Thursday, December 2, 2021

"America’s Cold Nightmare"

"America’s Cold Nightmare"
By Bill Bonner

"Winter is coming."
– "Game of Thrones"

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND – "This week, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell told Congress that he may “taper” a little faster than expected in order to squelch inflation. As it is, inflation is running hot. And the Fed’s enthusiasm for stopping it is, at best, tepid. As we showed last month, the Fed would have to put its key lending rate up to nearly 10% (it’s currently less than one-tenth of one percent) in order to achieve the same tightening effect as then-Fed-chair Paul Volcker got in 1980.

Powell says the Fed is planning to remove $15 billion per month from its bond-buying program… ending it completely by the middle of next year. In other words, no “tightening” is planned, just a very timid cutback on loosening. And John C. Williams, head of the New York Fed, says his august organization will now “grapple” with what to do next.

Cold Comfort: It comes as no comfort to us to know that the Fed is grappling with policy changes. Its policies have made a colossal mess of the economy and its markets. And it shows no hint of having learned anything. Here at the Diary, we have followed the Fed for more than 20 years, chronicling its clownish missteps and dumbbell mistakes.

We have not been shy about predicting where this will lead – to a disaster of corruption, runaway debt and inflation… and an eventual blow-up of the whole system. For what else can you expect when the central government spends far more than the nation can afford… the central bank papers over its deficits with newly printed money… and the elite gets richer and richer?

Future of Expensive Scarcity: “You’re way too negative,” say some dear readers. “Don’t be so cynical,” say others. Maybe they’re right.

The future always surprises us. And it will be a surprise to us all – including your editor – if things develop precisely as we foresee. Maybe we will muddle through without a real disaster, after all. But what if the surprise comes from the other direction? What if we have been too Panglossian in our outlook, lacking the imagination to see the immensity of the catastrophe awaiting us?

Our view of the future is usually nothing more than a limp extrapolation of today. But let us try to see what lies ahead in a different, more pernicious light. That is… we will walk ahead… and look back at what the policymakers have wrought, giving you a brief history of tomorrow.

Sometime… maybe two years from now… maybe 10… you go to the supermarket. You find a gallon of milk priced at $49. Bacon isn’t $10 a pound; it’s $100. And your favorite breakfast cereal? It’s not there at all. Sometimes, half the shelves are empty. “Supply chain disruptions,” they say.

Politicians blame “greedy middlemen” for “price gouging.” A House Committee promises an investigation of “market manipulation.” President Pete Buttigieg calls for another stimmy check “to help hard-pressed American families.”

Winter is coming; the cold bites.

Costly Transition: “Something is going seriously wrong,” you tell yourself. “Nature has turned against us.” But the fault lies not in our stars, but in ourselves. And it’s more than just $50 for a pound of beef… or a $1,000 monthly electricity bill. This mid-winter nightmare gets worse, much worse.

On your drive to the gas station, you detour to avoid a group of protestors/looters, who are burning tires in the middle of the road. You don’t want to get stopped by them. They will pull you from your car and beat you to death right in the street. And then, when you see the prices at the pumps, you may want to murder someone, too. You paid just $39 for a gallon of regular the week before. Now, it is $45. And then, there’s no gas at all.

Well, what would you expect? The world’s leading governments embarked on a “Great Transition” away from fossil fuel. At the United Nations COP26 Climate Change Conference in 2021, they aimed to cut the use of gas, coal, and oil in half by 2035. It would cost $150 trillion, said U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Janet Yellen. But all the major nations were already running huge deficits. The only way they could fund the “transition” – along with their marvelous “social infrastructure” programs – was by printing money.

Cold War on Fossil Fuels: Thus did the great nations light a stick of dynamite at both ends. It was fossil fuel that made it possible to feed, clothe, and house 8 billion people. There were fewer than 2 billion people on the planet in 1900. Solar energy, sequestered in oil, gas, and coal, made it possible to quadruple the population. But take away the fossil fuel, and what would those extra 6 billion people eat? Where would they live? How would they keep warm?

And pay for this transition with fake money? Even back in 2021, the inflation rate in the U.S. was running at 6%. Wasn’t it obvious that printing more money would make it worse?

The policymakers said they would replace oil, gas, and coal, with solar, wind, and geo-thermal energy. But in 2021, “renewables” only represented, effectively, about 5% of the world’s total energy supplies – even after four decades of investment and development. And tractors didn’t run on solar power or windmills; they ran on gasoline, which had gotten scarce. And where was the mystery in that?

When governments turned off traditional energy sources… while subsidizing and bankrolling “green” energy with trillions in newly printed money… they set in motion supply-side disruptions that proved… well… fatal. Tune in tomorrow for the tragic denouement."

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