June 11, 2005
Inflation, the IMF and Immigration
By Dr. Ken Dombey
[Recently
by Dr. Dombey:
Multiculturalism And Medicine: A Deadly Combination]
"But
my first question has to do with Mexico. It is bragged
that we had this wonderful bailout of Mexico three years
ago, and yet Mexico still has some of its
same problems. They have tremendous bank loans
occurring right now. The peso has weakened. Last month
it went down 5 percent. Since the conditions are
essentially the same, my question to you is when do you
anticipate the
next currency crisis in the
Mexican peso?"—Rep Ron Paul (R) of Texas to
Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan 2/24/98
In the 1990s polls showed that 80%
of the American people did not want to bail out the
failing Mexican economy. But ultimately
50 billion dollars was sent to Mexico as the
Republicans and Democrats agreed to
allocate resources to a foreign country without even
a vote from Congress.
Likewise, today polls indicate that
a
majority of people wants to stop illegal immigration.
Yet our government
refuses to enforce our immigration laws.
So why does the US government
ignore our citizens?
I think Alan Caruba may be on to
something:
"There
are a lot of reasons advanced to explain why the Bush
administration will do nothing to stop the flow of
illegals across our southern border, the vast bulk of
whom are Mexicans, but the one I had not heard until I
received the email was that Mexico would collapse
without the
money sent back by the Mexicans,
legal and illegal, among us. When you look at the
economic data, it is the one explanation that begins to
make sense." [Mexico's
coming collapse, May 30, 2005]
Think about it. How bad would it
look if a country we bailed out
just over a decade ago failed again?
Which begs the bigger question: why
does our ruling class support the IMF bailing out
countries all across the world with US taxpayer dollars?
If the
Austrian economists at the
Ludwig von Mises Institute are correct, the answer
goes beyond naked wealth transfer and also presents a
more complicated scenario for immigration reformers.
According to economist Jeffrey
Herbener:
"American supremacy in the wake of the
collapse of communism allowed the Fed to fully
exploit the international dollar reserve system. The new
system opened up a vast new vista for
overseas dollar holdings. From Russia and Eastern
Europe to
China and East Asia, the governments of former
communist countries began to soak up dollars to hold as
official reserves as they became part of the American,
‘global’ system."
So what role does the
IMF play in this system? Herbener goes on:
"Any
significant disgorging of dollars would threaten to
ignite price inflation in America if the dollars were
repatriated. Significant domestic price inflation would,
at best, bring a repeat of the 1970s, and, at worst, a
hyperinflation.
”This
danger explains the U.S. interest in promoting IMF
austerity policies and bailouts. The bailouts are
intended to soften the blow of devaluation and price
inflation. In exchange for taxpayers subsidizing banks
and large corporations, and other key beneficiaries of
the system, the IMF can use the bailout money as
leverage to impose conditions favorable for the future
of the dollar-reserve system."
Perils of the Dollar Standard, May 1998
Very interesting. If this theory is
correct, the fiat dollar reserve system benefits special
interests (as well as grand schemes for American
politicians). If taxpayers don't play along by footing
the bill for the IMF, then we risk
hyper-inflation sooner rather than later.
Massive illegal immigration
predominately from Mexico obviously threatens to destroy
America. But do politicians
risk our homeland to keep Mexico afloat in a broader
attempt to maintain our corrupt international monetary
system?
Could the immigration disaster have
been avoided had America stayed on the
gold standard?
Dr.
Ken Dombey [email
him] is a practicing internist.