China created paper money and paper money then created inflation         
 Ralph T. Foster in his invaluable book, Fiat Paper Money, The History  and Evolution of Our Currency, writes that paper money made its first  appearance in Szechwan, a remote province   of China early in the 11th  century. 
 Because of a shortage of copper coins, provincial officials  had begun  circulating iron coins; but the difference in value and weight  between  the two metals caused unexpected problems. 
 As Foster writes: [housewives needed] one and one-half pounds of iron [coins] to buy one pound of salt…Paper was the answer. People began to deposit their iron money in money  shops and  exchanged deposit receipts to transact business. 
 The money shops’ deposit receipts then began circulating as  money. But the money shops soon issued more deposit receipts than their supply  of  coins and by 1022, confidence had  eroded in both the notes and the supporting iron money [and] government authorities closed the private  note shops. 
 When the Chinese government intervened, the government  quickly discovered  the advantages paper money—at least to the issuers. The Sung  dynasty  immediately banned the issuance of paper notes by private money shops   and on January 12, 1024, the Sung court  directed the imperial treasury to issue national paper money for general use. 
 In the beginning, the imperial treasury backed its paper  notes with cash  coins equal to 29% of the paper money issued. Eventually,  however, the  Sung, like each succeeding dynasty, would print far more money  than it  actually possessed in backing. 
 The consequent loss of confidence in paper money caused  Chinese scholars to question the nature  of money...Ye Shi (1150-1223) spoke out against  excessive amounts of what he  called “empty money” when he observed how  paper inflation hurt the economy;  and scholar Hu Zhiyu (1127-1295) concluded that only backing gave paper value and blamed the retreat from  convertibility  for the loss of public confidence.. paper money, the  child, is dependent on precious  metals, the mother. Inconvertible notes are therefore “orphans who lost their  mother in childbirth”. (page 19) 
 For the next 600 years, succeeding dynasties would each  attempt to utilize the advantages of paper money and avoid its disadvantages. Not  one  dynasty was able to do so. All attempts to use paper money ended in  runaway  inflation and dynastic collapse. 
 By 1661, China  finally learned its lesson and the new Qing dynasty officially outlawed paper   money. Regarding China’s  600 year experiment, Foster writes: 
Over the course of 600 years, five dynasties had implemented paper money and all five made frequent use of the printing press to solve problems. Economic catastrophe and political chaos inevitably followed. Time and again, officials looked to paper money for instant liquidity and the immediate transfer of wealth. But its ostensible virtues could not withstand its tragic legacy: those who held it as a store of value found that in time all they held were worthless pieces of paper. (page 29)
 Today, almost 1,000 years after paper money first   appeared  and 350 years after China  banned its use, China’s is again  issuing excessive amounts of paper money; and,  once again, paper  money’s initial prosperity is about to give way to inflation  and  economic chaos in the celestial kingdom. 
 Southern Weekly, a  Chinese language publication, recently noted: 
China has not only been the country that prints money at the fastest rate but also been the country with the largest money supply in the world in the past decade. China’s M2, a broad measure of money supply, was up 19.46% at the end of November from a year earlier...This compares with 3.3% and 2.5% of annual M2 growth in the US and Japan respectively over the same period…
 
  China's money supply, M2-to-GDP ratio over the past decade is the highest in  the world.  The nation with the longest history of excessive money  printing and consequent  inflation has clearly forgotten its past. The  past, however, has not forgotten China. 
2011: CHINA, INFLATION & THE PRICE OF GOLD
 Asian nations, China  and India  in particular, have a long history with  gold. Precious metals as a hedge  against chaos is deeply embedded in  Asian cultures and when chaos takes the  form of inflation, gold is the  default hedge; and, today, inflation is on the  rise. 
 China raised interest rates for the third time  since mid-October ahead of a  report forecast to show inflation accelerated to  the fastest pace in 30 months.
February 8, 2011, Bloomberg News
February 8, 2011, Bloomberg News
 This has  profound implications for the price of gold. As  inflation continues to  increase, the buying of physical gold by the Chinese  will send the  price of gold skyrocketing. In fact, it has already begun. 
 On February 2nd, the Financial Times reported: Fears of inflation have also driven demand  for gold as a retail investment…  Precious metals traders in London  and Hong Kong said on Wednesday they  were  stunned by the strength of Chinese buying in the past month. “The  demand is  unbelievable. The size of the orders is enormous,” said one  senior banker, who estimated  that China  had imported about 200 tonnes  in three months. 
 On February 8th, Karen Maley in Australia’s Business  Spectator discussed this growing phenomenon in her article, China’s gold tsunami: It’s not hard to understand the growing Chinese enthusiasm for gold.   Officially, China’s  inflation rate was 4.6 per cent in December, but  many believe the actual  inflation rate is considerably higher. But  Chinese savers earn a paltry  interest rate of 2.75 per cent on one-year deposits, which means that they face  negative real interest rates.  
 Faced with these  dismal returns, Chinese households and businesses have been pouring money into  physical assets, such as food, real estate, and  commodities as a hedge against  inflation. Chinese authorities are now  trying to quell property market  speculation by making it more difficult for buyers to get bank finance for  their second and third investment properties, and have begun experimenting with  property taxes in some cities.  
 This has caused  Chinese investors to turn to gold. According to the Sprott  newsletter, China,  which is already the world’s largest gold producer,  imported more than 209  metric tons of gold in the first ten months of  2010 alone. This compares with  the estimated 45 metric tons it imported in all of 2009.  
DON’T WORRY ABOUT 2012, 2011 IS HERE
 The response to the 2008 global collapse set in motion an  even greater  danger—runaway inflation. In 2009 world governments attempted to  offset the global collapse in demand with historic levels of liquidity.  The  excessive printing of money has now led  to higher prices. 
 Prices, especially food prices are rapidly rising. Tyler  Durden, ZeroHedge, makes this  point with stunning clarity:  
One of the benefits of America finally seeing what Zimbabwe went through as it entered hyperinflation, ignoring for a second that the Zimbabwe stock market was the best performing market, putting Bernanke's liquidity pump to shame, is that very soon everyone will be naked, once companies finally realize they have no choice but to pass through surging input costs. And while some may be ecstatic by the S&P's modest rise YTD, it is nothing compared to what virtually every single agricultural product has done in the first month of 2011. To wit: Corn spot up 7.76%, wheat up 5.63%, Rice up 10.08%, Hogs up 10.16%, Sugar up 5.64%, Orange Juice up 3.33%, and cotton.... up 17.08%. That's in one month!
 
  Rapidly rising food prices have already contributed to  governments falling in  Tunisia  and Egypt.  Other governments, well aware of the risk that  inflationary food prices pose to  their continued rule, are now  stockpiling food to prevent further protests. 
 This buying will only drive the cost of food even higher: Jim Gerlach, of commodity brokerage A/C  Trading, said: "Sovereign nations  are beginning to stockpile food to  prevent unrest." "You artificially  stimulate much higher demand when  nations start to increase  stockpiles." 
 "This  is only the start of the panic  buying," said Ker Chung Yang, commodities  analyst at Singapore-based  Phillip Futures. "I expect we'll have more  countries coming in and  buying grain.
Telegraph
Telegraph
INFLATION & THE FUTURE PRICE OF GOLD
 Even the hardened paper boys on Wall Street are aware of  inflation’s impact on the price of gold. The meteoric rise of gold in the late  1970s was  caused by rapidly rising prices. In the last decade, however, gold   began moving steadily higher as did all commodities in a disinflationary atmosphere. That, however, is about to change. 
 With gold  already moving higher, the increasing inflationary  impetus will send  the price of gold far beyond its present price. Gold’s  spectacular  ascent in the 1970s is now about to be dwarfed. 
 Last night, I,  Ralph T. Foster, our wives and another couple  had dinner together and  the topic turned to the future price of gold. There was  agreement that  while its ascent was certain, gold’s ultimate price was a matter  of  pure conjecture since the reference points used to value that price  would be  virtually worthless pieces of paper money. 
 History is  the context within which our present  circumstances present themselves.  Of late, change has been so rapid that many  believe the past is merely  that which preceded the present. They are wrong. 
 History is about to repeat itself, albeit in a new  iteration. Paper money’s journey to  the west and back again is about to reach  its fatal climax. Paper  money’s ten-century drama is almost over; and while a  new and better  era will replace it, the collapse of the present era will be   unprecedented in magnitude. 
 
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