As I posted a two days ago, Peter Schiff does not agree with Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman about China and what would happen if the chinese stopped buying US debt. As he said in the video he would write an in-debth article on the same subject. That article is now available, entitled “Paul Krugman Versus Reality“. Here are a few quotes:

In his latest weekly New York Times column, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman put forward arguments that were so nonsensical that the award committee should ask for its medal back

According to Krugman, our secret weapon of economic invincibility is the Fed’s ability to print dollars endlessly. If China were to foolishly decide to attack us by selling our debt, the Fed could simply step in and buy the excess with newly printed greenbacks. (In other words, Krugman sees no difference between funding the debt and monetizing it. See my latest video blog on the subject.). For Krugman, China would gain little from such an attack, but would lose the ability to export to its best customer and suffer severe losses in the value of its dollar holdings. Krugman’s worldview is reassuring - but it has absolutely nothing to do with reality

There is a huge difference between selling your debt to another and “selling” it to yourself. When China buys our debt, it uses its own savings. In order to purchase a trillion dollars of U.S. Treasuries, the Fed would have to expand our money supply by a corresponding amount. Even Krugman acknowledges that this would cause the dollar to lose value; however, he feels that a weaker dollar is good for America and bad for China…

Krugman does not believe that a tanking dollar will translate into higher interest rates or higher consumer prices at home. No matter how many dollars the Fed creates, or how much value those dollars lose relative to other currencies, he is confident that as long as unemployment remains high, rates will stay low and inflation will remain under control. This is absurd

To construct a policy around Krugman’s ridiculous assumption that we benefit China more than they benefit us is to invite catastrophe on an unimaginable scale.

Peter Schiff takes on Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman’s column in the New York Times in this little clip explaining why Krugman is wrong on China and the impact of a Chinese massive sell-off of US debt on the Dollar. This is a good example on the difference between a Keynesian view (Krugman) and the view held by the Austrian School of Economics (Schiff). For some fun on the difference between these schools of though, watch this rap video.


I’d love to see a debate between these two guys.

As many of you know Peter Schiff is now running for Senator in the State of Connecticut. Schiff is an American economist of the Austrian School, author, commentator and popular video blogger who regularly appears in the role of a bearish pundit on numerous financial news networks. He predicted the Dotcom crash of 2000 and the Housing crisis of 2007/2008 and like the author of this blog he belives that the US Dollar is heading for hyperinflation. He is a licensed stock broker, the president of Euro Pacific Capital with a 100 employees who successfully protect their clients wealth by moving out of the US dollar and into real money such as gold etc.

If you want a crash course in the problems with the US economy, watch this. A good hour well spent with a lot of information and humor. Enjoy.

Disclosure: I have no vested interest in Euro Pacific Capital nor do I receive any payment for writing this.

Here’s a great commentary by Peter Schiff on the low-lights of Obama’s State of the Union address held on the 27th January 2010.

India buys 200 tonnes of Gold from the IMF for 6.7 billion US Dollars. Thats more than 7 million ounces and half of the announced IMF gold sale of 400 tonnes. Who will buy the other 200 tonnes? My bet is China. Why are they doing this? They want to get rid of their US Dollars and into hard assets. Gold is the money of kings. Debt is the money of slaves. Just look at the rate of decline in foreign purchases of US debt: Read the rest of this entry »





Johnny Mellgren is a Swedish entrepreneur with a keen interest in macro economics and macro politics. This is his web site where he blogs about the economic collapse of our time, what to do about it and the economic future we create together. Contact Johnny Mellgren.


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I provide advice on investment portfolios for private and corporate clients. I also hold lectures in the history of money and the current economic collapse and how to protect your wealth in a time of transition.