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Peter Schiff: Bull Markets In Asia And Precious Metals
Written by HardAssetsInvestor.com   
December 03, 2008 10:42 AM EST


Mike Norman, HardAssetsInvestor.com (Norman): Hello everybody, and welcome back to HardAssetsInvestor.com's interview series. I'm Mike Norman, your host. Well, here he is, Mr. Doom and Gloom himself, Peter Schiff.

I know you've been of this point of view that … just let everything go down, and somehow that's beneficial.

Peter Schiff, president of Euro Pacific Capital (Schiff): It's called capitalism.

Norman: No, it's not called capitalism. Capitalism has a political structure over it; there are laws, there are regulations.

Schiff: It's all that regulation, all that interference that's the source of our problems. It's the government that interfered with the market; that's why we had a housing bubble, that's why we have this phony economy ― because politicians mettle in the market, and they tried to direct capital in politically favored ways. That's what causes these problems.

Norman: Some people say, basically, Wall Street was given the keys and the government walked away, that it was a totally unregulated environment, and the cutting of regulations to the bone is what precipitated the whole bubble.

Schiff: They gave Wall Street the keys. But the problem is Alan Greenspan, the Fed ― they supplied the alcohol, Wall Street got drunk. It's the government that is responsible, it's the government that supplied the alcohol. If we had sound money and if we didn't have Freddie and Fannie …

Norman: We're going to get to the gold standard in a second, but I have to disagree with you on this, and this is just a fact. The one thing the Fed has control over is the monetary base, and if you look at the last six years ― which, by the way, includes the period when Alan Greenspan was in there supposedly creating all this money ― the monetary base shrunk. In fact, it got down to almost zero growth. We have never seen that, with the exception being periods of recession, but they've [the Fed] been very, very tight.

Schiff: It was showing up in other places. Look at the asset bubbles that they blew up, look how low interest rates were. Maybe they should have been looking at M3 [money supply statistics], but I guess that was growing so much they stopped covering it.

Norman: All right. You say that we'd be better off on a gold standard. I've heard you say that, but yet the trade-off with a gold standard, while yes you can maintain stable prices, the cost is less money. Gold standards are inherently deflationary. How can you not…? Even extreme economists [don't] buy into this idea now.

Schiff: Look, we were on a gold standard until 1971, right? We didn't leave it until then. What gold does …

Norman: FDR made it illegal for Americans to own gold in 1933.

Schiff: But international trade … the dollar was redeemable in gold up until 1971 … so all the currencies were backed by the dollar, which was convertible into gold. What gold does is it puts discipline on central bankers and governments: they can't simply spend money that they don't have, they can't run deficits, so it keeps a limit on the size of government.




 

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Comments (3)

 Friday, 05 December 2008 4:33 EST - Posted by Graham Nayler

 
If we aren't going to have only gold and silver as tender in payment of debts in the USA doesn't anyone else think that maybe we should think about possibly changing Article I Section 10 of the Constitution of the United States of America where it specifically states that "No State shall make anything but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts"? Shouldn't people at least be aware that technically this is the law of this land?

 Saturday, 06 December 2008 12:53 EST - Posted by George

 
It amazes me to this day that Mike Norman still does not get it. Our monetary system is a fraud. Our monetary system is counterfeit. How can you put a value on something that is created out of thin air Mike? Peter is right, this economy is phony. Mike Norman needs to fess up and admit how wrong he was, and apologize to Peter Schiff through years of mocking, laughing, and just being plain arrogant towards Peter. How can Hard Asset Investor employ such a guy who has been consistently wrong through the years is beyond me. Mike Norman is nothing but a tool of the banksters who profit off of debt. Mike Norman is a propagandist; anyone who has listened to his advice in the last few years has lost money. Since the Federal Reserve was enacted, our currency has lost 95% of its value. We had a Great Depression under the Federal Reserve. Wasn't the Federal Reserve established to prevent these things from happening Mike? Be a man and apologize to Peter. There is a reason why gold and silver is in our Constitution. There is a reason why our Constitution didn't call for a central bank. There is a reason why gold and silver is money, and Federal Reserve Notes are not. There is a reason why gold and silver never go to zero. There is a reason why all fiat currencies go to zero. I will end with this note; Thomas Jefferson warned us that Central Banks are a larger threat to our nation than standing armies. He also warned us that paper is only the ghost of money and not money itself. I would say that Mike Norman is a fraud, who continues to promote this fraud of deficit spending and perpetual debt as being good for our economy which in reality has always resulted in failure. Mike Norman needs to find a new line of work.

 Friday, 20 February 2009 11:59 EST - Posted by Sid Johnson

 
You guys are arguing over a fight that has been over for decades. There were lots of problems with a gold standard, one of which was that there was not enough of it to facilite all the trade going on in the world. The value of the US dollar is set on the open international market, not controlled by the US govt in some sort of conspiracy. Gold is just a commodity, which can have a bubble of its own, as many people will find to their chagrin.



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