Laissez Faire Today

The Laissez Faire Club Daily e-Letter

Small Package, Tons of Truth

Economic trends today are a litany of awful: high personal debt, stratospheric government debt, persistent trade deficits, declining living standards, government out of control, cycles of bubbles, zero return on savings, unemployment, and the ever-higher cost of living.

Everyone complains about these all the time. They make it hard to live a normal life. They produce vast anxiety. Some in this list are wrecking lives every day. They make us feel trapped with no options. And the problems are mounting by the day. Solutions seem beyond the political system as we know it.

What if all these problems have the same fundamental cause, the same root? This is the argument of Addison Wiggin and Samantha Buker in their fantastic book The Little Book of the Shrinking Dollar. There is a lot of truth packed in these pages. It is just about the best primer on the problem I’ve ever seen. I take it back: It is the best primer on the subject now in print.

While reading, I kept thinking this is the book I’ll give Mom, my neighbor, my dentist, that guy at the church who puzzles about economics and my outlook in particular, and maybe I need a stack of them to hand out to people who are deeply frustrated about the way things are going.

To find the answers to today’s burning economic questions, it is not enough to watch the business news or comb through the papers. Nor should it be necessary to plough through a 1,000-page treatise to figure out what’s wrong with the world. Wiggin and Buker explain all the essential points and connects the dots between many seemingly disparate problems, but in a small and entertaining book. And the answers make sense.

The merit of this book is that it ties all these far-flung things together and points to a unified cause. As he argues, these are not acts of nature or historical accidents that just so happen to be visited upon this generation. The dollar, for example, is shrinking for a specific institutional reason. So it is with the bubbles, the debt, the rising prices, the stock market instability and the falling living standards. Wiggin and Buker manage to explain them all in an analytically rigorous way that doesn’t put the reader to sleep.

Here’s the key thing. Something absolutely game changing happened in 1971. The dollar was untied from its last link to gold. The regime proclaimed it to be a new day. No more golden fetters! From now on, money would be backed by nothing but itself. Just paper, nothing more. The age of liquidity had arrived!

This was just one of many awful political decisions made by the Nixon administration, and there is no evidence that the administration thought it turn out to be that significant.

But the problems started immediately. They could be summed up in one world: inflation, meaning a constantly falling purchasing power of money. But that was just the beginning. The problems grew and grew, and the issues spread like a diseases, eventually affecting the whole of life.

And here we are 41 years later and the problems are spreading and too numerous to list. The solution is to make the money sound again and eliminate impediments to economic adjustment, but these ideas are regarded as too drastic and far flung. To solve the problem is not a technical one; instituting a gold standard or permitting competing currencies or allowing private alternatives to the dollar are all great ideas that could be put in place without much trouble. The real problem is that none of these solutions would not benefit the elites; on the contrary, the solutions to our problem would unseat the elites.

As a result, the spreading of the problem gets ever worse.

It’s like that scene in the Dr. Seuss book The Cat in the Hat Comes Back. Think of the pink color as fiat money. As Wikipedia describes the plot:

“The mother has left Sally and her unnamed brother alone for the day, but this time, they are instructed to clear away a huge amount of snow while she is out. While they are working, the cat turns up and snacks on a cake in the bathtub with the water running, and leaves a pink residue. Preliminary attempts to clean it up fail, as they only transfer the mess elsewhere, including a dress, the wall, a pair of $10 shoes, a rug, the bed and then eventually outside. The cat reveals that Little Cat A is nested inside his hat. Little Cat A doffs his hat to reveal Little Cat B, who reveals C and so on. A ‘spot killing’ war then takes place between the mess and Little Cats A through V, who use an arsenal of primitive weapons, including pop guns, bats and a lawn mower. Unfortunately, the initial battle to rid the mess only makes it into an entire yard-covering spot.”

Paper money is that pink residue that is spreading and spreading. But unlike in The Cat in the Hat Comes Back, there is not Little Cat Z to clean up the mess before Mom gets home.

Government cannot and will not control spending so long as the money grows on trees courtesy of the Fed. The Fed will not stop printing so long as its sponsoring government needs more money. With the paper money proliferation comes ever more indebtedness on the part of individuals, business and government. With this comes cycle of booms and busts, with each bust being “cured” by more of the thing that made the boom happen in the first place. It is sheer madness, since debt on this level amounts to a serious interference with freedom itself.

I’ve waited a long time for someone to write a tract that covers all the problems that paper money causes in our time. There are so many, and it takes a sophisticated mind to put it all together and a talented writer to make the argument sparkle.

Consider this passage on the absurd heights of the federal debt, and the silly idea that getting the rich to pay more can cure the problem. Wiggin writes:

“… charming gesture from a dead man in Coral Gables, Fla. He left his home and $1 million in cash to the government — for the purpose of paying down the national debt. His 1929 Spanish-style home — 3,900 square feet, six bedrooms/five baths, in need of ‘updates’ — grossed $1.175 million at auction. The deceased’s generosity won’t go very far: Uncle Sam blew through his inheritance in less time than it took you to read about this — 17 seconds.”

That passage had me laughing out loud. Actually, there are passages on every page that just make your eyes pop. He is also a very challenging intellectual, offering surprises at every turn.

For example, he thinks that the Occupy Movement isn’t so bad after all, that deflation would be very much welcome, that it doesn’t matter that much which political party is in control, that nations can and will fully default on their loan portfolios, that the decline in American prosperity (in some forms) actually stretches back 60 years and that there is a case for renouncing your citizenship. There are provocative arguments like this on every page.

There is another feature of this book that makes it unique. It is not just about explaining how the world works. It is about treating the serious financial problems that people face right now. It is not easy to get a return on your money in today’s environment, but I’m pretty sure that if there are ways to do so, you will find them in this book. Every few pages, he offers a small call-out that is a financial workaround anyone can use.

In this sense, this book is actually very subversive. It explains things you aren’t supposed to know. It offers opinions that are not supposed to be spoken aloud. And it offers tricks and tips for getting around the problem. He writes as if he is convinced that there is always an escape hatch for a person who is determined not to get fleeced. He digs very deep to find these, and offers them to readers who are gracious enough to buy and spend time with this little gem of a book.

Personally, I can’t think of anyone who wouldn’t benefit from The Little Book of the Shrinking Dollar. The business page will never look the same, if you even bother to read it after soaking in all the pithy wisdom in these pages.

  • Steve

    Thinking and being around for quite a while. The root of all this is DEBT. Imagine for a moment when our country had gold and silver coin. No debts. So a world that has to put away savings until you have enough to make that expense. No borrowing ever, by governments, corporations or individuals. What a world that would be.

  • http://www.westcoastladybugs.com RUSS SMITH

    Hi!, Patrons Of Laissez Fair Books Et Al:
    Inflation is not a new phenomena but worldwide inflation is. Following are some FREE clues for you:
    We have the review of damages as reported by Daniel Webster who observed the inflatinary waves destroying the bullworks of society during his day, when he once wrote: “Of all the contrivances ever designed for cheating the laboring classes of mankind none has been more successful than that which deludes them with issues of irredeemable, fiat, I Owe You Nothing, paper money.” Thank you Mr. Webster for being truthful in advance of this worldwide inflationary spiral presently robbing the laboring classes of mankind worldwide & why we haven’t listened to your advise earlier God only seems to know!
    We can take another FREE historical journey to Inflation Land, by going to the Von Mesis Institute website, to visit the more than 70 page treatise, Fiat Money Inflation In France, by Andrew Dixon White who was the co-founder of Cornell University. They also sell paperback copies for around $10.
    In this treatise we can find out how inflation came, what it brought and how it ended. It ended when Napoleon asked the French Ministry for specie gold coins to pay his troops, because they were tired of the consistantly deprecating French Assignant paper money causing prices of necessities to rise faster than troops isolated in the outbacks of war could spend them. Needless to say Napoleon received those requested gold coins for his troops, because otherwise Napoleon told the French ministry that they could fight their own wars. What would happen to the US’s military budget, if all US military personel were to demand to be paid in gold coins today?
    The absolute worse case of inflation recorded is that of the Hungarian Pengo which forced the Hungarians to adopt an accounting system based upon light years. How would you figure your bets between the various football, baseball or basketball teams etc., if your bets were anchored in light years accounting principals?
    During the Nightmare German Inflation of the 1920′s a loaf of bread went to 300,000,000,000 German Marks per loaf; while people today complain about paying $4 a loaf here in the United States? Due to the risng prices of everyday necessities that caused Germans to sell eveything they owned, a German mortgage could have been purchased for one US penny. Gold went to
    86,000,000,000,000 German Marks per troy oz. Wives met their husbands @ work daily to take their paychecks several times each day to buy goods before the prices could outstrip the purchasing power of their wages etc. Paper money became so worthless in Germany that some people literally burned it in order to cook and stay warm, because the cost of wood placed its’ price out of reach.
    Paper money was invented by the Chinese and has sense caused the demise of more Empires than that other famous Chinese invention: gun powder.
    One of OUR Nations’ greatest philosophers, Mr.Bertrand Russell, once stated: “Why do we here in the United States depend upon OUR professional politicians to solve our problems; when they are the problem?
    Dr. Franz Pick (deceased), once the world’s formost currency expert, has stated that the number one production of the United States is corruption and he didn’t call our US $ the dollar but the mini dollar instead plus he stated that, due to OUR inflationary policies, US Bonds are certificates of guaranteed confiscation.
    OUR world is attempting to inflate its’ way out of mountains of incalculable debts using the enemy of worldwide purchasing power we know as inflation. This process has failed when implemented by many various societies throughout world history as denoted above and so it is totally unlikely that we today can activate a better outcome than has been produced in the past implementing inflationary measures again. To default or not to default on our debts & especially by this time within the worldwide inflationary cycle should no longer be THEQUESTION should it?

    RUSS SMITH, CALIFORNIA
    resmith@wcisp.com

    • Ulysses

      Re: “Paper money was invented by the Chinese and has sense caused the demise of more Empires than that other famous Chinese invention: gun powder.”

      Paper money should not be confused with fiat money.

      Paper money is merely a negotiable receipt for real assets (usually precious metals) kept in deposit with a reliable party which facilitated trading and its value is exactly the same as that of the underlying asset.

      Fiat money, on the other hand, represents absolutely nothing and is merely a number written on a piece of paper and sooner or later it reaches its true worth, namely, zero.

  • No One Of Consequence

    The only thing more terrifying than what is going on, is the number of “economists” publishing books determining the “cause” of our ills.

    It terrifies me to think that one of our leaders will pick up one of the THOUSANDS of books similar to this one, and just pick a strategy out of it.

    Terrifying…absolutely terrifying.

  • Ulysses

    Actually one needs to go a bit further back from Nixon to find the root cause of why he did what he did. He was surreptitiously counterfeiting dollars to pay for the Vietnam insanity in violation of the Bretton Woods agreement. Some European countries got wind of that and began to redeem their dollars for gold.

    Now, while the Keynesians label gold as a “barbaric relic”, they can never stop losing sleep over the loss of that very same worthless object. So Nixon cut the Gordian knot by abruptly “closing the gold window” and the media hailed this blatant act of dishonesty as an accomplishment.

    However, the fundamental cause of America’s problems is best illustrated by Jay Leno’s “Jaywalking” which is an attempt at gallows humor at the appalling ignorance of today’s public. When their kids routinely stand at the bottom of the list at International competitions in science and math and they seemingly feel no shame about it and even a presidential candidate labels aspiring for a college education as “snobbery” while Asian kids are literally killing themselves in order to excel in education in a murderously competitive environment, the reason for the nations’s woes becomes abundantly clear and no amount of bookkeeping gimmickry is going to remedy that.