Lessons from Chile

Hernan Buchi, former minister of finance in Chile, recently published a new book called “The Economic Transformation of Chile” (link) where he outlined comprehensive economic reforms that boosted economic growth, lowered unemployment, reduced poverty and set the stage for more than two decades of robust growth and an economic turnaround which has been unprecedented in Latin America.

The books serves the reader with a menu of intriguing facts, curious statistics and precise analysis of how macroeconomic stability was achieved. Chile has been the leading nation in Latin America with the most stable and predictable inflation rate. Country’s decent fiscal management and solid macroeconomic outlook were important cornerstones behind the invitation to the OECD.

According to Jose Pinera (link), Chile is expected to enter the club of developed nations in 2018, the first Latin American country ever. Chile pioneered the privatization of the pension system in early 1980s. Today, country’s fully-funded pension system based on individual savings accounts is a model for the rest of the world (link) in overhauling unfunded pay-as-you-go social security systems.

Interview With John Rubino

Trace: Welcome back to the 65th episode of the RunToGold.com podcast. This will be an interview with John Rubino. Welcome John!

John: Hey Trace! How are you?

Trace: Great, great. You’re the author of The Collapse of the Dollar.

John: Co-author.

Trace: Yeah, co-author with James Turk, the founder of Gold Money, and then you also run your own website, www.DollarCollapse.com, which is a good hub in the gold niche.

We were talking a little bit before the call about how the stock market’s kind of topped off and the capital seems to be moving out of the stock market into the dollar, which seems to be pressing the price of gold down a little bit. Is there anything else you’d like to add to that initial nugget?

John: Yeah. The stock market, especially in the U.S., has had a really nice run from the 2008 bottom. It’s up about 65% overall. Just that by itself will tell you that a correction is coming, but at the same time we’ve got a lot of big bombs waiting to off out in the world.

Greece is on the verge of defaulting, and several other European countries are having a lot of trouble living within the Euro regime as Germany has defined it. So you’ve got a lot of trouble there, and the potential break-up of the Euro zone, which will send the currency markets into turmoil.

Then you’ve got Japan financially imploding, and a lot of other stuff going on that could send us back into worries about a 1930’s-style deflationary crash.

If that happens, you’ll see the stock market tank and you’ll see a lot of safe haven money as well flowing into the dollar, even though the dollar is obviously not a safe haven anymore. It’s just relative to a lot of these other currencies right now a little bit safer.

The question is what happens to gold in that kind of a scenario. It could be that it gets a lot of the safe haven money that’s flowing into the dollar as well. A lot of people will buy gold at the same time they’re buying dollars in a flight to safety, and that’s good for gold.

Or if we start worrying about a deflationary crash, that’s bad for inflation hedges – which a lot of people see gold as being one of the best – so we could see commodities in general and gold in particular really tank going forward.

As gold investors we need to be aware that the tide might be shifting once again back towards worries about deflation, so we need to be prepared in case there’s a big crack in the price of gold, which would just be the one final buying opportunity before everything takes off, because governments will respond to this.

If we do see Greece implode and the stock market tank, governments will really ramp up the printing presses then. If we’re running a trillion dollar deficit this year in the U.S., they’ll make it five trillion going forward, because they’ll be so worried about a deflationary crash. At some point that just totally destroys the value of the paper currencies out there.

So if gold drops below $1,000 an ounce here in the coming turmoil, then it’s time to load up the wagon. We’ve got a lot of dry powder right now, just in case we see that. I’d love one more chance of getting it in triple instead of quadruple digits.

Trace: Right. Now obviously you’re familiar with My Great Credit Contraction Pyramid. We’ve got gold and silver and then Federal Reserve Notes right above them. They abut each other in the liquidity pyramid.

I’ve often written about what adds so much value to a currency is its velocity, its ability to be used in the ordinary daily transactions. That’s one of the reasons the dollar is treated as a valuable instrument, because we’re able to exchange it in so many daily uses.

It’s kind of like a language. If you speak Swahili, like Monex or hawala, that’s nowhere near as valuable as if you speak English, only because so many other people also speak English.

So one of the problems that we have – because I definitely see this deflationary issue, it is the issue, it’s the great credit contraction – one of the problems I see for the gold investor is that gold isn’t really used in an ordinary daily transaction. It doesn’t really have that velocity.

You could say not very many money “speak gold” in their economic transactions, which leads us right into that massive article I wrote about Ron Paul’s bill H.R. 4248 Free Competition In Currency Act of 2009.

What effect do you think this bill, which will eliminate Federal legal tender law, which will prohibit states from assessing taxes on bullion, which will remove any of the criminal code for these types of tax-related problems and then also nullify any convictions, like the Kahre case in Nevada –

What type of effect do you think this bill could have on gold and silver and platinum becoming a more widely spoken economic language, or more widely-used monetary instrument?

John: A few things.

First of all, that’s a really good article, a brilliant piece of history and very educational.

Second, Ron Paul is by far the most interesting politician out there. He’s the only guy doing anything worth watching in Washington right now. As you say in the article, his bill to audit the Fed looked like it was a joke to begin with, because the powers that be would never let that happen, and yet it seems like it might happen.

There are still a lot of roadblocks in front of it, but because it’s resonating with the public, it’s generating enough votes to have an outside chance of passing.  That means you have to take seriously his new bill that you just explained.

Even though it’s even more of a long shot than auditing the Fed, it’s still a very powerful and very interesting idea that could capture the imagination of people, once they understand it.

If it ever passed – and it’s still a huge long shot, because the powers that be will never voluntarily give up control of the money supply – but if it did happen, it would be really interesting in a lot of ways, because if the dollar faced real competition, it would be shown to be the sham that it is.

It’s not based on anything. The government can and does print basically as many new dollars as they need to finance their re-election every year, and because of over-supply its value is plunging.If you put that up against other currencies that are circulating that don’t have those problems, the differences become really stark.

However, it also might activate Gresham’s Law, in which bad money chases good money off the field, so we still might end up just hoarding gold and silver, because as a store of value they’re so superior to dollars that we’ll want to spend dollars.

If there are gold coins around, we’ll take them and put them in a safe deposit box and spend our dollars. So we’ll still get massive dollar velocity at the same time that it’s losing its value.

Trace: I think a lot of people don’t realize the costs that are imposed on business by the current monetary and banking system. We’ve not only got the inflation tax but as I discussed H.R. 627 The Credit Card Act we have also got the transaction tax that Visa is just making an absolute killing with, and the credit card industries, which of course are all backed by the bank.

All of these things add so many additional costs to using that particular medium of transaction that if we were to remove even the 28% rate gain tax on gold, all the sudden you’ve got a currency that’s now 30% more efficient than the other one. It’s 45% more efficient just in 2009. That was the gold price rise.

But then you take into account say a 3% credit card fee. How much is it, 8 cents for every gallon of gas goes to Visa? So if we could eliminate some of these transaction costs using much more efficient tools, like gold money for example, which has a maximum fee of $2, and yet I just sent $100 with Paypal, and Paypal charged $3.80. If I’d sent $1,000, it would have been $30. There’s a lot of opportunity for competing currencies to really make a lot of change in the system.

However, I think I agree with you that the powers that be, the ones that currently have the legal right to counterfeit while everybody else is prohibited in that type of currency production activity – they don’t really want to give that up, especially not voluntarily.

So where we place the issue of revolution, you can do it with money, as Dr. Edwin Vieira Jr. says, or you can do it with guns.

I thought this was really interesting in my article. I don’t know if you remember, I had the quote from Bernanke about the U.S. government has a printing press so it can create as many dollars as it wants at virtually no cost, so I had that quote.

Then I had Section 19 of the 1792 Coinage Act, which provides that anybody who debases or makes worse the currency shall be guilty of a penalty and shall suffer death.

Wouldn’t it be interesting if – in addition to H.R. 4248 – we were also to start floating the idea politically to start implementing the death penalty for these types of counterfeiting activities that the Federal Reserve and the banks are currently engaged in.

We could perhaps start revoking bank charters for these types of violations, which would be the equivalent of executing a corporate entity, removing their bank charter status or things like that.

Goldman-Sachs – boom – you guys lose your bank charter. Your corporation is dissolved and you don’t get to do business anymore because you’re engaged in the type of behavior that China just executed one of their rogue derivative traders over.

This could be very interesting to see how we evolve politically in this sphere.

John: I agree, it’s a really attractive idea, but it’s sort of in the realm of gold bug porn. It would be so great, but they have such a long hard road to travel before they become even conceivable in the mainstream, because the bankers are basically in charge.

The idea that this kind of thing would become law over their objection means, like you said, a revolution. If we tried to do it with money it means that it would evolve into having to do it with guns probably to get to that point, but it’s a nice idea.

Trace: You know what we’re starting to see, especially with these Tea Party activities that are going on, with the banks and their massive PR nightmare, we’re really starting to see the zeitgeist, the culture that we swim in, we’re starting to see it really change.

A lot of popular sentiment is being directed in anger towards the Wall Street banks. How much longer is it going to take, how many more people’s retirements and pensions are just going to evaporate before they really get fed up with this stuff?

John: I think we have to have the crash, basically, because we’re still immensely self-centered and selfish – especially baby boomers.

We’ve always voted for free stuff, we expect to get free stuff, and we expect someone else to pay for it, and that hasn’t changed. In fact, it’s gotten more extreme. As the economy tanks, more and more people start demanding more and more stuff from the government to help them.

Trace: More and more free stuff.

John: More and more free stuff at someone else’s expense. Unless things get so extreme and the powers that be are so completely discredited that we actually have a national conversation in which these ideas come up and are debated and win out, this stuff, at least in its more extreme form, is not going to be enacted.

I think the system has to fall apart before enough people start paying attention and asking why it fell apart before we get to that point. The really interesting discussion happens two or three years out, when things have just totally tanked and when the whole concept of paper money is actively being debated, and then we have a chance to win.

Then we can put the original constitutional idea of sound money out there, forming a consensus around limited government, free enterprise, private property, sound money, and going back to constitutional principles.

But until that time, it looks to me like we’re still a childish selfish society that is going to run itself off a cliff before it really comes to grip with the mistakes.

Trace: You raise a great point there. You’ve got this baby boom generation that has just kind of moved through the garden hose like a basketball.

Now in 2016 you’re going to have 78 million baby boomers going up against 112 million millennials, and the baby boomers buying into this idea of government, which is just the fiction that everybody can live off everyone else.

They’re going to want to live off all the millennials, who are going to start entering their prime earning years and they’re going to say, “Why in the world am I paying 15% for Social Security when I know I’m never going to see any of it?”

And that’s the millennials that are actually able to find jobs or get employed, because the economy will just be that much further in depression because of all the preventing of the credit liquidation and trying to keep wage prices up and things like that that the Obama administration has implemented.

It’s going to really, I think, contribute dialogue with the ideas – assuming the internet stays relatively free and open, which I don’t really see any idea why it wouldn’t, because we enshrine free speech so much in our Western democracies on all sides of the aisles –

We’re going to have videos like Peter Schiff was right, and all the people who voted for Obama will have just lived through four or maybe eight years of this grind economically, and they’re going to want new ideas.

What are the ideas going to be? They’re going to be Peter Schiff or Ron Paul, who will look like seers that foresaw and forecasted all this happening, so we might see a big shift of the zeitgeist towards that.

In the 2004 election we didn’t really have YouTube as a functional usage, and now everybody watches YouTube. The same thing with Facebook. It’s gone from being absolutely nothing to having hundreds of millions of users in just a few short years. I think we could see quite a bit of change happen so quickly because of these technological advances that we have.

John: Oh, absolutely. We will have a national and a global discussion about this stuff. I just hope Ron Paul stays healthy so he’s around to lead the good guys.

But we won’t have the discussion, I don’t think, until enough people have been shaken out of their complacency and realize that they just can’t have free stuff. [laughing] We aren’t there yet.

Right now you and I get this, and we see Peter Schiff and Ron Paul and a few other guys out there making these really good points, but 99% of the people in the U.S. are still not paying attention.

They’re worried about their 401Ks, a little less worried now than they were a year ago, and they’re worried about their job and they’re worried about the value of their house, but they’re mostly looking to the government for help.

They expect that help to come from somewhere. They expect the government to get the money and to give it to them. That’s as far as they go in terms of thinking about how the world works.

Over time, when things really fall apart, that 1% will grow to 15-20% of people who actually understand what’s going on. Then we’re going to have an interesting debate, because 15-20% of a group, if they’re committed enough and knowledgeable enough, can change the nature of the group itself.

That’s our challenge three or five years from now, to be part of a well-educated, seriously committed group of people who want free markets, free minds, limited government, sound money – the constitutional principles – and it will be a huge battle, but it’ll be interesting.

Trace: Seth Godin talks about being this lynchpin that leads the tribe. We’ve got our little gold bug tribe, and we were talking about this before the call, how the traffic to our websites is so small compared to the other large websites out there, like the Huffington Post or some of these other really large blogs.

Our little gold niche is a relatively small niche despite the silver price and platinum price rises, and yet we could see this huge influx of people who are going to need to be educated and need to have this discussion.

I’d really encourage people to try and get involved at the local level with your local businesses. I guess if you can hold your nose and put on a Teflon suit, maybe go down to some political meeting and try to really make a difference and educate one’s neighbors on these issues.

Is there anything else that you’d like to add?

John: No, I think we’ve covered the high points. We’ll have to get together and do this again.

Trace: Yeah, we’ve covered quite a bit. Thanks, John, for coming over to the RunToGold.com podcast and I hope everyone gets a copy of The Collapse Of The Dollar.

John: Thanks for having me on, Trace.

DISCLOSURES: Long physical gold and silver with no interest in sovereign debt from Greece, Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Spain, etc., Euros or the problematic SLV, Streettracks Gold ETF Trust Shares or the platinum ETFs.

Retirement Accounts Could Boost Treasuries

The Federal Government is running massive budget deficits which is creating a massive supply of Treasuries.  But there is no demand and so the Federal Reserve is monetizing the debt.  But these colored coupons merely amount to certificates of confiscation.  Where will Congress find the capital to buy Treasuries?  Most likely, your retirement account and screwing up your retirement calculator.

MASSIVE BUDGET DEFICITS

The Obama administration is on track to need approximately $2T of new debt sales or about 300% of 2008 debt to fund their aggressive spending.  But an disproptionately large amount of purchases come from the ‘Household Sector’.  Eric Sprott of Sprott Asset Management enlightens us:

We must admit that we were surprised to discover that “Households” had bought so many Treasuries in 2009.  They bought 35 times more government debt than they did in 2008. … Amazingly, we discovered that the Household Sector is actually just a catch-all category.  It represents the buyers left over who can’t be slotted into the other group headings. …

Our concern now is that this is all starting to resemble one giant Ponzi scheme.  We all know that the Fed has been active in the market for T-bills.  Under the auspices of Quantitative Easing, they bought almost 50% of new Treasury issues in Q2 and almost 30% in Q3.  It serves to remember that the whole point of selling new US Treasury bonds is to attract outside capital to finance deficits or to pay off existing debts that are maturing.  We are now in a situation, however, where the Fed is printing dollars to buy Treasuries as a means of faking the Treasury’s ability to attract outside capital. …

As we have seen so illustriously over the past year, all Ponzi schemes eventually fail under their own weight.  The US debt scheme is no different.

Ponzi schemes fail when capital seeks safer and more liquid assets by burrowing down the liquidity pyramid.  This is similar to the process that happens in a credit contraction.  As I wrote earlier, the Federal Reserve will fail with quantitative easing.

CERTIFICATES OF CONFISCATION

Treasury instruments have been, are and most likely always will be certificates of confiscation.  The saving retirement calculators are almost guaranteed to fail because of this uncertainty.  Here is a visual explanation so you can understand the math.

So likewise Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) are just an invitation to be stolen from.  This makes your simple retirement calculator even less useful.

RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS

Congress looted the Social Security Ponzi scam many years ago.  The social security retirement calculator is completely broken and predictably riddled with fraud.

Where is the next largest pool of capital for these vampire squids?  Yes, your 401k (now a 104k), SEP-IRA, Roth IRA, etc.  How will these tax eating parasites slurp that value?

The Telegraph reported,

The Argentine state is taking control of the country’s privately-managed pension funds in a drastic move to raise cash. … So, over $29bn of Argentine civic savings are to be used as a funding kitty for the populist antics of President Cristina Kirchner.

On 8 January 2010 Kirchner has attempted to fire the chairman of the central bank because he has refused to use about $6.6B of the funds to pay international debt that falls due in 2010 but a federal judge has ruled Mr. Redrado should be reinstated at the independent central bank.  What a mess!  The President wants to fire the banker because he will not hand over everyone’s pension money to overseas bankers.

Businessweek has reported,

Seven in 10 U.S. households object to the idea of the government requiring retirees to convert part of their savings into annuities guaranteeing a steady payment for life, according to an institute-funded report today. … The institute’s member companies manage $11.6 trillion of assets in mutual funds, including employer-sponsored 401(k) accounts.

While the state sponsored retirement accounts may appear alluring, particularly when your employer matches your contribution, you may get more than you bargained for.  Like this English man if you contribute to your state sponsored retirement accounts then you may find unwittingly find yourself in an uncomfortable situation and have no one to blame but yourself.  The tax eating looters and moochers will attempt to force you to become infected with their lecherous colored coupons.

CONCLUSION

The nation does not need Washington DC and individuals do not need Washington DC usurping their retirement accounts and forcing the purchase of Treasuries.  Doing so is simply attempting to sustain the unsustainable.  But that is most likely what will happen.

Now is the time to begin reducing your exposure to this political risk and safely sheath your capital in safer assets outside of these retirement accounts.  For a reliable and free retirement calculator use the Numeraire Spreadsheet and realize that for hundreds of years a one ounce silver coin will buy you approximately one steak dinner.  For the ultimate no confidence vote just buy gold, silver or platinum and learn some good hawala techniques like the Argentines.

DISCLOSURES:  Long physical gold, silver and platinum with no position the problematic SLV or GLD ETFs.

Effective Tax Rates Around the World

Here’s a short brief (link) by The Economist on effective tax rates around the world. At a stunning 55 percent effective tax rate on annual gross earning of $100,000, Slovenia is the most heavily taxed country on earth followed by India, Italy, Sweden and Argentina.


Source: The Economist (link)

Saving Social Security: The SSA’s Alternatives To Higher Taxes, Privatization

The Social Security system is approaching a budgetary crisis point. Political rhetoric aside, the Social Security Administration (SSA) states in its latest strategic plan that, without a fundamental change, by 2017 the amount of tax revenue collected will not cover the amount of benefits paid.

When that happens, the SSA will begin cashing in the bonds within its Trust Fund. These bonds—to quote the SSA, “backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government” —represent sufficient funds to keep benefits flowing until 2041; however, asking the U.S. Treasury for so much cash will put pressure on the federal budget long before that date.

According to the Cato Institute, 60% of U.S. citizens currently working believe they’ll never receive benefits before the SSA goes belly-up, and they could be right. After all, Social Security is not an insurance program but a pay-as-you-go tax that transfers money directly from the workers of today to the retirees of today, not to an investment program for the workers’ future benefits.

The leverage between generations becomes more highly geared each year. In 1945, 10 years after the SSA was established, there were 42 workers for each beneficiary; today, with longer life expectancies, improved healthcare and lower birth rates, there are 3.3. This situation is not unique to the U.S., and benefits concerns encompass the globe; the UK now has more pensioners than teenagers below the age of 16, and their Department for Work and Pensions is also seeking a long-term funding solution.

Former President Bill Clinton discussed three possible salvage operations: higher taxes, reduced benefits or privatization. Senator Hillary Clinton, during her run for the Democratic nomination, refused to place any of those alternatives on the “proverbial table.” Senator Barack Obama wants to remove the cap on payroll taxes, while Senator McCain favors personal retirement accounts.

Improving Efficiency

Meanwhile, the Social Security Administration is quietly pursuing another alternative.

Back in mid-June of 2008, with producer prices for finished food products soaring 9.8% in six months, businesses realized that not all of these increased costs could be passed along to customers (the Consumer Price Index for finished food products rose only 6.6% during the same timeframe). The search began for ways to trim costs. Airlines charged for refreshments and jettisoned heavy entertainment equipment to increase fuel mileage on long-distance flights.

Amid this corporate scramble, McDonald’s neither raised prices nor cut services. Instead, they concentrated on increasing efficiency through such means as conserving energy, utilizing new technologies and purchasing supplies through long-term contracts. Their hamburgers remained the same (for good or ill) and so did their prices, without shaving profit margins to the bone.

Can improved efficiency really help Social Security?

  • The U.S. Treasury in January announced a new program that issues Social Security benefits on prepaid debit cards. Rather than issuing, printing and mailing checks, a computer program simply recharges the card each month, with annual cost savings of up to $44 million.
  • In addition to the direct costs of benefits, there’s also the cost of customer service. To offset this, the SSA has expanded the range of services available online, reducing administrative costs—not to mention saving the beneficiary’s time and gasoline.
  • It’s a sad fact that disability benefits are sometimes paid to individuals who are no longer (or never truly were) disabled. To reduce such fraud, the SSA conducts periodic disability redetermination reviews, which save $10 in no-longer-paid benefits for every $1 spent to operate the program.

In other words, yes, although increased efficiency cannot cure the problem, it can reduce pressure on the system. This is part of the solution being contemplated in the UK, where the House of Commons is debating a bill to simplify regulations for private pension schemes.

Another potential solution, modeled on the Galveston County employees’ plan, charges a monthly premium of just over 12% of wages, roughly the same as Social Security withholding. This premium provides private disability, life and retirement insurance, invested in CDs and annuities and earning around 6–8% per year. Although this plan does not eliminate all risk from retirement investing, it does reduce it below that of the stock market while earning around three times as much as the SSA Trust Fund bonds.

Now that the U.S. Treasury owns 79.9% of America’s largest insurance company, AIG, perhaps this is a viable option for the rest of us, too.

Does Your Family Have $1.3 million to Spare?

The federal government’s debt will soon reach $10 trillion. That’s about $130,000 per family of four in the United States.

But if you think that’s bad, then consider the real national debt. After all, the phony $9+ trillion “debt” does not include any of the following:

  1. The Social Security deficit
  2. The Medicare budget shortfall
  3. The new Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit
  4. Unforeseen (but virtually guaranteed) future wars

According to Richard W. Fisher, president of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, the first three of the above account for $99.2 trillion. Of this, Medicare makes up 69%, Social Security 14%, and “conservative” President Bush’s Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit 17% (more than Social Security!).

But what about #4? The U.S. has been in a nearly perpetual state of war since Pearl Harbor, and we now have a “War on Terror,” the proponents of which admit has no end in sight and could last for 100 years. War is expensive, and yet government accounting doesn’t even consider it. We’re spending at least $6 billion per month in Iraq, and there are more (and bigger) wars on the horizon, if history is a reliable guide.

How do liberal and neoconservative economists – the ones who scoff at the gold standard and celebrate the Fed – respond to this? For the most part, they don’t. If they do, they make ridiculous claims that “enhanced productivity” will allow us to claw our way out of this hole. But for the most part, they ignore the matter and hope the monetary and fiscal facade can remain standing another day longer, hopefully until they’re in their graves from old age. Unless these economists are pushing 80, I fear they may not get their wishes.

The fact is that the U.S. is bankrupt. We’re just lucky that the rest of the world is still living the fantasy, pretending that the emperor (or in this case, the Empire) has clothes. Sooner or later, and I’m betting it’s sooner, the chickens will come home to roost. The U.S. dollar will follow all fiat currencies that came before it in reaching its intrinsic value of $0.

Or another way of looking at it, the Fed can simply print $1.3 million per family as part of a “national debt bailout” and call it even. I’m sure there would be plenty of court economists who would celebrate this as a majestic action by the U.S. economy’s central planners! But one way or another, Dollar Hegemony is coming to an end. The sensible thing to do is get prepared.

An Austrian Economist in the U.S. Senate?

Since I wrote my most recent article about the economic and fiscal views of the “third-party” presidential candidates – Ralph Nader, Cynthia McKinney, Chuck Baldwin, and Bob Barr – I thought I’d use my blog to highlight a U.S. Senate candidate with an Austrian economics-friendly platform. His name is Scotty Boman, and he’s a Libertarian from Michigan.

Boman’s issues page is divided into three categories: Peace, Liberty, and Prosperity. This triumvirate of topics will be familiar to fans of Ron Paul, the most famous popularizer of Austrian economics of all time, and that’s because Scotty Boman was a grassroots leader of the Ron Paul campaign in Michigan. In fact, Boman voted for Paul not only in 2008 but also in 1988 when Paul was the Libertarian Party’s nominee for president.

Since this is an economics blog, I’m concerned here with the candidate’s views on “Prosperity.” On the downside, Scotty doesn’t paint a very rosy picture when discussing the Federal Reserve System, the income tax, and Social Security. This is a common knock against Austrians, who are often said to be even more pessimistic than Communists! But hey, we see the direction the U.S. is headed, and we refuse to put on the rose-colored glasses. Sorry!

Boman points out that the U.S. dollar has lost 95% of its value since the 1913 debut of the income tax and Federal Reserve System. Of the income tax, he says he supports “repealing it and replacing it with nothing” and makes a mostly moralistic argument against taxation in general. While I agree, the view has little to do with economics. Boman’s views on the Fed are more suitable for discussion here.

Boman says the Federal Reserve System has been “absolutely ruinous” to our country. He points out the ridiculousness – so eagerly regurgitated by the financial media – that the Fed exists to “combat inflation” when, in reality, only the Fed can cause inflation in the first place!

“They do this by expanding the money supply. Each time the Fed creates new money, it diminishes the value of your dollar-based financial holdings. It thus imposes a hidden tax – the ‘inflation tax’ – and redistributes wealth from the poor and working class to the rich and politically connected.”

This is a hardcore Austrian view in line with the “principled populism” of Dr. Murray Rothbard.

As for a solution, Boman supports the revolutionary idea of free market competing currencies. This would take the power of determining “what is money” out of the hands of the government and put it into the hands of the people. The core of this philosophy rests on the Austrian “Theory on the Origin of Money,” which states that money arose naturally as the most commonly accepted means of exchange during the course of prehistoric barter. Gold and silver became “money” for a variety of reasons but basically because they were widely accepted and easily transportable. Once you see that the government doesn’t need to declare anything money, that the free market can do that, then the Federal Reserve System’s theft is demystified. You can see the Man Behind the Curtain and find out that the Emperor has no clothes. It’s not a pretty sight.

Of Social Security, Boman’s solution isn’t nearly as well defined. He basically throws his hands up in the air and admits there is no good solution, or at least, he doesn’t have one. This is refreshing from a politician. But he does offer one reform: make Social Security voluntary and allow young people to opt out. I know I would.

Author’s note: Since writing this article, I have become involved with the Boman08 campaign.