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The Great Reset, 23 November

There are now two entirely different notions of a coming “reset”. One has been popular among those who speculate on the gold price. They expect a revaluation of the dollar. However, the government does not set the value of the dollar. So there is no way to reset the value. Indeed, the government has been trying to push down the value of the dollar for over a decade, and mostly failing (because increasing quantity is not the same thing as decreasing value).

But that is not the reset discussed today. We want to look at the reset proposed by the World Economic Forum, and the book by Klaus Schwab and Thierry Malleret. They start with the fact that lockdowns have inflicted economic harm. They’ve impoverished people. And resulted in a random set of policies.

In a sense, their so-called reset is just a grab-bag of all the rubbish policies of the Left. They are using the pretext of the COVID pandemic—really, the consequences of lockdown—to repackage their old rubbish as some kind of “rebuilding”.

We must insist that taxing the still-solvent to dole out free goodies to the nonproductive is not rebuilding at all. It is actually just more tearing down.

Many other newly rebranded reset policies have nothing to do with rebuilding.

Recent Proposals

Let’s look at a few policy proposals that are now under the reset banner. One is the sick idea of international taxation of companies and individuals. Related to this is the policy to tax for the sake of inequality (as opposed to taxation to pay for anything). Also related is taxation for climate change. Do you see the common theme?

Another is what the WEF calls “defining racism”. Even if one believes that racism is systemic, honesty would compel one to admit that it has nothing to do with rebuilding the economy in the wake of COVID.

Last week, they had a conference call to discuss the way forward. One of the participants is our old friend, of the cargo cult of Modern Monetary Theory. Unsurprisingly, Stephanie Kelton said, “the public sector is uniquely positioned to lead in financing large-scale, green tech investments.”

In other words, the government will spend trillions on projects that no rational financier would put money into, calling it “investment”. It reminds me of the old song about Yankee Doodle who, as it goes, put a feather in his cap and called it “macaroni.”

Whatever the word is, when the bureaucrats pour taxpayer and cheaply-borrowed funds into nonviable projects, that word is not: investment.

But Kelton is not worried in the slightest. That’s because there’s not much of a limit to what the government can spend—so long as it doesn’t “overflow the bathroom sink”, in her frivolous analogy.

This idea of government spending, even on wasteful projects, is just a more explicit version of what even the otherwise-free-market economists preach today. The current darling otherwise-free-market monetary idea is: GDP targeting. That is, the Fed should make borrowing as cheap as necessary to get GDP up to its target level.

The Flaws of GDP

GDP is so flawed, that even spending on nonviable green energy ideas like unicorn farts and refrigerator door breezes adds to GDP. Heck, even breaking windows adds to GDP. Or preparing for a war with aliens, as Paul Krugman said.

Viewed this way, it’s easier to see that there are degrees of central planning, ranging from the otherwise-free-marketers to the Green New Deal Great Resetters. The otherwise-free-marketers claim they just want to nudge the GDP number. But they do this by administering the most important price in the economy, the one on which all other prices depend. They say they want to leave the other prices alone, to be set in the otherwise-free-market.

The Green New Deal Resetters want the government to interfere all over the place, including by administering capital allocation. And determining which objectives are worthy objects of their largesse.

Modern Monetary Theory is just the most consistent version. Keynes is more consistent than Friedman, and Kelton is more consistent than Keynes. So long as people accept the basic moral (yes moral, not economic) principle of a thing, then the policy which most consistently embodies that principle tends to win.

The People Can’t Be Trusted

The principle for over a century has been that free people in a free market cannot be trusted to decide what to use as money, or what the price of borrowing should be. Only wise, incorruptible central planners can do that. For your own good, of course.

Kelton asserts that we can grow jobs and at the same time cut down on fossil-fuel energy use. Most of us think that these are opposite, as driving up the cost of energy will make us poorer. But Kelton—remember she sees little real limit to spending—thinks that the government can deliver on both promises.

We note that no one believes in socialist economics. Socialism is not about economics. It’s magical thinking plus envy. The magical thinking is obvious in the Kelton idea that government can spend whatever it takes to make us green, while growing jobs sustainably.

The envy part is in wealth taxes, and taxes imposed internationally. These taxes are not about raising revenue to pay for useful programs (or even a useless program). They are about making the wealthy less rich. For the sake of it.

How To Opt Out

The idea of a massive new set of expensive policy initiatives, paid for by spilling trillions (or more) down a massive bathroom sink—where the only constraint is not overflowing—gives more credence to the gold community’s idea of a great reset.

The dollar (and its derivatives EUR, GBP, etc) will become even less sound and move even farther along the path to utter ruin. That is, it will be debased. Gold will become more attractive, and farther along its path to use as a general medium of exchange. Gold is how rational investors opt out of Kelton’s central plan to pour their money down a large-scale green drain.

In the meantime, Monetary Metals is using gold to finance productive ventures, and pay interest on gold. Our investors are earning interest and helping the world move to a better monetary system.

Reviewing The Fundamentals

Let’s look at the fundamentals of gold and silver. First, here is a chart showing more than a year of gold.

There has been quite a drop in the dollar (the dollar can only be measured in gold, not in derivative currencies, and not in consumer prices). It’s gone from over 22mg gold to 15mg and now back up to 16.6mg.

During that time, the cobasis (our measure of gold’s scarcity to the market) held steady as the dollar dropped (i.e. the price of gold went up), then fell a bit as the dollar fell, and it has been rising since July. It is now higher—gold is now scarcer—than when the dollar was 22mg (i.e. gold was $1,410).

Gold Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

Gold Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

- Click to enlarge

Now, here’s silver.

As is often the case, the silver chart looks similar but different.

The overall shape is the same. But note two differences. One, the absolute level of the cobasis is around -2.5%. Whereas for gold, it is -1.1%. Two, the cobasis in silver is not higher now than in July 2019. It is about the same.

Make of the absolute level what you will. We tend towards the view that there’s no greater abundance of silver to the market compared to gold. Rather, it’s a continued artifact of the backing away of the market makers.

It is of note that during this recent period of rising dollar against silver (i.e. weak silver price), silver’s scarcity has been rising and is now near its post-COVID high.

Silver Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

Silver Basis and Co-basis and the Dollar Price

- Click to enlarge

The Gold Exchange Podcast

After being asked repeatedly to start a podcast, we have one in the works. To sign up for episode alerts beginning in December, visit The Gold Exchange Podcast.

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Keith Weiner
Keith Weiner is president of the Gold Standard Institute USA in Phoenix, Arizona, and CEO of the precious metals fund manager Monetary Metals.
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