And on Wednesday, the Fed signalled which way it would go. From Bloomberg: âFed Caught Between Inflation and Bank Crisisâ: âAll eyes in the financial and economic world will be laser-focused Wednesday on the Federal Reserve as Chair Jerome Powell tries to balance his fight against inflation against a sudden banking crisis. âPowell and his colleagues began their meeting Tuesday with the outcome unusually unclear. While most economists expect a quarter-point interest-rate hike, some say policymakers should pauseâ¦â Youâll already have the news by the time you read this. But from our point of view, it hardly matters. The Fed has already begun its âstealth pivotâ. And even though Wall Street still hasnât crashedâ¦and the economy still hasnât gone into an official recessionâ¦the powers-that-be are on the brink of panic. Meanwhile, at the end of the world⦠But here in Argentina, we are steeped in crisisâ¦surrounded by ineptitudeâ¦immersed in corruption. It gives us a sense of deja-vuâ¦as if the future of the US could be read in the pages of the Buenos Aires Herald over the last 70 years. So rather than speculate about what the Fed will doâ¦weâll look around us. Rick Rule invited us to open our eyes last week. Rick is an old friend who was tracking puma in Patagonia and decided to stop for a visit. He asked the same question many Dear Readers have posed: âYou could live anywhere, why do you live here? Yes, itâs beautiful in a rugged kinda way. But so is it where Dan lives in Wyoming. And they donât have inflation at 105% in Laramie.â Rick was referring to the latest inflation report. Over the last 12 months, Argentinaâs inflation rate has gone up from 100% to 105%: âINDEC: Prices jumped 6.6% in February, inflation 105.8% over last yearâ¦â Thatâs the highest inflation reading in 32 years. It reminds people of what may come next: hyperinflation. The last time inflation hit more than 100%, it ran all the way to 5,000%â¦when people needed a wheelbarrow full of pesos in order to buy a cup of coffee. The peso is going down against the dollar fast, too. When we arrived just a month ago, we were offered 370 pesos per dollar, on the black market, of course. Now, the exchange rate is 392 per dollar. Functional disfunction âIâd also like to know how an economy can function with 105% inflationâ, said Rick. âIt seems impossible. Who comes to work? Who votes for a president who allows inflation to get so high? How do people make ends meet? And yet, the electricity works. The airports are open and the planes fly. The steaks are thick and tasty. The wine is delicious. Youâd almost think nothing was wrong.â Our reply follows: âEconomists long ago singled out Japan and Argentina as economies that didnât seem to fit any of their models. But there are some things that are always and everywhere true⦠ââ¦and as Milton Friedman put it âif you want more of something, subsidize it; if you want less of something, tax itâ. âWe donât know anything about Japan, but weâve been coming down to Argentina for nearly 20 years. Itâs a country rich in resources. And know-how. But poor in public policies. Here, they subsidize poverty and tax the producers. And theyâve turned Argentina into a poor country. âPeople around here are poor. Most are unemployed. But itâs hard to find people to pick grapes. You almost have to beg them to come to work. It wasnât always like that. Even 20 years ago, when we first came here [we had come in a groupâ¦with Rick], it wasnât like this. âJust look at Buenos Aires. There are thousands of buildings that are relics of a Belle Epochâ¦a time when average Argentines had the money and the ambition to build nice buildings. Now, a few still want fine suburban housesâ¦but most live in the run-down relics of Buenos Airesâ¦or the unfinished, improvised housing in the outer boroughs. âThe GDP per capita is only $10,000 per person. Even people on Social Security get three times as much in the US.â When the music stops We invited Rick into the living room, where we have a grand piano given to us by a friend. âThat piano was owned by Robustiano Patron-Costas. His story tells us a lot about what happened here. He was a very energetic investor who became one of the richest men in the country (at a time when the country had a lot of rich men) by doing something remarkable. He developed a vast sugar-producing industry, in the middle of what had been almost wasteland. He built a refineryâ¦houses for the staffâ¦a hospitalâ¦a railroad. âHe got very rich. And he was urged to run for president⦠a kind of gaucho Calvin Coolidge who represented âconservativeâ voters who believed that they could improve their lives by hard work and hard money. That is, he approved of what we called in our latest book âthe win-win dealâ and disapproved of anything that got in the way. âBut there was another, fast-growing element in Argentine society. Back then, people believed that democracy would solve all their political problemsâ¦and the idealists were eager to extend the vote to all citizens. Today, that seems like the right thing to do. But it suddenly changed the political calculus of the country. Politicians found they could win by appealing to the masses of immigrants in the capital city, Buenos Aires. And they appealed to them by offering them various âsocialâ benefits â that is, free stuff. âThis is essentially what the âPeronistsâ did. And they won election after election, promising more and more programs, for the next 7 decades. More and more unproductive jobs. More and more welfare. âBut waitâ¦where to get the money? Tax the rich! âRobustiano was the perfect enemy. Immensely wealthy. Old-fashioned. A bit of a fuddy-duddy. And he represented the Old Orderâ¦people who had gotten rich before the government began actively managing the economy. âHe was accused of exploiting his workers (who previously had no jobs, no education, no incomes and no health care.) His gentlemanâs club in Salta was confiscated by the new, leftist government. And the political situation became so tense, he had to flee to Uruguay. âFrom then on, it was one disaster after another. âBoom, bust, boom againâ¦Inflation, crash, default, coup dâetat, military takeover, war, new currency, new government, inflation again. âWhee! What a ride! âAfter 7 decades, Argentines have learned how to surviveâ, we concluded, âbut not to prosperâ. Our advice: invest in wheelbarrows. Regards, Bill Bonner, For The Daily Reckoning Australia The post The Road to Argentina appeared first on Daily Reckoning Australia. [Image] Here are Some More Investing Tips and Resources. Enjoy! Sponsored [Banking Nightmare]( During and after the Great Financial Crisis of 2008, 485 U.S. banks went under.â¯Here at Weiss Ratings, we warned about 484 â an accuracy rate of 99.8%. Now, we have a new warning.â¯But this time, itâs not just about a few hundred banks â¦â¯itâs about nearly every single bank in America ⦠[Get all the details here]( [Privacy Policy/Disclosures]( [The Road to Argentina](?site= And on Wednesday, the Fed signalled which way it would go. From Bloomberg: âFed Caught Between Inflation and Bank Crisisâ: âAll eyes in the financial and economic world will be laser-focused Wednesday on the Federal Reserve as Chair Jerome Powell tries to balance his fight against inflation against a sudden banking crisis. âPowell and his colleagues began their meeting Tuesday with the outcome unusually unclear. While most economists expect a quarter-point interest-rate hike, some say policymakers should pauseâ¦â Youâll already have the news by the time you read this. But from our point of view, it hardly matters. The Fed has already begun its âstealth pivotâ. And even though Wall Street still hasnât crashedâ¦and the economy still hasnât gone into an official recessionâ¦the powers-that-be are on the brink of panic. Meanwhile, at the end of the world⦠But here in Argentina, we are steeped in crisisâ¦surrounded by ineptitudeâ¦immersed in corruption. It gives us a sense of deja-vuâ¦as if the future of the US could be read in the pages of the Buenos Aires Herald over the last 70 years. So rather than speculate about what the Fed will doâ¦weâll look around us. Rick Rule invited us to open our eyes last week. Rick is an old friend who was tracking puma in Patagonia and decided to stop for a visit. He asked the same question many Dear Readers have posed: âYou could live anywhere, why do you live here? Yes, itâs beautiful in a rugged kinda way. But so is it where Dan lives in Wyoming. And they donât have inflation at 105% in Laramie.â Rick was referring to the latest inflation report. Over the last 12 months, Argentinaâs inflation rate has gone up from 100% to 105%: âINDEC: Prices jumped 6.6% in February, inflation 105.8% over last yearâ¦â Thatâs the highest inflation reading in 32 years. It reminds people of what may come next: hyperinflation. The last time inflation hit more than 100%, it ran all the way to 5,000%â¦when people needed a wheelbarrow full of pesos in order to buy a cup of coffee. The peso is going down against the dollar fast, too. When we arrived just a month ago, we were offered 370 pesos per dollar, on the black market, of course. Now, the exchange rate is 392 per dollar. Functional disfunction âIâd also like to know how an economy can function with 105% inflationâ, said Rick. âIt seems impossible. Who comes to work? Who votes for a president who allows inflation to get so high? How do people make ends meet? And yet, the electricity works. The airports are open and the planes fly. The steaks are thick and tasty. The wine is delicious. Youâd almost think nothing was wrong.â Our reply follows: âEconomists long ago singled out Japan and Argentina as economies that didnât seem to fit any of their models. But there are some things that are always and everywhere true⦠ââ¦and as Milton Friedman put it âif you want more of something, subsidize it; if you want less of something, tax itâ. âWe donât know anything about Japan, but weâve been coming down to Argentina for nearly 20 years. Itâs a country rich in resources. And know-how. But poor in public policies. Here, they subsidize poverty and tax the producers. And theyâve turned Argentina into a poor country. âPeople around here are poor. Most are unemployed. But itâs hard to find people to pick grapes. You almost have to beg them to come to work. It wasnât always like that. Even 20 years ago, when we first came here [we had come in a groupâ¦with Rick], it wasnât like this. âJust look at Buenos Aires. There are thousands of buildings that are relics of a Belle Epochâ¦a time when average Argentines had the money and the ambition to build nice buildings. Now, a few still want fine suburban housesâ¦but most live in the run-down relics of Buenos Airesâ¦or the unfinished, improvised housing in the outer boroughs. âThe GDP per capita is only $10,000 per person. Even people on Social Security get three times as much in the US.â When the music stops We invited Rick into the living room, where we have a grand piano given to us by a friend. âThat piano was owned by Robustiano Patron-Costas. His story tells us a lot about what happened here. He was a very energetic investor who became one of the richest men in the country (at a time when the country had a lot of rich men) by doing something remarkable. He developed a vast sugar-producing industry, in the middle of what had been almost wasteland. He built a refineryâ¦houses for the staffâ¦a hospitalâ¦a railroad. âHe got very rich. And he was urged to run for president⦠a kind of gaucho Calvin Coolidge who represented âconservativeâ voters who believed that they could improve their lives by hard work and hard money. That is, he approved of what we called in our latest book âthe win-win dealâ and disapproved of anything that got in the way. âBut there was another, fast-growing element in Argentine society. Back then, people believed that democracy would solve all their political problemsâ¦and the idealists were eager to extend the vote to all citizens. Today, that seems like the right thing to do. But it suddenly changed the political calculus of the country. Politicians found they could win by appealing to the masses of immigrants in the capital city, Buenos Aires. And they appealed to them by offering them various âsocialâ benefits â that is, free stuff. âThis is essentially what the âPeronistsâ did. And they won election after election, promising more and more programs, for the next 7 decades. More and more unproductive jobs. More and more welfare. âBut waitâ¦where to get the money? Tax the rich! âRobustiano was the perfect enemy. Immensely wealthy. Old-fashioned. A bit of a fuddy-duddy. And he represented the Old Orderâ¦people who had gotten rich before the government began actively managing the economy. âHe was accused of exploiting his workers (who previously had no jobs, no education, no incomes and no health care.) His gentlemanâs club in Salta was confiscated by the new, leftist government. And the political situation became so tense, he had to flee to Uruguay. âFrom then on, it was one disaster after another. âBoom, bust, boom againâ¦Inflation, crash, default, coup dâetat, military takeover, war, new currency, new government, inflation again. âWhee! What a ride! âAfter 7 decades, Argentines have learned how to surviveâ, we concluded, âbut not to prosperâ. Our advice: invest in wheelbarrows. Regards, Bill Bonner, For The Daily Reckoning Australia The post The Road to Argentina appeared first on Daily Reckoning Australia. [Continue Reading...](?site= [The Road to Argentina]( And, in case you missed it: - [Your Way Forward in This Global Mess](?site=
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