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Get ready for Obama’s coming hyperinflation

Examiner Editorial
-
April 30, 2009

Those who refuse to learn from history are doomed to repeat it, said George Santayana, the philosopher. But this familiar maxim is being ignored this week by President Barack Obama and his fellow Democrats on Capitol Hill this week as they complete action on the chief executive’s proposed 2010 federal budget. With its unprecedented deficit approaching $2 trillion, this budget proposal is a certain prescription for hyper-inflation. So every senator and representative who votes for this monster $3.6 trillion budget will be endorsing actions that will turn America into the next Weimar Republic. For those too young to remember, that was the period in Germany in the years between the two world wars when people needed wheelbarrows full of money to buy a loaf of bread.
 
In a 1993 interview, Harvard law professor Friedrich Kessler described what living with Weimar hyperinflation was like: “It was horrible. Horrible! Like lightning it struck. No one was prepared....The shelves in the grocery store were empty. You could buy nothing with your paper money.” Thanks to the expanding profligacy on Capitol Hill, a version of such economic hell will likely happen here, according to two prominent economists. Johns Hopkins Professor Steve Hanke notes that the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet “has more than doubled in size since August...Unless the Fed shrinks its balance sheet,” he warns, “...inflation will roar back with a vengeance.”
 
The printing presses have already been running non-stop since Congress approved the Toxic Assets Recovery Program (TARP) and the $787 billion bailout of insolvent firms who got that way by abusing “easy credit.” Yet with interest rates now close to zero, Hanke points out, the Fed is merely “prescribing more of the same.” In their groundbreaking “Monetary History of the United States” Anna Schwartz and the late Nobel Prize winner Milton Friedman found that then (as now) a huge influx of foreign capital accompanied the early stages of Weimar hyperinflation. Schwartz, who today believes the “systemic risk” cited as justification to recapitalize failed financial institutions was just an excuse to save bankers’ hides, agrees that massive inflation is “unavoidable.”
 
There have been other, more recent hyperinflations, too. After years of deficits, the former Yugoslavia tried to print its way out of a similar predicament, then tried to counter the inevitable 15 to 25 percent annual inflation rate with price controls. Economic collapse quickly followed the worst hyperinflation in history. On Nov. 12, 1993, one million dinars could be traded for one German deutsche mark; by Jan. 4, 1994, the exchange rate was 6 trillion to 1. With Obama’s reckless 2010 budget – which was passed without a single Republican vote - Democrats are playing with inflationary fire.


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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Crash

Apr 30, 2009

President Obama's handlers have not "wasted a good crisis". They have played on his hyper-arrogance and neediness to make him extend a normal recession into a catastrophic depression.

 

Larry Gwaltney

Apr 30, 2009

Remind me not to take any financial advice from Reg Crowder.

If Crowder and Obama were right, poverty would have been eliminated from human society centuries ago.

Guess what.

 

edword

Apr 30, 2009

Let's pretend that Democrats like Chris Dodd, Charles Rangel, Chuck Shumer and Barney Frank who have been in control of the banking system for almost the last 3 years never happened.

 

Sean

Apr 30, 2009

Blame it on Bush and Cheney, or Canada. Right REG Crowder?

You are a conservative? "Give me liberty or give me death", huh? WHen did democrats decide that their time could be best spent by posting moronic statements on conservative websites while claiming to be actually conservative?

 

jimbo

Apr 30, 2009

Oh, you mean like the hyperinflation that followed WWII, after 4 years of deficits in excess of 25% GDP? Or the hyperinflation Japan is experiencing now, after years of 7-9% GDP deficits? I agree, a deficit of 6% GDP, heading toward 7 or even (gasp!) 8%, must inevitably lead to hyperinflation. All the history is on your side.

 

rhhardin

Apr 30, 2009

Whether there's inflation or not depends on action not yet taken: what happens when the money being created starts moving to purchase stuff rather than sitting as a credit at the Fed.

At that moment, the Fed has to soak up the extra money very fast, which will kill the recovery for the moment; and that will take political leadership as cover for it.

So there's the moment to watch for, to see which way we go.

 

Dave in Dallas

Apr 30, 2009

Mr. Crowder is in the finance business? ahem.. please DO quit your day job.

We conservatives agree that the Bush admin. spent way too much money it didn't have. But Obama has made Bush seem like a thrifty grandmother with a purse full of pennies...

Anytime you more than double the amount of currency in circulation, you decrease the value of that currency by half.. and that's if all else remains the same! And it won't, because this inflation will alter behaviors from one end of the economy to the other.

it's a matter of time, perhaps a year or two, before we see 15-25% inflation annually. Worse than Carter, worse than any in American history... and certainly worthy of comparison to Mugabe or to the Weimar republic.

Crowder... show your post to your clients, if you have any left. They deserve to know you feel this way.

 

Steve

Apr 30, 2009

What exactly did George Bush do to "burn the economy to the ground" that wasn't a continuation of a Clinton policy and/or aided and abetted by a Democratic Congress?

Also note that this article says nothing (positive or negative) about Bush or the Republicans; since when did "the other side is just as bad" become a valid retort to legitimate criticism?
(Sadly, the comment is true, and is cause for despair, but that does not make it a valid defense of Obama's actions.)

 

Zainuddin

Apr 30, 2009

To Reg Crowder: Bush lit the match but Obama is adding big time fuel to the resulting flame to coax it into a raging fire instead of trying to put it out. I am beginning to believe that he is trying to recreate the Soviet Union in the United States. He is more likely to turn us into a Banana Republic.

 

MT

Apr 30, 2009

Can't have much inflation if there is no demand as the economy craters and jobs are lost.

 

Raoul Ortega

Apr 30, 2009

MT is obviously ignorant of "stagflation" and Jimmy Carter.


 

Good Lt.

Apr 30, 2009

Wait...you mean Congress approves all of these gargantuan economic crimes against the American taxpayer? And Congress authorized TARP, a boondoggle that is being investigated as a criminal enterprise?

It's almost as if there is some political party that believes that it can spend the nation's money with complete regard for the political preservation and no regard for the long-term consequences and damage their legislation will wreak on the citizens of this country.

Which party controls Congress and has controlled it since the beginning of 2007 and is allowing all of this to happen?

The BUSH party?

 

Reichstag

Apr 30, 2009

I am still waiting to see one side or the other come out with actual numbers on money supply for Germany before hyperinflation and now. Pretty clearly the deficits that are projected will put the US in much the same position that France put Germany in then. I think the french president said something like squeeze them till they pop. Without money supply figures and hard analysis, both side are talking trash.

Back to the Blue Angel now :->

 

i4cu2

Apr 30, 2009

I keep reading that inflation is coming in about 18 months, give or take a few months. I am a beginner at investing and have a question or two. I realize that anything said to me are opinions and observations.

I personally believe that our economy is going to tank in historic proportions. I don't know whether that will be hyper-inflation or another great depression. If what I am reading is right then what would be the right way to protect my family financially. I am not asking for stock tips but what kind of books or publications to read. Also with what is going on would buying gold really a smart move? I mean buying coins. Would silver be an option?

Please forgive my rambling. Thank you to any and all who take some of their time to answer any of these questions.

 

freeman

Apr 30, 2009

Forget about partisan squabbling; both parties colluded in creating this huge budget, which we and our children will slave to pay off.

 

Ben

Apr 30, 2009

Consider this simple fact: For all the hell Democrats (and many Republicans) gave the Bush administration for raising the national debt by $2.3B, Obama will almost match that IN HIS FIRST YEAR IN OFFICE ($1.85B). Only a fool (or a blind partisan) could possibly think that this kind of reckless deficit spending will not have inflationary consequences.

 

MrJimm

Apr 30, 2009

You can keep up with the story of another hyperinflation that is happening right now in Zimbabwe by Googling "Zimbabwe blog". Of note is (1) the comical efforts by the government to "make things better" by freezing prices (resultng in bread disappearing from store shelves because it can't be produced at a profit anymore) and (2) the horrors of what the government is willing to do (torture, disappearences, etc.) to stay in power. Plus the occasional funny tale about having to pay your company's internet access bill of $77 Trillion, when your accounting system won't take anything higher than (a mere) $999 Billion. Truly frightening. Every crisis is just another excuse for those in power to abuse the system. I am truly afraid for the future.

 

bballbob

Apr 30, 2009

I am willing to undertake for anticipated inflation action similar to what I undertook to reign in the price of oil. When oil reached $145 per barrel, I bought 100 shares of Royal Dutch Shell. Oil prices started falling almost immediately.

I am considering buying TIPS, treasury securities tied to the inflation rate. Should I undertake such an investment, you can be assured that the inflation rate will be relatively insignificant until either my bond matures or I sell.

 

pacific_waters

Apr 30, 2009

Reg, do you have any idea how our government works? Congress passes spending bills, not the POTUS. Last I looked congress was democrat controlled. Even if bush lit the fire does that mean obama should pour gasoline on it?

 

mre

Apr 30, 2009

Amazing.
REG CROWDER doesn't dispute the assertion that hyperinflation is coming. But, he wants to make sure the correct blame is affixed. I guess, with the knowledge that "it's Bush's fault" added to your wheelbarrow full of money, you'll be able to buy a cup of coffee.

EVERYTHING THAT'S BAD IS BUSH's FAULT.
Whew...now I feel better........

 

some guy

Apr 30, 2009

Can we have an IQ test before people post? Some of this is silly: "Bush was bad so that justifies Obama doing worse." Riiiight. Who said Bush was good? Who said Obama wasn't worse?

 

Bill

Apr 30, 2009

We are hip deep in fools. We should be very fearful of the future. When liberal thought is in ascendency, weakness results, war and pestilence follows. Pruning back the liberals, for rational conservatives to rebuild. The day is coming... unfortunately we can't skip over what's between here and there to get to that day.

 

jdb

Apr 30, 2009

Go to the Fed site and check the money supply. We've doubled - DOUBLED - the number of dollars in circulation over the past year. And we'd almost doubled it in the year before that.

More money less wealth = inflation, period.

 

klesb

May 1, 2009

i4cu2:

I think it is clear from the response to your question that the bloggers on this site haven't a clue what to do! Including me!

 

jayr

May 7, 2009

It appears to me that during times of war, at least since WWI, a lot of money is printed. When the wars are over, it is payback time. The same will happen after the wars in the middle east are over.

 

ralph foster

May 30, 2009

THE SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER HAS PLAGIARIZED MY INTERVIEW AS QUOTED IN MY BOOK "FIAT PAPER MONEY THE HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF OUR CURRENCY.
4/30/2009
In a 1993 interview, Harvard law professor Friedrich Kessler described what living with Weimar hyperinflation was like: “It was horrible. Horrible! Like lightning it struck. No one was prepared....The shelves in the grocery store were empty. You could buy nothing with your paper money.”

 

ralph foster

May 30, 2009

May 30, 2009

THE WASHUNGTON EXAMINER HAS PLAGIARIZED MY INTERVIEW AS QUOTED IN MY BOOK "FIAT PAPER MONEY THE HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF OUR CURRENCY.
4/30/2009
In a 1993 interview, Harvard law professor Friedrich Kessler described what living with Weimar hyperinflation was like: “It was horrible. Horrible! Like lightning it struck. No one was prepared....The shelves in the grocery store were empty. You could buy nothing with your paper money.” RALPH FOSTER

 

jj

Aug 12, 2009

obama will say anything to get the masses to vote for him. The more poor folks, the better for him,...so he doesn't care if they stay poor and uneducated, since he gives them hope, but likes to keep them poor, but he will become incredibly wealthy, built on schmoozing the poor voters...lol.

 

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