[Bill Bonner’s Diary]( Re-discovering John Connally By Bill Bonner Tuesday, June 8, 2021 Or like stout Cortez when with eagle eyes He stared at the Pacific – and all his men Look’d at each other with a wild surmise – Silent, upon a peak in Darien. – On First Looking Into Chapman’s Homer, by John Keats [Bill Bonner] YOUGHAL, IRELAND – We ended yesterday’s Diary with a question: [Who will tame inflation this time]( You already know the answer, don’t you, Dear Reader? No one. It’s too late for that. Too many businesses… households… and the government itself depend on “printing press money.” Too many economists, investors, politicians, and policymakers have forgotten how inflation works. They think it stimulates the economy. And today, the costs of tapering off the Federal Reserve’s crackpot policies are far too high. At the time of its last encounter with double-digit consumer price inflation, the federal government owed roughly $1 trillion dollars. Now, it owes nearly 30 times as much. It cannot “taper” off its money-printing now. Interest rates would rise. And with so much debt outstanding, the carrying costs would crush the economy. Debt and Despair Yes, Dear Reader, in the physical world, you only get to discover the New World once. But in the world of government policies, money, and poetry… we cross the same oceans… look out at the same horizon… and are surprised to find the same hill in Darien every time. And now… we look out on a vast Pacific of debt and delusion… and we despair. Where are the old “conservatives,” who will “just say no” to deficits, boondoggles, and money-printing? Where is Paul Volcker, the old-fashioned banker who understood what caused inflation and was able to stop it? Recommended Link [Dan Denning: "Democrats have the power and America is Doomed"]( [image]( With the Democrats taking charge, for the third time in U.S. history our government is preparing to [ânationalizeâ Americaâs currency](. Before long, everywhere you go, theyâll be talking about how we must reset Americaâs currency⦠to keep things fair⦠to build a stronger country⦠to âwipe the slate clean.â But think about it: Where will all this new money come from? [Hereâs what they arenât telling you about this planâ¦](
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Go Fish In 1971, the Quantity Theory of Money (QTM) – [which we explained yesterday]( – caught up with the Nixon Administration. Richard Nixon’s predecessor, Lyndon B. Johnson, had spent too freely. “Guns and butter” – a war against the Commies in Vietnam and a war on poverty at home – were his doing. Both cost money. Both were lost. And by 1971, the U.S. owed money all over town, particularly to the French. The honest thing would have been to tighten belts, pay down the debt, and bring things back to normal. Instead, Nixon, aided and abetted by his Secretary of the Treasury, John Connally (about whose financial genius you will have a better idea in a few minutes) pulled a fast one, a switcheroo. They changed America’s dollar from a gold-backed currency to a “fiat” currency, backed only by the full faith and credit of its governors. If the French – or anyone else – wanted to trade their pieces of green paper for gold… well, they could just go fish! [Featured: Watch Demo of Elon Muskâs Next Big Project]( Greatest Failure The dollar promptly fell, as investors saw what the full faith and credit of politicians was actually worth. And over the next 10 years, U.S. prices more than doubled. The CPI (consumer price index… expressed here as an annual rate of increase) began the decade at only 6%. It finished it, in December of 1979, above 13%. Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel called it “the greatest failure of American macroeconomic policy in the postwar period.” By 1980, consumer price inflation had taken on a life of its own. People expected higher prices. So they spent quickly, increasing the “[velocity]( of money, a key component of the inflation formula. Interest rates rose, but struggled to stay ahead of rising prices. Real output slowed, even as prices soared. The feds faced a tough choice. They could get ahead of inflation and pinch it off. But it would mean a recession. Maybe worse. If they let inflation continue, on the other hand, it would plague the country for years… And who knew where it would end up. Recommended Link [Why the rich get richer...]( [image]( Ever wondered how the ârichâ just seem to get âricher?â Well, hereâs why⦠Because they donât follow the same old tired advice that everybody else keeps dishing out, like: âBuy and hold stocks and bonds, Put money into mutual funds, and ETFs.â Or even better⦠Just save half your income in high yield accounts and cut your expenses⦠For two decades, Jeff Clark ran a $200 million money management firm. Most of his former clients were CEOs, entrepreneurs, and Venture Capitalists. Some of these accounts were worth up to $40 million alone⦠He was really good at making his clients richer. And he didnât do it using any of the strategies mentioned earlier. It was all thanks to a technique he perfected called the âMoney Multiplier.â [Click here to See how to use the âMoney Multiplierâ now.](
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Tall Paul to the Rescue Then, in August 1979, into the breach stepped then Fed chairman “Tall Paul” Volcker, who announced that he would stop it. Yes, it was stout Volcker who planted his feet at the Fed and set to work. He raised its key lending rate to 20%, effectively shutting off credit to the whole banking sector. Immediately, the press… business lobbies… consumers… Wall Street – almost everyone – called for his head. He was “destroying jobs,” they said. He was stifling investment. He was causing a recession! Of course, that was exactly what he was doing. He was deflating the economy. And Ronald Reagan kept him at his post until the job was done. By 1982, the inflation rate had been cut in half. By 1983, it was below 3%. [Featured: The 3-Stock Retirement Blueprint]( No Volcker or Reagan And now, four decades later… it’s time for a re-discovery. In the first quarter of this year, consumer prices rose at a 5% annualized rate. Sooner or later, the “inflation rate” will hit 10%. But don’t bother to look for a Paul Volcker or a Ronald Reagan; there are no candidates. And even if there were, neither would be allowed anywhere near Washington. Instead, the money-printing will continue (perhaps interrupted by a brief taper), until it results in a much more serious disaster. Jeremy Seigel… you ain’t seen nuthin’ yet. Recommended Link [Before You Put a Penny in the Next Tech Stock, Watch This Video]( [image]( Everyoneâs glued to big tech stories these days. Yet theyâve all missed the biggest of all. Not surprising. No one else is talking about what youâll see in this video. Even before you put another penny into another tech stock, you'll want to watch this video first. [Click here for full details.](
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Swimming Naked Money-printing isn’t poetry. But it has its own rhymes and rhythms… and its re-discoveries, too. And so there was a kind of poetry in The New York Times’ headline on August 1, 1987: Real Estate Woes Force Connally Bankruptcy John B. Connally, a former United States Treasury Secretary and Democratic Governor of Texas who later sought the Republican Presidential nomination, filed a bankruptcy petition today, citing problems brought on by a depressed Texas real estate market. Poor Mr. Connally had reached his hill in Darien. He looked out with eagle eyes… and realized he was broke. “This is one of the most difficult things I have ever done, but obligations arising out of the Barnes-Connally Partnership operation have sorrowfully left me no choice,” Mr. Connally said in a statement. And here we offer a useless prediction… No Volckers will appear. Nor any Reagans. But Connallys… we will see aplenty. Regards, [signature] Bill --------------------------------------------------------------- Like what you’re reading? Send your thoughts to [feedback@rogueeconomics.com](mailto:feedback@rogueeconomics.com?subject=Re-discovering John Connally). --------------------------------------------------------------- MAILBAG Inflation is on dear readers’ minds today⦠At the real day-to-day level, inflation is rampant. We get Chinese on Thursday nights. Last Thursday, when I picked up the order, I got a severe case of sticker shock. They had raised the price of their entrees 40% – from $9.99 to $14. Unbelievable. They said their food costs have skyrocketed. Trust me, it is not transient. The price will never be reduced. – Fred T. Inflation did not go “underground” in the 1990s. That is when shrinkflation began. Now, we have a true hyperinflation wave hitting America as shrinkflation continues. When you add the two together, you find that prices are rising hundreds (if not thousands) of times for many items. – Goku V. Inflation is here to stay, I believe. Thank you for exposing the truth in your essays. We appear to be in a Deep State perfect storm, and they continue to shoot our boats, so they can survive. – Richard S. How are you seeing inflation in your day-to-day life? Will inflation be “transient”? Write us at [feedback@rogueeconomics.com](mailto:feedback@rogueeconomics.com?subject=Re-discovering John Connally). IN CASE YOU MISSED IT⦠[[Tech Melt 2021] An Action Planâ¦]( One American research firm has predicted every single major market move since 1987⦠They predicted Black Monday⦠The dot-com collapse⦠the housing crisis⦠the crypto crash⦠As well as the market pullback earlier last year (45 days before it started). Now, they are making their next major prediction⦠[A âtech meltâ that will catch many investors by surprise.]( If youâve got money in the market. Or, if youâve been debating getting back in as tech seems to be making new highs on a daily basis⦠This is canât miss information you need to see before you make one more move⦠As Jeff Brown, the firmâs top technologist, says⦠âI believe weâre on the cusp of something we havenât seen in 20 years⦠Fortunes will be made â and lost â over the next few monthsâ¦â [** Click Here to See The Full, Urgent Details.]( [image]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Get Instant Access Click to read these free reports and automatically sign up for daily research. [image]( [The Ultimate Guide to Taking Back Your Privacy]( [image]( [The Gold Investor’s Guide]( [image]( [An Insider's Guide to Making a Fortune from Small Tech Stocks]( [Rogue Economincs]( Rogue Economics
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