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Christian Biblical Church of God
Post Office Box 1442
Hollister, California 95024-1442
(831)-637-1875
Fred R. Coulter
Minister
December 6, 2004
Dear Brethren,
I am writing this important letter to you because of the rapid
decline of the US dollar in the United States and in the world. We are literally
witnessing prophecy being fulfilled before our eyes.
For the past couple of years, the value of the dollar has
declined dramatically. In fact, since this summer it has fallen by nearly 40%.
(The value of the dollar today as compared to 1940 is a mere 3 cents.) This is
wrecking great havoc on the international trading market and on other nations
because they hold trillions of dollars of our government, business and personal
debt. Most people do not realize it, but the United States owes nearly 45
trillion, some experts say more. This has caused the price of everything to rise
dramatically. What has happened to the price of oil recently, though the prices
now appear to be falling, is just a foretaste of what we will be facing in the
future.
In 1980 the United States was a creditor nation—the nations of
the world owed us money. However, in 25 years all that has changed. Today, we
are the greatest debtor nation the world has ever seen. Now it appears the
nations of the world are ready to begin taking action against the USA—which will
also affect the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
At the present time it is most difficult for them to act,
because if they pull the plug on our debt and start cashing out their trillions
of dollar our debt, this will also cause their own economies to collapse. So at
the present time the nations of the world are stuck with the declining dollar
and the tremendous loss of value of their dollar holdings. No one knows how much
longer we can hold out, but a major drastic dollar adjustment and decline is
about to come upon us. If a depression does not hit us, we will be faced with
run-away inflation. Either way it will affect everyone!
God prophesied that the nations of Israel would suffer these
calamities for rejecting Him and not keeping His commandments. In Deuteronomy 28
God lays bare this coming economic upheaval: "The stranger that is within thee
shall get up above thee very high; and thou shalt come down very low. He
shall lend to thee, and thou shalt not lend to him: he shall be the head, and
thou shalt be the tail.
"Moreover all these curses shall come upon thee, and shall
pursue thee, and overtake thee, till thou be destroyed; because thou hearkenedst
not unto the voice of the LORD thy God, to keep his commandments and his
statutes which he commanded thee: and they shall be upon thee for a sign and for
a wonder, and upon thy seed for ever. Because thou servedst not the LORD thy
God with joyfulness, and with gladness of heart, for the abundance of all things;
therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies which the LORD shall send against thee,
in hunger, and in thirst, and in nakedness, and in want of all things: and he
shall put a yoke of iron upon thy neck, until he have destroyed thee … And he
shall besiege thee in all thy gates, until thy high and fenced walls come down,
wherein thou trustedst, throughout all thy land: and he shall besiege thee in
all thy gates throughout all thy land, which the LORD thy God hath given thee"
(Deut. 28:43-47, 52, KJV).
The economic disaster will be the first thing to happen. And it
will probably come in several stages. We need to understand the times we are
living in and not get caught asleep at the wheel. On Sabbath December 4, I gave
a sermon on the coming economic tribulation. I read excerpts from the book,
The New Economic Disorder—Our Economy in the End Times by Larry Bates, ISBN
0-88419-383-7 published by Charisma House. If you want to order a book for
yourself, you can call the publisher at 1-800-599-5750; cost is $7.99 plus $3.95
shipping. It is also available in many Bible bookstores for $9.95.
Brethren, we need to be wise and prepare the best that we are
able, given our individual circumstances. God instructs us: "A prudent man
foreseeth the evil, and hideth himself: but the simple pass on, and are
punished" (Prov 22:3, KJV).
I am not a financial advisor, so I cannot tell you what to do.
You have to make your own decisions, in faith trusting God to guide you. But I
can tell you that the most important thing you can do first of all is to get out
of debt as much as possible, except for your housing. Above all remain faithful
to God in your tithes and offerings so that God can bless you according to his
promises: "Bring ye all the tithes into the storehouse, that there may be meat
in mine house, and prove me now herewith, saith the LORD of hosts, if I will not
open you the windows of heaven, and pour you out a blessing, that there shall
not be room enough to receive it. And I will rebuke the devourer for your sakes,
and he shall not destroy the fruits of your ground; neither shall your vine cast
her fruit before the time in the field, saith the LORD of hosts" (Mal. 3:10-11,
KJV). And again as Paul wrote: "For God is able to make all grace
abound toward you so that in every way you may always have sufficiency in
all things, and may abound unto every good work" (II Cor. 9:8).
Recent News Excerpts on the Falling Dollar: I am
including the following economic news reports about the steep decline of the
dollar by Bruce Porteous entitled What the Collapse of the US Dollar Will
Mean to the World. As you read them you will begin to understand the urgency
of the current situation.
"The recent 42-month rally of gold is the 2nd longest since the
breakdown of the Bretton Woods system in 1971. But the worst for the dollar is
yet to come. In a written report for the National Bureau of Economic Research,
former IMF chief economist Kenneth Rogoff and one Maurice Obstfeld warn...’When
current-account adjustment comes, the exchange rate effects may be massive. The
potential collapse of the dollar becomes considerably larger— "...the USA, under
the just-reelected President George W. Bush, is bankrupt, and will be plunged
into the relevant deep, global, chain-reaction collapse very soon. ... Bush
might soon have very painful reasons to wish he hadn’t been elected, (since he)
may absolutely rely on the rapid arrival of a bankrupt economy. ... As I have
emphasized, repeatedly, the present world monetary-financial system is now
entering a terminal phase of general, global collapse - from which it will never
recover in its present form..."(Washington Insider, 11-11-04)
"The leading Italian financial daily Il Sole 24 Ore
stated on its Nov. 9 front page editorial by banker and former minister Paolo
Savona, that the re-election of George W. Bush had pushed the world closer to a
‘monetary Hiroshima’. He said that, due to the US imbalances, we are heading
towards ‘a big explosion which will disintegrate the world dollar activities and
will unleash the Second World Depression.’ " (EIR Strategic Alert,
11-18-04)
"The main current risks I see are in the immense American
current-account deficit on the one hand, and the refusal of the Europeans, on
the other, to contribute to the growth of the world economy. Therefore, a very
severe crisis of the international financial system is preprogrammed. I see the
problem in the fact that, since the ‘stock bubble’ burst 3 years ago, we have
not had any significant dynamic of investment in the US any more. At the same
time, we have a high consumption dynamic, which is not justified by anything,
and therefore can't be sustained. Income didn't increase, and consumption was
promoted primarily by the monetary policy of the Fed and other measures by the
government. The savings rate in the US is dangerously low. Any additional shock,
no matter whether caused by high oil prices or rising interest rates, could now
lead to a situation whereby America's consumers normalize their savings quota
‘overnight’, so to speak—and that would be a catastrophe for the American, and
therefore, the world, economy." (Interview with Prof. Dr. Heiner Flassbeck –
Germany’s deputy finance minister [’98-99] and currently chief economist of the
UN Conference on Trade & Development - in the Executive Intelligence Review,
12-12-04)
"During a routine sale of US Treasury bonds in early September,
one of the essential pillars holding up the economy suddenly disappeared.
Foreigners have been regularly buying nearly half of all debt issued by the US
government. On Sept. 9, for the first time that anyone could remember, they
stayed home. ... The foreigners returned in force at the next Treasury auction,
and Sept. 9 was quickly dismissed as an aberration. But the episode demonstrated
how much of the US economy is dependent on other countries to bankroll its
free-spending ways. A cheaper dollar reduces the value of American securities,
making them less attractive to foreign investors. That could eventually
precipitate...the doomsday scenario’—Japan and China not only refusing to buy US
bonds, but selling some of their $1.3 trillion in reserves. The only way Uncle
Sam could then find new customers for its IOUs would be by raising interest
rates...(which) would be disastrous for a country weaned on cheap credit. A
number of economists and academics say there are real reasons for concern. If
the dollar falls too far too quickly, those all-important foreign investors will
abandon the US in favor of stabler places. Indeed, there are signs that such an
exodus might have already started. In August...foreign private investors sold $2
billion more in US stocks than they bought...(and) they dumped $4 billion more
in government bonds than they purchased. ‘A run for the exits could happen any
day, that's for sure,’ said C. Fred Bergsten, author of Dollar Overvaluation
and the World Economy and director of the Institute for International
Economics, a Washington think tank. (Los Angeles Times, 11-14-04)
"Treasury Secretary John Snow has been forced to suspend the
issuance of US debt, to postpone indefinitely the announcement of the coming
Treasury bill auction and to admit to Congress and the world that he is running
out of legal ways to keep America afloat." (International Herald Tribune,
11-19-04)
"Jean-Claude Juncker, who will become the official spokesman for
the euro zone in January and currently the Luxembourg prime minister and finance
minister, said the United States was not listening to calls for action to
support the dollar. European officials fear that a continued drop in the value
of the dollar could undermine the EU's fragile economic recovery, which is
already under strain from the high oil prices." (International Herald Tribune,
11-17-04)
"The chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan, sounded a
warning over the spiraling US trade deficit... Wall Street paid close attention
to Greenspan's unusually frank assessment of the trade imbalance and its effect
on the US economy. (He) said the economy...would be vulnerable to foreign
influence should the deficits continue to build. ‘It was unusual for him to
speak out on it like that, and it’s having an effect,’ said the chief investment
officer at LPL Financial Services in Boston. This is not the first time
Greenspan has warned about the risks of a spiraling current-account deficit. In
testimony before Congress in February, he said: ‘Foreign investors, both private
and official, may become less willing to absorb ever-growing claims on US
residents.’ " (International Herald Tribune, 11-20-04)
"Alan Greenspan came to the home of the euro on Friday and
warned anxious Europeans to expect little relief from the dollar's relentless
decline against their currency. (He) said the persistently high US
current-account deficit posed a risk to the dollar’s value, as foreign investors
would eventually resist buying more American assets. Taken together [Greenspan's
speech and Snow's ruling out of helping stem the dollar's decline], the two
speeches have sent an unmistakable signal that the Bush administration is
prepared to tolerate a weaker dollar for the foreseeable future. That could
aggravate tensions between the United States and Europe." (International
Herald Tribune, 11-20-04)
"Mr. Speaker, Congress is once again engaging in fiscal
irresponsibility and endangering the American economy by raising the debt
ceiling, this time by $800 billion. ... the debt limit has become merely another
technicality on the road to bankruptcy. ... Congress has become like the drunk
who promises to sober up tomorrow, if only he can keep drinking today.
Increasing the national debt sends a signal to investors that the government is
not serious about reining in spending. This increases the risk that investors
will be reluctant to buy government debt instruments. The effects on the
American economy could be devastating. The only reason why we have been able to
endure such large deficits without skyrocketing interest rates is the
willingness of foreign nations to buy the federal government’s debt instruments.
However, the recent fall in the value of the dollar and rise in the price of
gold indicate that investors may be unwilling to continue to prop up our
debt-ridden economy." (Congressman Dr. Ron Paul [R-TX] to the Congress on
11-20-04)
"Japan has already made it clear it is unhappy with the
export-damaging strength of the yen and some traders say it may not be long
before Japanese authorities step into the market to sell yen for dollars. (The)
Bank of Japan Governor said in an interview...that an appreciation of the yen
could be destabilizing and become a big concern." (Reuters, 11-22-04)
"The Avalanche is coming: It happened before; it might happen
again. The dollar could pitch the world into financial catastrophe. The Federal
Reserve is becoming extremely anxious. ... The problem is not a new one. It is
based on the structural weakness of the world’s leading currency. ... Since 1971
the dollar has been in an unusual and vulnerable position. It is a dominant, but
inconvertible, currency. ... Such a currency is always at a disadvantage. ...
The politicians of the dominant country can behave with relative
irresponsibility, and they usually do. The dominant nation is also likely to
accumulate debt, on a horrific scale. This is like the situation that precedes
an avalanche. More and more loose snow gathers, until there is a huge overhang.
At some point, which cannot be predicted exactly, the appetite for the dominant
currency is sated, and people want to sell. Then the fear sets in; the avalanche
is upon us." (The London Times - Opinion by Sir William Rees-Mogg,
11-22-04)
"The central bank of Russia said that it would stop trying to
peg the ruble solely against the dollar, shifting instead to a target based on a
basket of global currency reserves. The biggest questions hang over Asian
central banks, which have bought hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of US
Treasury securities and other dollar-denominated assets in recent years to slow
the decline of the dollar, in order to safeguard their countries’ exports to the
United States. By adding more euros and other currencies into the mix, central
banks could protect themselves against a loss of value in their holdings... " (International
Herald Tribune, 11-27-04)
"The ‘Great Crash of 2004-2005’: Lyndon LaRouch issued a
statement on Nov. 28 on the escalating world monetary crisis, centered on the US
dollar’s rapid depreciation. The current world monetary tensions are the cutting
edge of the systemic crisis of the global economic-financial system. In his
statement, he warned against ‘voices heard from Asia and Europe, which propose
an immediate withdrawal from the collapsing dollar now... Contrary to their
delusions, the trend toward a "basket of currencies," as an alternative to the
dollar, will merely accelerate the already onrushing worldwide depression.
...the entire world monetary-financial system has now reached the point of
inevitable ongoing disintegration, that there is no hope for civilization...our
civilization as we have known it, is doomed for generations yet to come...’ On
Nov. 25, the executive director and chief economist of the Bank of England, gave
a speech, in which he drew parallels between the times of the Roman Empire and
the present. He said that today everything appears to be fine on the surface,
‘but, as the Romans in 60 AD failed to recognize, the chances of everything
working out exactly as expected are remote... The largest currency traders...all
reduced their forecasts for the dollar.’ These announcements will cause more
investors to hedge their derivatives bets to protect against the collapse. The
hedging, in turn, increases the rate of collapse, which will increase hedging,
and so forth. We are now in an accelerating dynamic of the dollar plunging,
while the euro is pushed even further up—driving Europe’s real economy even
deeper into depression."
"Its (dollar) latest slide is merely a symptom of a worse
malaise: the global financial system is under great strain. ... If the dollar
falls by another 30%, as some predict, it would amount to the biggest default in
history: not a conventional default on debt service, but default by
stealth—wiping trillions off the value of foreigners’ dollar assets. The
dollar’s loss of reserve-currency status would lead America’s creditors to start
cashing those cheques—and what an awful lot of cheques there are to cash. As
that process gathered pace, the dollar could tumble further and further" (The
Economist, 12-03-04)
And last, but not least . . .
"Economic ‘Armageddon’ predicted: Stephen Roach, the chief
economist at investment banking giant Morgan Stanley, has a public reputation
for being bearish. But you should hear what he's saying in private. ... His
prediction: America has no better than a 10% chance of avoiding economic
‘Armageddon.’ In a nutshell, Roach’s argument is that America’s record trade
deficit means the dollar will keep falling. To keep foreigners buying T-bills
and prevent a resulting rise in inflation, Greenspan will be forced to raise
interest rates further and faster than he wants. The result: US consumers, who
are in debt up to their eyeballs, will get pounded. Less a case of ‘Armageddon’
maybe, than of a ‘Perfect Storm.’ To finance its current account deficit with
the rest of the world, America has to import $2.6 billion in cash. Every working
day. That is an amazing 80% of the entire world’s net savings. Sustainable?
Hardly. A source who heard his presentation concluded that a ‘spectacular wave
of bankruptcies is possible. Smart people downtown (NY) agree with much of the
analysis. It is undeniable that America is living in a ‘debt bubble’ of record
proportions." (The Boston Herald, 11-23-04)
Brethren, these news articles clearly show that we are living in
dangerous economic times indeed. We need to follow God’s advice and prepare, but
our faith has to be in God the Father and Jesus Christ. Yes, we will face some
tough times, but God will see us through it.
A final saving grace that may slow the decline is this: This
nation is the only nation that is preaching the Gospel of salvation through
Jesus Christ—whether the full truth or partial truths. Because of this, we can
pray that God will give us wisdom to do what we need to do and to hold back the
hand of His correction for the sake of preaching the Gospel and for the sake of
the brethren.
I realize that this letter is coming to you just after last
week’s letter. However, this information is so important, it is imperative that
you receive it right away. May God grant you His love, grace and wisdom in all
things.
With love in Christ
Jesus,
Fred R. Coulter
FRC
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