Treasury Bills: The New Opium, by Jim Rickards
Sep/100
Eric King: Jim Rickards continues to illustrate that he is one of the truly brilliant and original thinkers in today’s financial world. Rickards uncovers Treasury Bills for what they really are, and has laid out his case in convincing fashion. The following is Jim’s piece exclusively for the King World News blog that discusses the fact that Treasury debt has become the “new opium” and it is a must read:
Treasury Bills: The New Opium
By James G. Rickards
September 7 (King World News) – One of the turning points in the history of world trade was the failed mission in 1793 of Lord George Macartney, representing King George III of England, to the Imperial Court of Qianlong, Fifth Emperor of the Manchu Dynasty of China. Beginning in the late 18th century, England had increased its imports of goods from China including tea, silks, spices, porcelain and other manufactured goods. England paid for these imports with silver, and later with exports of opium, which it obtained from its Imperial provinces in Central Asia. Lord Macartney attempted to persuade Emperor Qianlong to open up China to trade with England so that England’s trade deficit could be balanced with exports from England of cotton and woolen textiles, new mechanical devices such as clocks, weapons and other manufactured goods. Macartney famously offended Qianlong by refusing to perform the kowtow, an elaborate ritual of bowing and prostration, and in the end Qianlong rejected Macartney’s offer on grounds of China’s “celestial supremacy” summarized in his remark that there was nothing in the world which China lacked, therefore trade was unnecessary.
Left with only silver and opium with which to balance their trade deficit, England quickly decided that they preferred to keep their silver at home and would thereafter balance their trade with massive opium exports to China. Opium exports to China grew enormously between the 1790’s and 1830’s until addiction reached crisis proportions and the Manchu Dynasty took steps to seize imported opium and to shut down the opium trade. England responded with military force to open the ports and suppress the Manchu officials responsible in a series of Opium Wars which stretched from 1839 to 1856 and which ended in the humiliation of the Manchu and the subordination of the Chinese economy to the mercantile interests of England, France, Russia, Germany, Japan and the U.S. Conveniently, England was able to continue to settle its trade deficits with China using opium, which it grew cheaply and in vast quantities.
Plus ça change… Today the U.S. faces massive, continual trade deficits with China and has for decades. We take DVD players, flat screen TV’s and iPods instead of tea and silks but the fundamental dynamic of world trade has not changed in 300 years; the U.S. still needs to find a way to pay for its deficit. From 1944 to 1971 under the Bretton Woods international financial system, the U.S. would settle its deficits in gold, much as England had paid in silver in the 1790’s. But in the Bretton Woods period, the U.S. saw its gold reserves dwindle from about 20,000 metric tonnes in 1950 to about 9,000 metric tonnes in 1970. As a result, President Nixon suspended redemption of dollar reserves held by trading partners for gold. Thereafter, trading partners with surpluses and dollar reserves could only invest in dollar denominated assets, principally U.S. Treasury obligations, or dump their dollars for some other currency…
Continue at King World News
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