Tuesday, 18 May 2010

What is currency debasement and why gold will be the next world currency?

If the 2008 financial crisis was characterised by private debt being bailed out by public debt (ie borne by the long suffering taxpayer), then who will come to the rescue of sovereign debt? Which government(s) is going to foot the tab on another's profligacy? It seems another floor has just been built on the house of cards.

With this new set of economic machinations, the chart above points to next year’s sovereign debt estimates for the G7 and other key global economies. The U.S. debt in 2011 would be about equal to GDP (US$15 trillion) while the debt loads carried by Japan, Italy and Greece would exceed GDP.

There is a concern among investors that not all is right with the financial world and they don't fully understand it. They think central bankers might be debasing their currencies and so there is an interest developing in gold. If their personal wealth can be affected by the future inflation spawned by the trillions of dollars and euros created to finance economic rescue plans, then the potential implications for gold are profound.

What is currency debasement and how does one measure it? This may once have been the domain of a few old Germans, Latin Americans and Asians to think about. The recent ferocity in which it has struck Mittel Europa has un-nerved many who are slowly coming round to the view the Euro is heading inexorably towards Argentine peso status. It won't be just clattering pots and pans in the streets...the trade union molly-coddled Greeks can attest to something more vigourous.

Here’s one way to look at currency destruction. 10 years ago this week, US$1,000 bought nearly four ounces of gold and today US$1,000 won’t even get you a single ounce (today's spot price is US$1,215). Gold is money, so when you look at the gold-US dollar exchange rate, the dollar’s value has fallen by a startling 70%+ just in the past decade...and that's the global reserve currency!

To hold gold is not about getting rich, but a means to diversify assets and protect wealth.

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