The Great Dispossession Part 3

Guest Post by Paul Craig Roberts

In Part 1, I explained that the next financial crisis will be bailed out not with central bank money creation but with our stocks, bonds and bank balances.

In Part 2, I explained the multi-year quiet regulatory changes that dispossessed us of our property.

In Part 3, I explain David Rogers Webb’s conclusion that a massive financial crisis is pending in which our financial assets are the collateral underwriting the derivative and financial bubble and will result in the loss of our assets but leave us with our debts as happened to those whose banks failed in the 1930s.

Webb begins with the economic formula that the velocity of circulation of money times the money supply equals nominal Gross Domestic Product. V x MS = GDP.

The velocity of circulation is a measure of how many times a dollar is spent during a given period of time, e.g., quarterly, annually. A high velocity means people quickly spend the money that comes into their hands. A low velocity means people tend to hold on to money.

Velocity impacts the Federal Reserve’s ability to manage economic growth with money supply changes. If the velocity of money is falling, an expansionist monetary policy will not result in rising GDP. In such a situation, the Federal Reserve is said to be “pushing on a string.” Instead of pushing up GDP, money supply increases push up the values of financial assets and real estate resulting in financial and real estate bubbles.

Webb notes that falls in velocity are precursors of financial crises. A multi-year sharp fall in velocity preceded the stock market crash in 1929 and the Great Depression that gave birth to regulatory agencies. The 21st century is characterized by a long-term fall in velocity that has reached the lowest level on record, while stocks and real estate have been driven to unprecedented levels by years of zero interest rates. When this bubble pops, we will be dispossessed.

Will the bubble pop?

Yes. The Fed suddenly and rapidly moved from zero to 5% interest rates, a reversal of the policy that drove up prices of stocks and bonds. The Fed raises rates by reducing money supply growth, thus removing the factor supporting high stock prices and collapsing the value of bonds. This results in a lowering of the value of stocks and bonds serving as collateral for loans, which, of course, means the loans and the financial institution behind them are in trouble. Bonds have already taken a hit. The stock market is holding because participants believe the Fed is about to reverse its interest rate policy and lower rates.

Webb notes that the official data show that the velocity of money collapsed in the 21st century while the Fed introduced “quantitative easing.” He makes the correct point that when the velocity of money collapses, the Fed is pushing on a string. Instead of money creation fueling economic growth, it produces asset bubbles in real estate and financial instruments, which is what we have at the present time.

When after more than a decade of near zero interest rates, the Fed raises interest rates it collapses the values of financial portfolios and real estate and produces a financial crisis.

As the authorities have set in place a system that bails out secured creditors with our bank deposits, stocks, and bonds, we will have no money and no financial assets to sell for money. People with mortgaged homes and businesses will lose them, as they did in the 1930s, when they lost their money due to bank failures. People with car payments will lose their transportation. The way the system works is you lose your money but not your debts.

The secured creditors are the creditors of the troubled institutions. Ultimately, the secured creditors are the mega-banks defined as “privileged creditors.”

The collapse of financial asset values in 1929 resulted in the failure of 9,000 banks (https://www.encyclopedia.com/economics/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/banking-panics-1930-1933). Bank failure meant that you lost the money you had in the bank. It means the same thing today regardless of deposit insurance, because your deposits have been turned into collateral for creditors. Moreover, FDIC deposit insurance is a joke. The FDIC’s assets are in the billions. Bank deposits are in the trillions. The Dodd-Frank Act prioritized derivatives over bank depositors, so a bank account holder is in line behind derivative claims. Apparently, FDIC insurance claims will be issued in the form of issuance of stock in a failed bank.

It has all happened before, but not on the scale of what is pending.

Under the regulatory regime in place, financial collapse today means that money will be drained from the economy and be concentrated along with all wealth in a few hands. A modern-day economy cannot function without money and without companies that serve as distributors of food, goods, and services. Webb notes that it is a perfect opportunity for central banks to introduce Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) with which they have been experimenting.

The provision of CBDC to the population would provide a money supply and income to a population in total chaos and restore order to a grateful population. But it would also give total control to rulers. Webb quotes Augustin Carstens, general manager of the Bank for International Settlements who says that the key difference between present day currency and Central Bank Digital Currency is that with CBDC the central bank will know how each person uses their allotment of digital currency which gives the central bank absolute control over you via the capability to regulate your purchases, to turn off disapproved purchases, to discipline dissenters. You will be supplied with the means of life as long as you have a good social credit score, which means that you are a non-dissenter of official narratives.

Webb believes that this result is the intent of the regulatory changes and corresponds to the World Economic Forum’s agenda: “you will own nothing.” There is much in the regulatory documents that support Webb’s belief. For example, the Single Resolution Board’s 2022 Guidance for Banks to prepare for “solvent wind-down,” is an indication that an event is in the works. The Single Resolution Board’s Work Program 2023 states: “The year 2023 will be the last of a transitional period for the establishment of the main elements of the resolution framework in the Banking Union.” In other words, everything is in place.

Whether Webb is correct that the regulatory regime that has been put in place amounts to a deliberate restoration of feudalism under high tech management or whether the new rules are the unintended consequence of the rulers’ drive for security is not important. The relevant point is that the next financial crisis will dispossess us not only of our pensions and financial assets but also of our freedom and independence. If the past is a guide, the next financial crisis is close at hand.

If the mega-rich and the large financial intermediaries can be made aware of the situation, it is in their own self-interest to convince Congress to use its law-making power to unwind the regulatory system of dispossession that has been created. But the hour grows late.

Ordinary people are dismissive of the World Economic Forum and its agenda of “you will own nothing and be happy,” but this is a mistake. The WEF was founded 53 years ago and has over the half century recruited many of the important people in business, finance, and politics. If you are not a WEF member and attendee at Davos, you are lower down on the totem pole. Social, political, and intellectual standing depends on membership. It is important to understand that The Great Reset means the re-institutionalization of feudalism.

Note that we are also being dispossessed of our food and farmers of the use of their land: “No Farmers No Food: Will You Eat The Bugs?” is an Epoch Original documentary exposing the hidden agenda behind global “Green Policies,” the untold stories of farmers forced out of business, the disruption this will have on our food supply, and why edible bugs are suddenly being pushed to the fore as a “Global Green Solution.”

EpochTV program “Facts Matter” host Roman Balmakov investigates the rapidly changing landscape of our global food source—the farming industry—through interviews with farmers in The Netherlands, Sri Lanka, and the United States. This is the next global crisis that is being ignored by the world’s media.

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9 Comments
The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
April 17, 2024 7:03 am

I’m doin’ pretty good! So far, I’ve dispossessed myself right out of reading 3 of these things! The insouciance, it burns!

Think while it's still legal
Think while it's still legal
  The Central Scrutinizer
April 17, 2024 11:18 am

By not reading it, you missed one of the really rare instances of an article where he doesn’t use that word =)

The Central Scrutinizer
The Central Scrutinizer
  Think while it's still legal
April 17, 2024 12:29 pm

He lost me at “The US won’t get involved in Ukraine”. No one that wrong deserves to be listened to.

Patricat
Patricat
April 17, 2024 11:32 am

On a small scale, dispossession is possible for some unfortunates here and there, such as repossessions are seen now.
On a large scale where everybody is getting f*cked by the system, the rifles come out and they won’t be disposessing anybody of anything if they plan to live. The same is true of the “system” which relies upon mass compliance. It will die too, if enough people tell them to take a hike with their theft schemes written into “law” for the purpose of fleecing everybody.
This won’t end well for anybody, especially for anyone trying to enforce it.

Hieronymus
Hieronymus
April 17, 2024 1:05 pm

Does anyone know where to get one of those vests that were made for Sgt .Brody in Gettysburg?

Junious Ricardo Stanton
Junious Ricardo Stanton
April 17, 2024 1:15 pm

This process is even more complex and diabolical than the writer shared; as the Federal Reserve has also reduced the money supply in circulation in their efforts to “stem inflation” https://www.goldmansachs.com/intelligence/pages/why-the-us-money-supply-is-shrinking.html at the same time they were increasing interest rates. If you deep research on the “Great Depression” you’ll find that is exactly what the banksters did in the late 1920’s. They withdrew money and credit from the system then called the loans on businesses and farmers thus forcing them into insolvency, bankruptcy and ruin.
Meanwhile in 2019 the Fed was bailing out banks and no one is talking about the quadrillions in uncollateralized derivatives that are a ticking time bomb for the system that will make 2008 like like a hiccup when they unravel. This is what the writer means when he says we are the collateral for the system, they call in bail ins where our assests will be used to prop up the collapsing system! . Don’t forget the trillions (now probably quadrillions) in unaccounted for government money. https://msutoday.msu.edu/news/2017/msu-scholars-find-21-trillion-in-unauthorized-government-spending-defense-department-to-conduct
We live in a kakistocracy a society ruled by the most immoral, ruthless, depraved and perverted among us, their mindset of predation sets the tone for the whole society as we currently witness/experience the implosion of America.

AbsurdlyCritical
AbsurdlyCritical
  Junious Ricardo Stanton
April 18, 2024 6:08 am

I know right. I’m sick of all the socialists out there bitching about capitalism. This isn’t freakin’ capitalism as true free market capitalism would have allowed the banks to fail in ’08. Corporatism is a form of socialism where corporations are the animals that are “more equal” than others. It isn’t just the banks though there are mega conglomerates in practically all industries. The government is dirilect in failing to use antitrust laws appropriately. If a bank or company is “too big to fail” then it should clearly be broken up into smaller companies that aren’t.

Anonymouse
Anonymouse
April 17, 2024 1:24 pm

Part 4. The people will rise up and burn Wall Street, Corporate offices, government buildings and the homes of the elite before hanging these parasites from lamp posts.. when the sheep realize they have nothing then they have nothing to lose.

Htos1av
Htos1av
April 18, 2024 7:43 am

Well, Mr. fedulator, IF you plan to go home every night to a wonderful, wet, warm, hairy hole, I’d leave people and their PRIVATE properties alone….

Just a heads up.