by Brandon Smith
One of the most frustrating issues to haunt the halls
of alternative economic analysis is the threat of misrepresentative
terminology. For instance, when the U.S. government decided to back the private
Federal Reserve in lowering the interest rates on lending windows to European
banks last month, they did not call this a bailout, even though that’s exactly
what it was. They did not call it quantitative easing, or fiat printing, or a
hyperinflationary landmine; rarely does bureaucracy ever apply honest terminology
to their subversive activities. False terminology is the bane of every honest
analyst, because in order for them to educate and awaken those who are unaware
of the truth, they must first battle through the daunting muck of the general
public’s horrifically improper perceptions and vocabulary.
The chain of financial events taking place over the
past decade in Asia have been correspondingly mislabeled and misunderstood.
What some economists see as total collapse is actually a new and decidedly
prophetic (or engineered) transition. What some naively see as the “natural”
progression of globalism, is actually a distinctly deliberate program of
centralization meant to further the goals of world economic and political
totalitarianism. Asia, and most especially China, is a Petri dish for elitist
psychopaths. What we see as suffocating collectivism in this region of the
world today is the exact social schematic intended for the West tomorrow. Call
it whatever you will, but on the other side of the Pacific, like the eerie
smile of a sinister clown, sits fabricated fate.
The genius of globalization is not in how it “works”,
but in how it DOESN’T work. Globalization chains mismatched cultures together
through circumstance and throws us into the deep end of the pool. If one sinks,
we all sink, enslaving us with interdependency. The question one must ask,
then, is if all sovereign economies are currently tied together in the same
way? The answer is no, not anymore. Certain countries have moved to insulate
themselves from the domino effect of debt implosion, one of the primary
examples being China.
Since at least 2005, China has been taking the exact
steps required to counter the brunt of a global debt collapse; not enough to
make it untouchable, but enough that its infrastructure will survive. One could
even surmise that China’s actions indicate a foreknowledge of the events that
would eventually escalate in 2008. How they knew is hard to say, but if the
available evidence causes you to lean towards collapse as a Hegelian creation
(and it should if you are paying any attention), then China’s activity begins
to make perfect sense. If a globalist insider told you that in a few short
years the two most powerful financial empires in the world were going to topple
like bowling pins under the weight of their own liabilities, what would you do?
Probably separate yourself as much as possible from the diseased dynamic and
construct your own replacement system. This is what China has done…
China started with the circulation of Yuan denominated
bonds, like T-Bonds, meant to securitize Chinese debt, creating an outlet for
the currency to go global. China’s considerable forex and bond reserves make
this move a rather suspicious one. With so much savings at their disposal, why
bother to issue bonds at all? Why threaten the traditional export based economy
and the uneven trade advantage that the country had been thriving on for
decades? The success of Chinese bonds would mean the internationalization of
the Yuan, a floating valuation of the currency, and the loss of the desirable
trade deficit with the U.S. Back in 2005, this all would surely seem like a
novelty that was going nowhere fast. Of course, today China’s actions suggest
an unprecedented push to convert to a consumer hub at the center of a massive
trading bloc. To put it simply; China knew ahead of schedule that the U.S. was
no longer going to be a viable customer, and reliance on such a country would
spell disaster. They have been preparing to break away from America’s consumer
markets and the dollar for some time.
In 2008, after China announced the use of the Yuan in
cross border trade on a limited basis, I began to write about the possibility
that China was preparing to break from the Greenback. For the past few years my
primary focus in terms of finance has been the East as a kind of warning bell
for the state of the global economy. In 2009 and 2010, it became absolutely
clear that China (with the help of global corporate entities) was developing
the skeleton of a new system; a trade network that that had the capacity to
supplant the U.S. and end the dollar’s world reserve status.
Since then, Yuan bonds have spread across the planet,
China has dropped the dollar in bilateral trade with Russia, the ASEAN trading
bloc has formed into a tight shell of export partners, and that is just the
beginning. Two major announcements in 2011 have solidified my belief that a
complete dump of the dollar by eastern interests is near…
First was the announcement that China was actively and
openly pursuing the establishment of a central bank for the whole of ASEAN,
with the Yuan utilized as the reserve currency instead of the dollar:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/27/us-china-asean-financial-idUST...
This news, of course, has barely been reported on in the mainstream. As I discussed at the beginning of this article, the terminology surrounding economic developments has been diluted and twisted. When China states that an ASEAN central bank is in the works, we need to point out what this really means; the ASEAN trading bloc is about to become the Asian Union. The only missing piece of the puzzle is something that I have been warning about for at least a couple years, ever since my days at Neithercorp (see “Migration Of The Black Swans” as a recent example). This key catalyst is the inclusion of Japan in ASEAN, something which many said would take five to ten years to unfold. News released this Christmas speaks otherwise:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/27/us-china-asean-financial-idUST...
This news, of course, has barely been reported on in the mainstream. As I discussed at the beginning of this article, the terminology surrounding economic developments has been diluted and twisted. When China states that an ASEAN central bank is in the works, we need to point out what this really means; the ASEAN trading bloc is about to become the Asian Union. The only missing piece of the puzzle is something that I have been warning about for at least a couple years, ever since my days at Neithercorp (see “Migration Of The Black Swans” as a recent example). This key catalyst is the inclusion of Japan in ASEAN, something which many said would take five to ten years to unfold. News released this Christmas speaks otherwise:
Japan has indeed entered into an agreement to drop the
dollar in currency exchange with China and has expressed interest in melting
into ASEAN. Japan has also struck somewhat similar though slightly more limited
deals with India, South Korea, Indonesia, and the Philippines almost
simultaneously:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-28/japan-india-seal-15-billion-currency-swap-arrangement-to-shore-up-rupee.html
This means that the two largest foreign holders of U.S. debt and Greenbacks will soon be in a position to tap into an export market far more profitable than that of America, and that all of this trade will be facilitated by currencies OTHER THAN THE DOLLAR. It means the end of the dollar as the world reserve and probably the end of the dollar as we know it.
This means that the two largest foreign holders of U.S. debt and Greenbacks will soon be in a position to tap into an export market far more profitable than that of America, and that all of this trade will be facilitated by currencies OTHER THAN THE DOLLAR. It means the end of the dollar as the world reserve and probably the end of the dollar as we know it.
Japan’s inclusion in this process was inevitable. With
its economy already in steep deflationary decline, the Yen skyrocketing in
value against the dollar making exports difficult, as well as the ongoing
nuclear meltdown problem at Fukushima, the island nation has been on the edge
of complete collapse. Its only option, therefore, is to sink into the chaotic
sees, or float like a buoy tied to an Asian Union. There can be absolutely no doubt
now that Japan will soon implement the latter solution.
The dilemma at this point becomes one of timing. Now
that we are certain that two of the largest economies in the world are about
to dump the Greenback, what signals can we watch when preparing for the event?
My belief is that the trigger will come squarely from the U.S. and the Federal
Reserve, either as legislation to heavily tax Asian imports, a renewed threat
of further credit downgrades like that which S&P brought down in August, or
the announcement of more open quantitative easing. Any and all of these issues
could very well arise in the course of the next 6-12 months, QE3 being a basic
no-brainer. ASEAN could, certainly, drop the dollar immediately after their
central bank apparatus is put in place, resulting in a much more volatile trade
war atmosphere (also useful for full global centralization later down the
road). The point is, we are truly at a place in our economic life when ANYTHING
is possible.
My hope is that as our predictions in the alternative
economic community are proven correct with every passing quarter, more
Americans will take note, and prepare. I can say quite confidently that we have
entered the first stages of the catastrophic phase of the economic implosion.
All the fantastic and terrible consequences many once considered theory or
science fiction, are about to become reality. Practical solutions have been
offered by myself and many others. The only thing left now is to take action,
or ride the tidal wave of destruction like so much driftwood. We can help to
determine the outcome, or we can be idle spectators.
In everything, there is a choice…
No comments:
Post a Comment