The Government Steals Raisins

"Why does the federal government steal one-third to one-half of the raisin crop every year? Why aren’t the farmers paid for the stolen crop? Why does the government then sell the stolen raisins to foreigners at below-market prices? Why has this been going on ever since 1948? There are at least 29 other programs just like it. How many government employees spend their entire careers enforcing laws like this one? No one knows. Congress does not care. A story like this never makes it into high school civics textbooks. Stories like this one make the federal government sound like a loony bin." Continue reading

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Harvard Economist: ‘No Doubt, Pensions Are Screwed’

"Der Spiegel interviews Harvard economist Carmen Reinhart who has the novel idea that central banks are acting like the 'adults' in the room by cleaning up after spendthrift governments. 'Governments are incapable of reducing their debts and now central banks are stepping in.' Perhaps this argument sounds reasonable to a Martian that has not been following exactly what central banks have been doing and continue to do, but last time we looked we weren't Martian. The idea that monopoly central bankers are 'responsible' and politicians are not seems a spurious question, in our humble view. A pox on both their houses." Continue reading

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China Builds Great Central Bankers?

"Around the world, Western-style monetary recipes are failing. But this article attempts to convince us that the Chinese have somehow managed to implement miraculous growth using ingredients that are notably dysfunctional elsewhere. How is that possible? We would submit it is not. What is going on is a kind of campaign to convince people that as capital and power flow east, such a reality is reasonable and inevitable. Seen from this standpoint, the profile of this Chinese central banking genius – and it drones on and on – is part and parcel of a larger attempt at explaining the inexplicable." Continue reading

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Jim Rogers shares insights on his book Street Smarts

"Jim Rogers of Rogers International Commodities Index (RICI) joins Open Currency Update with Kurt Wallace. While logging miles on his exercise bike, Jim discusses his ground up approach to investing and why he recommends investors learn philosophy and history. He also shares about a changing global environment toward Asia and why he sees New York City as a third world city. Rogers talks about his chapter ‘Creative Destruction’ and he explains the importance of how a robust immigration system directly effects the state of a society’s economy." Continue reading

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Doug Casey: The Gold Crash Is Not What Either Bulls or Bears Are Telling You

"I don't expect it to drop much more, and I'd be very surprised at a drop below $1,000 an ounce, but there is no law of nature preventing it from doing so. All markets fluctuate. People who get panicked are overcommitted... or maybe they shouldn't be in the market because they're not psychologically suited for it. The problem is that government currency debasement practically forces everyone to be in the market, just to try to stay ahead of inflation. You can't time market bottoms, but you've got to play the odds. If I were going to sell anything now, I wouldn't think of selling my gold or gold stocks." Continue reading

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Bitcoins gain traction in Argentina

"Enter the bitcoin? The virtual currency is emerging as the latest inflation refuge – and Bloomberg reports that TradeHill, a US-based bitcoin exchange, is now planning to open an office in Argentina where demand is fastest in the region. Bitcoins are absolutely not words on everybody’s lips here and many people have no clue about how to use them. But a quick squint at the website of MercadoLibre – a kind of ebay – reveals that you can buy plenty of things, from motorbikes to apartments to an anti-slip spray for bathtubs, and pay with bitcoins. Argentina’s two centuries’ history of currency turbulence, has wired a need for financial smarts into the national DNA." Continue reading

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Bill Bonner: Is this a major change of direction for gold?

"Everyone believes the gold market has reversed direction. The bull market of the last 14 years has finally ended. It's all downhill from here, they say. But if that is true, what else will have to be true? The last bull market in gold ended when the Fed changed course. Arthur Burns was replaced by Paul Volcker. A loose money policy became a tight money policy. By the end of the bear market in gold there was hardly a single gold bug who was still sober or still solvent. But what's the Fed doing now? Has it reversed course? Has Ben 'Bubbles' Bernanke been replaced with a tough-as-nails inflation fighter? Has the FOMC vowed to stop printing money?" Continue reading

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Peter Schiff: Gold in the Crosshairs

"While the vast majority of economists see gold as the 'barbarous relic' described by Keynes, the sentiment has not stopped many central bankers from holding huge quantities as currency reserves. It is a curious phenomenon that the countries with the most daunting debt problems have the highest percentage of gold in their foreign exchange reserves. Many of these countries were formerly prosperous, and at various points in their histories had gold-backed currencies that required large reserves. These legacy assets now account for the bulk of their reserve wealth." Continue reading

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Bill Bonner: Gold versus paper cash

"Maybe there really is a recovery...however weak. Maybe the feds really do have the situation under control. Maybe the central banks are right to print money. Maybe it will be clear sailing from now until Kingdom Come. And we'll be fools not to be on the boat along with all the other stockbuyers and gold-dumpers. One day, however...and we won't say 'when'...people will stop worrying about the quantity of the paper and begin worrying about the quality of it. They will find that they have plenty of paper...and that more is coming all the time. They will look in their vaults and wonder what they will do with all this paper money." Continue reading

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