houses. Many migrants are coming, but their wages typically are very low, so they tend to live in bad disctricts and poor outskirts. So, good mansions are raising less, or not raising at all, than low level houses.
3. Rich people abroad invest in hi-prestige mansions in the centre of important cities, not in the outskirts or in small town close to Amsterdam or Rotterdam.
4. Due to Amazon and internet selling and improved logistics, many malls are dying, so freeing further cubic meters for renting or selling. This is a very long term process, but it is going on right now.

The key point, here, is that households are deep in debt. My opinion is that in the near future (within 1 year from now) interest rates will be lower and house prices in the Netherlands will not raise that much. I guess that a good time for buying a property will be in the first quarter of 2017. Why? because at that time the market might already start to price the end of Mario Draghi's Quantitative Easing (QE), ie there will be less liquidity in Europe for banks and house prices will fall again, while the interest rates will still be very low, close to zero. I also think that there will be a new QE in USA, which will further drain liquidity from Europe to USA. So, less cheap money for banks to be invested in real estate for "buy to let".

Many analysts foresee that another world crisis is looming. Well, for sure there are important banks in very bad shape in Europe (Deutsche Bank in Germany and Unicredit in Italy, notably), China is slowing (maybe it has not grown at all last year), and USA are tightening their imports: remember, if the USA stop buying, the world collapses. It is not the exporters who make the world a decent place for a living, it is the importers. Because if everybody is exporting, and there is nobody to buy stuff, your investments and your factories, go bananas and the bank system that financed those investments go bananas too. And if workers in factories are fired, then the property houses fall. Everything is connected.
You should also consider that, differently from a family who has a ceiling on the debt it can tolerate, a country with a Central Bank, that is a lender of last resort, can always create money from thin air, by means of securities issued by the Treasury that its Central Bank buys.
In other terms, unless a Country owns debt in a foreign currency (for example like Argentina or Brazil that are full of debt nominated in USA dollars), the Treasury can always issue debt that is bought by its Central Bank and whose profits are then turned to the Government. Zero cost and lots of credit around. I know, it is a bit complicated, but I will explain this point another time(see Money Series in this blog)

If a crisis will strike this Summer 2016, well, it is even better if you have a secure job and some cash to buy a house. If you don't, save money and improve your financial QI in the meantime. Your best asset to invest in is between your ears.

venerdì 1 luglio 2016

Money Series: Index

What is money?


Fig.1: Stone money


Fig.2: modern money


This is one of the most difficult questions to answer ever. Money can be different according to the historic period you are living in; something may be money for somebody but not for somebody else. Sometimes money is a physical piece of metal, sometimes money is only a promise to pay. Today it may be even a promise of a promise to pay.
In today digital era, money can even be virtual, intangible. It is a sequence of 1's and 0's in a ledger, typically a hard disk, in one or more banks.

Can money be created? if so, who can create money? how is money created? where does money come from?
We always hear at the TV that we are full of debt, that countries have huge government debts. Is debt a form of money? Is government debt different from household debt? Or are they essentially the same, since a government is the executive branch of a country and a country is made up of families?

As you see, the more you question about the nature of money, the more you may get confused.

This is the first post of a series that I call "the money series". We will see what money is, how money is created, who is in control of it, in today's world.
We will cover (well, at least, try to cover) the following topics, not necessarily in order since I am not going to write a textbook. Some of the posts are also available in Italian.

1. Origin of money (no, it is not the barter)
2. Characteristics of money, whatever means you use as money
3. Sound Money, intro to Gold Standard
4. Fiat Money, current era
a. Origins of inequality
(in English, here); Le origini della disuguaglianza (in Italian, here)

5. Difference between money and credit
(in English, here
a. What is money
(in English, here)
b: how money is created nowadays by commercial banks:
Part 1 (in English, here) - (In Italian, here)
Part 2 (in English, here) - (In Italian, here)
Part 3 (in English, here) - (In Italian, here)
c: What bank reserves are and why they are fundamental
(in English, here) - (in Italian, here)

6. Fractional reserve banking demistified: an inaccurate model
(in English, here) - (in Italian, here)
d: difference between money created by Central Banks and Commercial Banks
e: what are the consequences on trade between countries in a fiat money system
f: bubbles in a fiat money system: ex. Japan and China
g: how can financial crisis and wars be so frequent or long?
h. Virtual Money
i. Criptomoney, like Bitcoin
l. Technology innovation or financial innovation? root causes of raising inequality

If you may find this interesting, please leave a comment with suggestions.

I would like to stress the following point: I am an engineer, so a person with a strong technological background, therefore I started my economic studies with an important bias in the methodology for approaching finance and history of money. I used to think that technological innovation drives almost everything: this turned out to be a mistake. Technology innovation is only possible when financial tools are available. I will prove you that in this money series. I had to turn inside out some very deep convictions that I have had all my life. Literally, I had to eradicate many of the certainties I used to have (because those "axioms" were taught to me at school) in terms of progress and historical causes for wars and famines.

This is to tell you that studying how money is created may change your view of life forever: for sure, it changed mine.

mercoledì 29 giugno 2016

Expat's dilemma: should I stay or should I go?


Today I am going to talk about the typical sentences a family father answers when he is asked about the reasons why he does not leave his Country, if he is already finding himself in a bad economic or working situation, with fewer and fewer perspectives of improvement.
I took inspiration from this article, and I tried to adapt it according to my European/Italian background, my age, my education and my working skills.

"My parents and grandparents were born here; I have roots in this country/I'm not going to be unpatriotic. " : Italians have never been very patriotic nor nationalistic, and this statement does not apply to me. My grand-grandfather left Italy for America and then came back. However, it is true that when you leave your Country, you have to take into account that long-dated and true friendships are harder to find, simply because real friendship is achieved after living common experiences. You may find very good acquaintances, good colleagues and good neighbours, but friendship is another thing. Fortunately, there are cheap flights, and there are social networks. You will not loose your friends, you will only see them less frequently. Coming back to patriotism, it is funny that those politicians or people who have thrown in the flush our economics and well-being, by adhering to the eurozone disaster without safety precautions and claiming we are a whole super-nation, now are accusing those who fly away of being unpatriotic if they decide to move to another state of their super-nation.

"I can't leave my aging mother behind." : well, my mother died in my thirties, and I was working hard abroad at that time. It was a terrible, terrible period. She was dying, but I had to work for a living and I had to travel back and forth from Europe to America. For sure, if your parents need care and are not self-sufficient, it is a hard decision to take. Nevertheless, just try to think to your children too. If you cannot give your children a better future, or even your living standards when you were their age if you stay in your Country, what are you going to do? Your parents will pass away in any case. If you can earn more money by moving abroad and pay better medical care to your aging mother, who is going to stay back in her homeplace, is it not a good choice to leave in any case? Or, even better, you can bring her with you, to your new place. For sure the problem would be the language if she decides to have a talk with the grocery guy, but if she can do that, then she is not in such a bad shape and you can leave the country with less apprehension.

"I don't have enough capital to make a move." That is exactly the reason why you should be moving! If you are in your forties (like I was when I decided to leave Italy with my family), and you are struggling to get to the end of the month with your money, trying to live a decent life with a decent car and decent holidays, what the hell is preventing you from moving abroad if you are confident that you will earn more money and maybe have more free time to spend with your family or for yourself (ie going to the gym, reading, studying)?

"I don't speak the language." That is YOUR fault. You need to learn English as a minimum. English courses are super cheap today. If you are Italian, it is easy to learn Spanish or French. If you move to Germany/Netherlands, it is very often the case that if you speak only English, that is enough at the beginning. You can learn German/Dutch at work or by attending evening courses. They are typically reimbursed or paid completely by your Company. Of course if you are reading now, it means your English is already good. Be aware that to learn a new language may be more difficult when you are older, for a simple reason: first, you have less time to study; second, if you are an educated person, your native language is already complex, so it is hard to learn to re-formulate concepts in a simple new language. You have to "de-complexify" your way of talking.

"I am too old to leave.".  I was 41 when I left with wife and children. I know people who left at 53. The question should be another: is the salary and the living standard I get there worth the effort of leaving? the new experiences I can make in another Country are worth the struggle to get used to new weather, food, sunlight, habits, etc? So, take a piece of paper and start writing, next to each other, pro's and con's  for staying or leaving. Try to be objective, not emotional. These decisions will affect your future and the future of your family. By the way, do you think you will get your pension at 65? well, if you do, you are very optimistic. It may be the case that you will have to work until you are in your seventies. So if you are 50 and healthy, you are still young for working.

Of course everybody has his own experience and story to tell: on average, it is easier for a graduated guy to leave Italy in his late twenties, it is harder for an older guy with a family. The older guy takes more risk, undoubtedly. If both parents work, maybe only one can move to another place at the beginning. But I want to stress out the point that you leave your country if you are not feeling well staying where you are, not if you are happy with your environment and working conditions, of course! In my case, I hated the place I was living in, most of my uneducated neighbours, the traffic, the impoliteness of Rome people, the crisis my company was experiencing. All this was a powerful driver and motivator for me to fly from Italy, counting only on my brain and working experience. I did not want my kid to raise with uneducated boys, speaking dialect. There would have been good people around him, of course, but I would have had to fight for poor school teachers and organization. A good hospital was 30 Km away, due to crisis cuts in medicalcare in Italy.
Taxes were raising, services were getting worse, policy makers were still the same of 2008, press was giving wrong information about the root causes of the crisis. Did I need other inputs for leaving my Country?

lunedì 27 giugno 2016

Home Sweet Home - Property bubble (an example in Amsterdam)




Last time, in our Home Sweet home series, we discovered that:

1. For our parents, thanks to inflation, the house was a good asset: it used to raise in price and, with a fixed rate mortgage, the percentage of the monthly payment was becoming smaller and smaller through time.
2. Today, due to deflation, it may be convenient to stay under rent for some time, since the house is not increasing in value. In addition, interest rates are dropping: so I showed that by simply waiting one year, you actually ended up in saving money, even paying a high rent in the meantime.

This is something that it is completely counter-intuitive for the past generations. My father still uses to tell me that to be under rent is a waste of money. He is fundamentally right: it is the present world that works upside-down. But we have to live with that.

Let's discuss now an example of what a property bubble means.

In economy, we refer to a bubble as a condition in which some particular asset (it may be your house, but also gold, stocks, commodities, oil) is increasing its value without any apparent fundamental reason, simply because the people (or the investors) are so sure that the asset is going to raise its value, that they buy it. Therefore, there is a strong demand, the price of the asset raises, which on its turn stimulates more demand, which raises the price etc.

If you are not aware of what a property bubble is, and how to recognize it, you may end up very badly! Because all bubbles pop, sooner or later: the decrease in value occurs abruptly, in a very short time, and if you bought a house when it was very expensive, you may find yourself with a house whose market value does not even cover the residual mortgage.

Let's use this real example, taken from a house in a nice town close to Amsterdam, built in 1971.
NOTE: in the Netherlands in the real estate websites, you may find precious info about the past prices of the houses. In Italy it is not possible, real estate agencies do not provide this information.

Price as of 2007: 695000 €
Price as of 2009: 599000 €
Price as of 2016: 415000 €

So, in 9 years (from 2007 to 2016), the house has lost 280000 €, that is MINUS 40% of market value.
Bear in mind that if you had bought this house in 2007, you were paying roughly 5,3% of interest rate for a 30 year mortgage to the bank.

In such conditions, in 2016 you would still own the bank 525000 €. 
In other terms, the present market value of the house (415000) does not even cover the debt to the bank (525000)!
To put it bluntly: a TOTAL DISASTER! 

The question is: how do you realize that the real estate market is in a bubble? This is important, since you need to avoid buying a house when the price is close to its peak. 
The other question is: how is it possible that the houses first became so expensive and then lost so much value in the following years?

To answer the first question, that is to find the means to defend us and our families from a financial disaster, we need first to answer the second question.

In other terms, we need to understand what CREDIT is, how it is born, where it comes from, and what forces jointly act to expand it or to shrink it.

We will see that CREDIT and INFLATION are very tied concepts. And that they have a huge influence upon our everyday life. 

It took me years to understand these concepts and to join the dots: if you follow me, I am confident that you will have in a few weeks the tools to take better decisions.

TAGS: inflation, deflation, house, real estate, mortgage, bubble




domenica 26 giugno 2016

Guest Post - The Gold Standard: Generator & Protector of Jobs

NOTE: the following post was written by Hugo Salinas Price, and is available here.

It is not for absolute beginners, but it highlights some very important points about the neverending crisis we have been experiencing in the Western Countries.

Red emphasis is mine.

Enjoy the reading!

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The abandonment of the gold standard in 1971 is closely tied to the massive unemployment the industrialized world has suffered in recent years; Mexico, even with a lower level of industrialization than the developed countries, has also lost jobs due to the closing of industries; in recent years, the creation of new jobs in productive activities has been anemic at best. 
The world's financial press, in which leading economists and analysts publish their work, never examines the relationship between the abandonment of the gold standard and unemployment, de-industrialization, and the huge chronic export deficits of the Western world powers. Might it be due to ignorance? We are reluctant to think so, given that the articles appearing in the world's leading financial publications are written by quite intelligent analysts. Rather, in our opinion, it is an act of self-censorship to avoid incurring the displeasure of the important financial and geopolitical interests that are behind the financial press.
In this article we discuss the relationship between loss of the gold standard and the present financial chaos, which is accompanied by severe "structural imbalances" between the historically dominant industrial powers and their new rivals in Asia.
World trade before 1971
From the end of World War II through the 1960s, all well-governed nations in the world sought to maintain a constant balance between their exports and imports. They all wanted to maintain a situation where they exported more than they imported, so that they could accumulate growing Treasury reserves of gold, or in its defect dollars, which, under the terms of the United States (US) promise in the Bretton Woods Agreements of 1944, could be redeemed by any Central Bank that requested gold in exchange for its dollars.
To be precise, we cannot fail to mention one exception. The exception to the rule was none other than the US. All well-governed countries sought to export more than they imported, except the US.
The US was not overly concerned with maintaining a balance between exports and imports, because - according to Bretton Woods - the US could pay its export deficits by the simple expedient of sending more dollars to pay its creditors. As the sole source of dollars, the US had a clear advantage over the rest of the world; they could pay their debts in (redeemable) dollars that they themselves printed.
Economists of the day warned of the danger of this practice, which resulted in a constant loss of American gold. From over 20,000 tons at the end of World War II, US gold reserves dropped year by year as certain countries, notably France, insisted on redeeming their dollars for gold at a rate of 35 dollars per ounce of gold. France incurred intense displeasure in Washington and New York due to its demands for gold in exchange for dollars; some analysts attribute the unrest in France in the spring of 1968 to covert operations by the US intelligence services, in a show of America's disapproval of the behavior of France, led at the time by General Charles de Gaulle.
The US did nothing to slow the loss of gold. In the early months of 1971, Henry Hazlitt, a solid classical economist, predicted that the dollar would have to be devalued; he said it would be necessary to increase the number of dollars that would be needed to obtain an ounce of gold from the United States Treasury. Only months after his warning, the dam burst, and in August 1971 the US was forced to devalue its currency, because the amount of gold in its reserves had fallen to a dangerous level. (Today, many doubt that the US has the 8,000 tons of gold it claims to have in its vaults at Fort Knox and the US Military Academy at West Point, N.Y.)
What Henry Hazlitt never imagined was that instead of devaluing the currency - the recommendation of Paul Samuelson, Nobel Prize Winner in Economics, published the week before August 15, 1971 - President Nixon took the advice of Milton Friedman and declared that from that time forward the US would no longer redeem dollars held by the world's central banks at any price. The US unilaterally violated the terms of Bretton Woods. In effect, it was actually financial bankruptcy.
Since then, all world trade - or most of it, as the euro, the pound sterling, and to a lesser extent the yen all compete with the dollar - is conducted using dollars that are nothing more than fiat money, fake money. Because all the world's other currencies were bound to gold through the dollar, the immediate consequence was that simultaneously they also became fiat money, fake money with no backing.
Consequences of abandoning the gold standard
The consequences of that fateful day have overthrown all order and harmony in economic relations among the nations of the world, while facilitating and expediting the global expansion of credit because part of the dollars exported by the US ended up in the reserves of Central Banks around the world.
Countries began to accumulate dollars as the expansion of credit in the US advanced inexorably, now free of the restraint formerly imposed by Bretton Woods. The rest of the world was forced to accumulate dollars in reserves, because having insufficient dollar reserves, or having reserves that did not grow, or worse, having falling reserves, was a clear sign for monetary speculators to attack a country's currency and destroy it with devaluation.
As the loss of gold ceased to be a limiting factor, the last restrictions on the expansion of credit were stripped away. A heavy flow of dollars to all parts of the world spurred the expansion of global credit, which did not stop until 2007. The international banking elite always strive to obtain greater profits and to that end always seek to expand credit. Starting in 1971, freed of the restraint of being required to pay international accounts in gold, or with dollars redeemable for gold, the constant unfettered creation of credit and still more credit ensued. It was boom time in the US.
The US, which paid the rest of the world with its own irredeemable dollars of no intrinsic value, lauded the adoption of "free trade" and "globalization". The US could buy whatever it wanted, anywhere in the world, in any quantity, and at any price. Starting in the 1990s, its export deficits became alarming, but nothing was done to reduce them; on the contrary, they grew year by year.
Mexico, following the US example, joined NAFTA - the North American Free Trade Association. Down with import tariffs! Free trade with the world! The new vision offered the enthralling, seductive picture of a globalized world without borders, where everyone could buy and sell where they liked, with no limits. The 90's were years of unbridled optimism for globalization!
Free Trade is unquestionably beneficial for humanity at large. It is good to be able to buy goods where they are cheapest; some countries enjoy conditions that favor them in production of certain things; each country should produce those things in which it has an advantage over other countries. Thus, the whole world can benefit from the good things each country has to offer. It is an appealing and sound doctrine, but… there is a crucial catch: the doctrine of Free Trade was conceived for a world where the sole means of payment was gold. When the doctrines of "Free Trade" and the "Comparative Advantages of Nations" were developed, the economists of the day could not imagine a world that did not use gold, but instead relied on a fiat money that could be created at will by a single country.
The "globalization" of the 1980s and 1990s and to date is based on the ideas of "Free Trade". However, in the absence of the gold standard that existed when the doctrine was conceived, "globalization" had completely destructive results, which have caused the de-industrialization of the West and the rise to power of Asia.
In the decades prior to 2007 a massive fleet of cargo ships was created, which sailed for the US and Europe - the West in general, Mexico included - bearing all kinds of inexpensive, quality products made in Asia. The flood was so great that local factories in the Western World were forced to move to Asia, to employ cheaper labor and continue to sell their products in the West.
My readers will know how many industries, large and small, have ceased to exist in the US and the West in general, because Chinese competition killed them. They will know as well how hard it is to find a product that can be produced at a profit in the developed countries. It is very difficult to find a niche for any product to be manufactured locally. The flight of factories to Asia to take advantage of lower wages caused unemployment where local factories were closed. For the same reason job creation is slow or non-existent.
A taxi driver in Barcelona told us: "Spain is a service economy. Industry is no longer our foundation. If tourists stop coming, we'll die." By the same token, it has been said of Greece: "It produces olive oil and tourism, and nothing more." The US, industrial colossus of the post-war world, has been de-industrialized. Now, what are developed countries to do to create jobs?
Diagnosis of the evils of de-industrialization and unemployment
These evils appeared because gold was eliminated as a) a constraint on the expansion of credit and the creation of money, and b) the only form of payment of international debt.
Under the gold standard all players in international trade knew that it was only possible to sell to a country that sold something else in turn. It was not possible to buy from a country that did not buy in turn. Trade was naturally balanced by this restriction. The "structural imbalances" so commonplace today were unheard of.
For example, in 1900, Mexico could export coffee to Germany because Germany, in turn, exported machinery to Mexico. Germany could buy coffee from Mexico because Mexico, in turn, bought machinery from Germany. Each transaction was denominated in gold, and as a result there was a balance based on an economic reality. Because there was balance in world commercial relationships, a relatively small amount of gold sufficed to adjust the international balance. The world financial center which acted as a "Global Clearing House" was London. A few hundred tons of gold were sufficient to meet the needs of that Clearing House. For further reading on the function of London as a clearing centre for world commerce, see "Real Bills" and associated articles by Antal E. Fekete at www.professorfekete.com
Another example: In 1930, the US could sell very little to China, because the Chinese were poor and lacked purchasing power. Because the US sold very little to China, at the same time it could buy very little from China. Although prices of Chinese products were very low, the US could not buy much from China, because China did not buy from the US - China was poor and could not afford American products. Thus, trade between China and the US was balanced by the need to pay the balance of their transactions in gold. Balance was imperative. There was no chance of "structural imbalance".
Under Free Trade with the gold standard, the great majority of transactions did not require movement of gold to complete the exchange. The goods exchanged paid for each other. Only small remainders had to be paid in gold. Consequently, international trade was limited by the volume of mutual purchases between parties; for example, Chinese silk paid for imports of American machinery, and vice-versa.
The gold standard imposed order and harmony. If President Nixon had not "closed the gold window" in 1971, the world would be radically different today. China would have taken a century or more to reach its present level. China could not buy much from the US, because it was poor; therefore, China could not sell much to the US.
All this changed radically with the abolition of the gold standard.
Everything changed because the United States, having removed gold from the world monetary system, could "pay" everything in dollars, and without the gold standard as a limiting institution, it could print dollars ad libitum - without limit. Thus, in the 1970s the United States started to buy huge amounts of high quality products from Japan, while the Japanese boasted: "Japan sells; Japan does not buy." A situation that was impossible under the gold standard became perfectly possible under the fiat dollar standard. The Japanese became gigantic producers, their country an island transformed into a factory. Japan accumulated vast reserves of dollars sent from the US in exchange for Japanese products. This in turn triggered the de-industrialization of the US.
Take for example the US manufacturers of T.V. Some of the famous US factories that built TV receivers by the millions were "Philco", "Admiral", "Zenith", and "Motorola". The Japanese had better and cheaper products, and since the abandonment of the gold standard allowed Japan to sell without buying in turn, and allowed the US to buy without selling in turn, the result was that all the huge factories producing these TV's in the US were closed down. That's how "going off gold" closed down US industry.
Unlimited purchases from Japan flowed to the US and the world, because they were paid in dollars, which could be created in unlimited quantities. The balance the gold standard had imposed disappeared and imbalance took its place.
After 1971, the US embarked on a protracted, large-scale expansion of credit. As the nation was de-industrialized and high-paying jobs in industry disappeared, a lack of disposable income for the population was replaced with easy and cheap credit, to conceal the stagnation in per capita income. Consumer credit drove imports from Asia and furthered de-industrialization even more. The great expansion of American credit was made possible because the gold standard, which restrained the expansion of credit by the banking system, had been abandoned. It is no coincidence that some analysts have observed that in real terms, American workers have had no real increase in their income since 1970.
All mainstream economists consider the elimination of the gold standard perfectly acceptable. They still do not see, or do not want to see, that the "Law of Unforeseen Consequences" is at work: the enormous advantage the US gained by being able to pay unlimited amounts in irredeemable dollars has become the fatal cause of the industrial destruction of the US - and of the West in general. A Mexican saying applies: en el pecado llevas la penitencia - "sin brings with it its own punishment".
The current malaise: financial crisis, industrial crisis, crisis of unemployment
Today the situation is far worse. China, with a population of 1.3 billion, has become a formidable power. No one can compete with China in price. China sells vast quantities of goods to the rest of the world, without the rest of the world having any chance of selling similar quantities to China, and China can do so, because today trade deficits are "paid" not in gold, but in dollars or euros or pounds sterling or yen, which will never be scarce: they are created at will by the USA, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, or the Bank of Japan.
A fearful monster has been created as a consequence of the elimination of the gold standard, which imposed a limit: "You can only sell to those who sell to you; you can only buy from those who buy from you." This limit no longer applies; everything is disarray, inequality, imbalance; "structural imbalance" prevails because we no longer have the gold standard.
The credit expansion boom has ended, and in its place we have a global financial crisis. Today the problem of "structural imbalance" and the de-industrialization and unemployment it has produced in formerly industrialized countries acquires greater relevance with every passing day. What is to be done with the masses of jobless men and women? No one knows the answer, because the answer is not acceptable to the thinkers of today: the correction of "structural imbalances" and re-industrialization, in other words the creation of new jobs, lies in restoring the gold standard worldwide.
The "globalization" so highly praised by the financial press in recent years, has become the worst imaginable nightmare. It is no longer possible to support the unemployed with government handouts. The Sovereign State is close to bankruptcy. Thus, nature takes its revenge on those who dared violate its laws by seeking to impose false money on the world.
Richard Nixon's elimination of the gold standard has proven to be the US's best possible strategic gift to China and the rest of Asia. Today, China has a colossal industrial base that might have taken centuries to build, while the US is to a great extent devoid of factories and incapable of reclaiming its former glory. How tragic a fate for the US! 
International and National Commerce
The word "commerce" is defined in the Concise Oxford English Dictionary as "Exchange of merchandise or services, esp. on a large scale [ French or from Latin COM (mercium from merx mercis merchandise)]
Note that the "exchange of merchandise or services" cannot include as a complement to that exchange a fictitious payment with fiat money, which is neither merchandise nor a service, but rather a paper note or digital entry denoting a debt payable in nothing. In the case of the dollar, the debt is a debt of the Federal Reserve and registered accordingly on its balance sheet. A debt cannot be settled by tendering a debt instrument (which is payable in nothing in any case) and in effect, Balance of Payments debts have not, by any means, been settled in international commerce since 1971.
The non-settlement of international balance of payments debts has produced the accumulation of huge fictitious dollar reserves on the part of exporting countries, since 1971. The same holds for fictitious payments of export deficit debts with euros, pounds, yen or any other present-day currency.

Gold, up until the Bretton Woods Agreements of 1944, figured as the complement to the international exchange of merchandise or services and did settle outstanding balance of payments deficits, because it was a merchandise or commodity used as money.
According to the Bretton Woods Agreements, the fiduciary dollar was accepted as being as good as gold, with trust on the part of Central Banks upon the ability to redeem the dollar into gold. From 1944 up until 1971 then, these fiduciary dollars were held in Central Bank reserves as a credit call upon US gold; the final payment had not been effected and was delayed as a credit granted to the US until the dollars held in reserves were to be cashed in for gold at some future date.
As it turned out, the "fiducia" or "trust" was misplaced, for in 1971 the US reneged on the Bretton Woods Agreements of 1944, "closed the gold window" and stiffed the creditor countries. No final settlement of international commerce debts took place in 1971, nor has any taken place since thenthe truth of this statement is obscured by the mistaken idea that tendering a fiat currency in payment of an international debt constitutes settlement of that debt.
Once that false idea - that fiat money can settle a debt - is accepted as valid, then the problem of the enormous "imbalances" in world trade becomes an insoluble enigma. The best and brightest of today's accredited economists attempt in vain to find a solution to a problem that cannot be solved except by the renewed use of gold as the international medium of commerce.
Regarding national commerce, the same reasoning applies. In reality, no one engaging in commerce in any country in the world today is actually paying for purchases, that is to say, there is no any actual settlement of any debt. All individuals, corporations and government entities are merely shuffling debts (payable in nothing) between themselves, in the form of either paper bills or digital banking money, whether in dollars or any other currency in the world.
For internal national commerce the smaller value of the silver coin was convenient for day-to-day transactions at the popular level and did constitute settlement of debt when tendered in payment, for silver is a merchandise or commodity which, like gold, can participate in commercial exchange.
Today, China and the other great Asian exporters have belatedly realized that the dollars they received as "payment" for their mass exports are nothing more than digits in American computers. If the Chinese do not cooperate, the bankers in New York can erase those digits in half an hour, and leave China with no reserves.For this reason, the Chinese and Asians in general are buying gold, and will continue to buy it indefinitely: computers cannot erase gold reserves.
The awful truth about China is that the Chinese acquired their formidable industrial power in the short span of thirty years at a tremendous cost: for thirty years they worked for nothing. China has $2.5 Trillion of reserves; China does not have any use for these reserves, they have no intrinsic value and China does not know how to get rid of them in exchange for something tangible of value; these reserves are nothing more than digits in computers in the Western world. Net, net, net: China worked for thirty years to provide the world with a vast quantity of merchandise, in return for: nothing! Thirty years of slavery, to build an industrial empire!
Mexico: forced to use the protectionist "Band-Aid"
Mexico has its oil, perhaps more than we are told. Let's hope so! Our economy is less complex, less sophisticated, than the US's. According to a Mexican Treasury study carried out in 2007, 85% of Mexicans have no bank accounts - a good sign that they can get by on paper money and are not getting into trouble with credit card debt. The Mexican economy, as we see it, is like a broad, low pyramid. It is more stable than the American "skyscraper" economy, a highly complex economy. Mexico is better equipped to survive the present crisis than the USA.
In today's great world financial crisis of false money, we are likely to see countries around the world resort to protectionism: the leaders will be the same countries that so recently sang the praises of "globalization". In this probable case, Mexico will have to do the same. It is a far from ideal scenario, but it is imperative for lack of the gold standard. Protectionism limits productive efficiency in any country because it limits the market for its protected products to its own national market. A limited market hampers efficiency. The supply of goods available to the population will be more limited and probably of lower quality at higher prices. (Protectionism will have similar effects in the US.)
Mexico will have to restrict imports in the near future. Otherwise, we will suffer serial currency devaluations. Protectionism is not the best policy, but Mexico will probably be forced to resort to it, for lack of the gold standard, which would be the best means of creating jobs in the US, in the rest of the "developed" world and here.
The effective cure
If Mexico aspires to anything more, we shall have to wait for the restoration of the gold standard worldwide. In the meantime, neither demagogy nor Socialism will solve our problems. Only the gold standard can do that.
For our industrial capacity to gain access to international markets - and for Mexicans to gain access to products from international markets - it will be necessary to restore the gold standard. Bilateral trade agreements are not optimum. The optimum is to have the world as a market, where payment for exports is balanced by imports and residual balances are paid in gold. Payment in gold of export deficits and collection in gold of export surpluses is sine qua non. Under the gold standard, Mexico would achieve sustainable prosperity and full employment for our admirable workforce.
Products from China and Asia in general, which today undermine our industrial capacity and create unemployment because we cannot compete with the extremely low wages of the Asian countries, would cease to be a problem under the gold standard; if the Asian countries, which today invade our markets, do not buy similar quantities of Mexican products - which today they do not - they would not be able to export their products to Mexico. The gold standard would fairly balance exports with imports; it would prevent the strategic destruction of our industry and protect us naturally, without the need for protectionist barriers.
The same therapy Mexico needs - the restoration of the gold standard - is what the world requires to regain economic health and sustainable prosperity.
Under a restored gold standard, Americans will not be able to purchase goods from China, unless China purchases American goods with a similar value. If the Chinese find nothing of value to purchase in the US, then Americans will be unable to purchase Chinese goods. It's as simple as that! To continue selling to the West, China will have to open wide its doors to imports!
If Americans find they simply cannot purchase Chinese goods, Americans will manufacture those goods themselves. Industries and new jobs will spring up like mushrooms immediately, to satisfy American demand. International balance will be restored, unemployment will disappear.
Protectionism is not a cure, it is a Band-Aid. Mexico will not achieve the prosperity of which it is capable through protectionism nor by resorting to Socialist measures that crush the creative spirit of the individual. Nor can we succumb to renouncing our nationality and accepting absorption by the US, imitating all the (very costly) measures the current US administration imposes on its citizens. The ideal combination for Mexico includes a moderate dose of nationalism, a government that does not incur deficits, the institution of a monetized one-ounce silver coin, the "Libertad", to stimulate and protect savings, and eventual participation in a new global gold standard, in which our nation can find the opportunity to fulfill its destiny.
"The gold standard is the generator and protector of jobs."