Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
The stakes couldn't be higher for Ben Bernanke. If the Fed chief decides to lower rates at the end of April, he could be condemning millions of people to an agonizing death by starvation. The situation is that serious; there's no room for error. Food riots have broken out across the globe destabilizing large parts of the developing world. China is experiencing double-digit inflation. Indonesia, Vietnam and India have imposed controls over rice exports. Wheat, corn and soya are at record highs and threatening to go higher still. Commodities are up across the board. The World Food Program is warning of widespread famine if the West doesn't provide emergency humanitarian relief. The situation is dire.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez summed it up like this;
"It is a massacre of the world's poor. The problem is not the production of food. It is the economic, social and political model of the world. The capitalist model is in crisis."
Right on, Hugo. There is no shortage of food; it's just the
prices that are making food unaffordable. Bernanke's "weak dollar"
policy has ignited a wave of speculation in commodities which is
pushing prices into the stratosphere. The UN is calling the global food
crisis it a "silent tsunami", but its more like a flood; the world is
awash in increasingly worthless dollars that are making food and raw
materials more expensive.
Foreign central banks and investors
presently hold $6 trillion in dollars and dollar-backed assets, so when
the dollar starts to slide, the pain radiates through entire economies.
This is especially true in countries where the currency is pegged to
the dollar.
That's why most of the Gulf States are experiencing
runaway inflation.
This doesn't mean that oil depletion, biofuel
production, over-population, and giant agribusinesses don't add to the
problem. They do. But the catalyst is the Fed's monetary policies;
that's the domino that puts the others in motion.
Here's Otto
Spengler's summary in his recent article in Asia Times,'Rice, Death
and the Dollar':
"The global food crisis is a monetary
phenomenon, an unintended consequence of America's attempt to inflate
its way out of a market failure. There are long-term reasons for food
prices to rise, but the unprecedented spike in grain prices during the
past year stems from the weakness of the American dollar. Washington's
economic misery now threatens to become a geopolitical
catastrophe....The link between the declining parity of the US unit and
the rising price of commodities, including oil as well as rice and
other wares, is indisputable.
"Never before in history has
hunger become a global threat in a period of plentiful harvests. Global
rice production will hit a record of 423 million tons in the 2007-2008
crop year, enough to satisfy global demand. The trouble is that only 7%
of the world's rice supply is exported, because local demand is met by
local production. Any significant increase in rice stockpiles cuts
deeply into available supply for export, leading to a spike in prices.
Because such a small proportion of the global rice supply trades, the
monetary shock from the weak dollar was sufficient to more than double
its price." ("Rice, death and the dollar", By Otto Spengler, Asia Times)
The US is exporting its inflation by cheapening its currency. Now a
field worker in Haiti who earns $2 a day, and spends all of that to
feed his family, has to earn twice that amount or eat half as much.
That's not a choice a parent wants to make. Its no wonder that six
people were killed Port au Prince in the recent food riots. People go
crazy when they can't feed their kids.
Food and energy
prices are sucking the life out of the global economy. Foreign banks
and pension funds are trying to protect their investments by diverting
dollars into things that will retain their value. That's why oil is
nudging $120 per barrel when it should be in the $70 to $80 range.
According
to Tim Evans, energy analyst at Citigroup in New York, Theres no
supply-demand deficit". None. In fact suppliers are expecting an oil
surplus by the end of this year.
"The case for lower oil
prices is straightforward: The prospect of a deep U.S. recession or
even a marked period of slower economic growth in the worlds top
energy consumer making a dent in energy consumption. Year to date, oil
demand in the U.S. is down 1.9% compared with the same period in 2007,
and high prices and a weak economy should knock down U.S. oil
consumption by 90,000 barrels a day this year, according to the federal
Energy Information Administration." ("Bears Baffled by Oil Highs"
gregory Meyer, Wall Street Journal)
There's no oil shortage;
that's another ruse. Speculators are simply driving up the price of oil
to hedge their bets on the falling dollar. What else can they do; put
them in the frozen bond market, or the sinking stock market, or the
collapsing housing market? The Fed has gummed up the entire financial
system with its low-interest credit scam; now it's on to commodities
where the real pain is just beginning to be felt. What a mess!
This is what happens when there's too many dollars sloshing around the
system; they all need a place to rest, and when they do, they create
equity bubbles. Sound familiar? Indeed. This is Greenspan's legacy in a
nutshell; the dark specter of Maestro will continue to haunt the world
until all the hyper-inflated asset-classes (real estate, bonds, stocks,
commodities) return to earth and all the red ink is mopped up.
That'll
take time, but Bernanke could make things a lot easier if he accepted
some responsibility for the current turmoil and raised rates by 25
basis points. That would show speculators that the Fed was serious
about defending the currency which would send the commodities bubble
crashing to earth. Prices would go down overnight; guaranteed.
But
Bernanke won't raise rates because he doesn't really give a hoot about
the people in Cameroon who have to scavenge through garbage-dumps for a
few morsels to keep their families alive. Nor does he care about the
average American working-stiff who gets cardiac-arrest every time he
pulls up to the gas pump. What matters to Bernanke is making sure that
his fat-cat buddies in the banking establishment get a steady stream of
low interest loot so they can paper-over their bad investments and ward
off bankruptcy for another day or two. Its a joke; it was the
investment banks that started this downward spiral with their rotten
mortgage-backed securities and other debt-exotica. Still, in Bernanke's
mind, they are the only ones who really count.
And don't expect
Bush to step in and save the day either. The "Decider" still believes
in the unrestricted activity of the free market; especially when his
crooked friends can make a buck on the deal.
From the Washington Times:
"Farmers and food executives appealed fruitlessly to federal officials
yesterday for regulatory steps to limit speculative buying that is
helping to drive food prices higher. Meanwhile, some Americans are
stocking up on staples such as rice, flour and oil in anticipation of
high prices and shortages spreading from overseas. Costco and other
grocery stores in California reported a run on rice, which has forced
them to set limits on how many sacks of rice each customer can buy.
Filipinos in Canada are scooping up all the rice they can find and
shipping it to relatives in the Philippines, which is suffering a
severe shortage that is leaving many people hungry." (Patrice Hill,
Washington Times)
The Bush administration knows there's
hanky-panky going on, but they just look the other way. It's Enron
redux, where Ken Lay Inc. scalped the public with utter impunity while
regulators sat on the sidelines applauding. Great. Now its the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) turn; they're taking a
hands-off approach so Wall Street sharpies make a fortune jacking up
the price of everything from soda crackers to toilet bowls.
"A hearing Tuesday in Washington before the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission starts a new round of scrutiny into the popularity of
agricultural futures, a once a quieter arena that for years was
dominated largely by big producers and consumers of crops and their
banks trying to manage price risks. The commission's official stance
and that of many of the exchanges, however, is likely to disappoint
many consumer groups. The CFTC's economist plans to state at the
hearing that the agency doesn't believe financial investors are driving
up grain prices. Some grain buyers say speculators' big bets on
relatively small grain exchanges, especially recently, are pushing up
prices for ordinary consumers." ('Call Goes Out to Rein In Grain
Speculators', Ann Davis)
"The agency doesn't believe financial investors are driving up grain prices"?!?
Prices have doubled, people are starving, and the Bush troop is still parroting the same worn party-mantra. Its maddening.
The
US has been gaming the system for decades; sucking up two-thirds of the
world's capital to expand its cache of Cadillac Escalades and
flat-screen TVs; giving nothing back in return except mortgage-backed
junk, cluster bombs, and crummy green paper. Nothing changes; it only
gets worse. But this is different.
The world is now facing the very
real prospect of "completely avoidable" famine because twelve doddering
old banksters at the Federal Reserve would rather bailout their sketchy
friends and preserve their spot at the top of the economic food-chain
then save the lives of starving women and children. Bernanke now has
an opportunity to do more damage than Bush with one swipe of the pen.
If he cut rates; the dollar will fall, commodities will spike, and
people will starve.