Greenspan Warns Inflation Will Come, Time For Gold Standard Is Now

“If we went back on the gold standard…we’d be fine.”

Allan Greenspan says economic stagnation compounded by bipartisan refusal to bring social benefits under control has brought about the worst period he has seen in his public service career. The 90 year old economist and former Chairman of the Federal Reserve told Bloomberg Television interviewers that “productivity growth has ground to a halt” while the money supply is “going up remarkably steadily 6 percent, 7 percent, almost a straight line” including a point or two in the last several months. He says this type of economic environment ends with inflation.

ENTITLEMENTS UNSUSTAINABLE

Mr. Greenspan says the annual rate of growth in the US of close to two percent is insufficient to finance the ever-increasing demands of the social safety net for the sick and elderly. Yet, in an election year, he says neither party is willing to address the issue for fear of losing votes. “This is what the election should be all about in the United States. You will never hear one word from either side.”

BREXIT COMPLICATES MATTERS

Speaking of votes, Mr. Greenspan referred to the UK referendum on exiting from the European Union as a “terrible outcome in all respects” which“didn’t have to happen.” But happen it did, and now “we are in the very early days of a crisis which has got a way to go.” He pointed to the strong possibility that Scotland would likely have another referendum of its own and successfully separate from Great Britain, with Northern Ireland likely to follow. He noted the irony of the EU struggling mightily to keep Greece (which he referred to as a “toxic liability”) in the Eurozone, only to see its second-largest member willingly depart.

The week after the British referendum, all US markets continued to decline, with some economists predicting the European turmoil would stunt American growth at least slightly. Goldman Sachs reduced its growth forecast for the second half of 2016 to 2% from 2.25%. Traders are presently betting that the Fed will have to, once again, hold off on raising interest rates in order to add stimulus to the economy. Meanwhile in Britain, there seems to be no question that the domestic economy will stumble; the only question is how hard. What is further certain is that uncertainty will continue to reign in the markets as the UK and EU try to sort out their not-insignificant differences.

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