Russians are shifting their cash into foreign currencies and buying things they don’t need as the economy stalls and the central bank weakens its defense of the ruble, signaling a larger devaluation may be on the way.Think of the excitement that lies in store for us as we try to figure out what we should do with our increasingly worthless dollars. It will be like a grand parlor game and we'll all be playing it together! Such family bonding we will experience!
(I)nvestments of choice range from electronics to gold jewelry. Evroset, Russia’s largest mobile-phone chain, is telling people to buy anything they can.Hey, that sounds like an economic stimulus right there! Hooray!
“It’s better to feel happy that you own something than to fear losing the money you have earned,” Chairman Yevgeny Chichvarkin says in a letter posted at 5,200 Evroset stores. “If you need a car, buy a car! If you need an apartment, buy an apartment! If you need a fur coat, buy a fur coat!”
Sales at Technosila, the third-biggest consumer electronics chain, have doubled since September as customers rush to swap rubles for flat-screen TVs and laptops, spokeswoman Nadezhda Senyuk said by phone from Moscow, where the company is based.
None of this will happen until the Feds starts printing money to pay for US debt. Once that starts, all bets are off. Since there are fewer buyers of Treasuries and a mountain of them for us to sell this year, that might happen sooner rather than later. We're currently experiencing deflation, so dollars are growing in value right now. That won't last forever as the government shovels borrowed money into the maws of every Democrat special interest group they can find.
You know, I have a friend who has been noodling around with an economic simulation game that he is trying to make more economically-realistic than Monopoly. Maybe I should suggest revising the rules a bit, so that we could play "Hyperinflation!" for real.
ReplyDeleteWhat are you all worried about? Never mind that every day there's a new requirement to spend a trillion dollars, yet never enough time to read the plan (if there is one). Only crooked salesmen say "you don't need to read that, just sign here," right?
ReplyDeleteAnd you can read it. SECTREAS is going to have a web site and everything. It will probably be filled with PDF scans of fuzzy documents that can't be OCR'd, but we can give him another trillion or two.