In 1929, Ford sold 1,507,132 cars.
Chevrolet sold 1,328,605. Then came the stock market crash. Sales dropped dramatically
each year until 1932, when sales bottomed at 210,824 for Ford and 313,404 for
Chevrolet.
But, during that time, a small new
market came on stream for the two foremost budget brands—the rich.
Although literally millions of people
were hit very hard by the crash, those who had invested wisely retained their
wealth. Those who steered clear of the stock market bubble and/or invested in
assets that would survive the crash, such as precious metals, were able to
continue to live well.
However, they did find that when they
drove down the street in their luxury cars, they stood out and became the
objects of anger and scorn.
This is an important trait in human
nature to recognize—that those who have been reckless with their money and have
ended up losing it tend to
hate those who were not reckless and have
retained their wealth. Perhaps, observing someone who behaved responsibly is a
regular reminder that they behaved stupidly.
Whatever the psychology involved, in
1930, those who had fared well soon learned that it was unwise to be
conspicuous in their continued wealth. At that point, an interesting but
little-remembered development occurred. Such people put their mink coats in the
closet, put their jewellery in a safe place and, most importantly, found barns
in the countryside into which they could park their Duesenbergs, Cords, and
Auburns.
It’s likely that they intended to
retrieve the luxury cars once the economy recovered. However, a collectivist
government under President Franklin Roosevelt protracted the depression by
implementing extensive legislation and policies to “help the common man.”
Unfortunately, those actions crippled the business community, turning what
might have been a normal two-year depression into one that lasted sixteen
years.
During that time, those who had
mothballed their luxury cars bought inexpensive cars such as Fords and
Chevrolets in order to be less conspicuous. Along the way, chauffeurs became a
thing of the past. They were more affordable than ever, but far too conspicuous
to even consider employing.
In the end, most of the Deusies
remained in the barns until after the war, when the prosperity of the 1950s
made them once again popular—this time as collector cars. Today, a restored
Duesenberg can be sold at auction for as much as $10 million, but there was a
25-year drought during which no one would be seen driving them. They became a
dead loss for their original owners.
But what we’re discussing here is a
mere symptom of those times. Of what value is that to us today? Well, many
readers of this publication will be aware that the world is once again facing a
financial crisis—one that will far exceed the Great Depression in its
magnitude. It will be more devastating and will last longer than the previous
debacle, and it will once again be unwise to be seen driving a Deusie.
And so, we prepare ourselves by
moving a significant amount of our holdings into precious metals. If we’ve been
paying attention, we’ve figured out that the banks are likely to confiscate our
deposits and empty our safe deposit boxes. We will have stored the bulk in a
storage facility that is not a financial institution, plus we will now have
some sort of safe at home where we keep an emergency supply—perhaps of silver
rounds—that we may use after a crash. We’ve reasoned correctly that, if and
when the currency collapses, we’ll still be able to buy groceries and fuel for
the car each week by handing over a silver Ajax or two.
So, we’ve prepared ourselves... Well,
not quite. Trouble is, we’ll be observed making our purchases. If the crisis
period were to last a few weeks, we’d have no problem. However, after only a
few months of a period in which people have little or no real currency (as is
always the case after a currency collapse), our neighbours will take note that
the one guy in the community who is regularly seen walking to his car with bags
of groceries, or parked in the otherwise empty filling station having his tank
topped up, is us. Even if we’re driving a Toyota instead of a Mercedes,
eyebrows will be raised, and, after the word gets out that we’ve somehow
survived intact, resentment will build against us.
It will be at that time that we’ll
wish we’d gotten rid of
all our luxury associated assets, then gotten
the proceeds
out of the country—away from those who will resent our
ownership of some form of currency. We may have stored wealth, but it will
become a liability rather than a safety net. We may get on just fine with our
neighbours right now, but when their families are eating dog food for dinner
due to their greatly diminished buying power, we’ll most assuredly be hated by
them.
At this point, it’s likely to become
clear that being the last guy with currency in a neighbourhood that has lost
its currency is not an enviable position to be in.
If we then try to make a run for it,
we’ll find that the rules of the world that existed just a short while ago have
been rewritten. First, we’ll find that currency controls are now in place and
our home country, having crashed, disallows the flight of wealth from its
shores. We can only remove our wealth by becoming criminals.
In addition, we’ll find that,
although the numbers leaving our home country were small prior to the crisis,
those numbers have now swelled dramatically and target countries, where the
economies are faring better, are closing their doors to economic refugees.
At this point, we’ll become pariahs
in our home community and be trapped there. We may own precious metals, but
it’ll be risky to use them to survive. We’ll be aware that we can’t keep a lid on
the fact that we own precious metals. At best, we might be waylaid when leaving
the supermarket with our bags of food. At worst, our house will be ransacked,
either by angry neighbours or by a government SWAT team, when they find that
we’ve violated the Emergency Currency Act. (No, it doesn’t exist yet, but it
most likely will.)
It’s a basic socio-economic principle
that,
during hard times, those who have not been responsible will come after
those who have
. Therefore, it’s not enough to merely retain wealth;
it’s also essential to have both that wealth
and ourselves in a
jurisdiction that has been minimally impacted by the crisis.
We are now entering the latter stages
of the Great Unraveling and are about to see the first of the major economic
dominoes topple. At that point, conditions will get ugly. When that point
arrives, it will be essential to have
already expatriated the great
majority of our wealth (no matter how small or large it may be) to a safer
jurisdiction—one where we might openly pay for groceries with an Ajax or
two—and to have made arrangements for a residence there, to which we can travel
on short notice.
Of this we can be certain: When the
major dominoes begin to fall, there will be little or no warning, and there
will not be sufficient time to begin formulating an exit strategy.
In actual fact, if the reader is the
possessor of the equivalent of a Duesenberg, now would be the time to sell it
off quickly and lease a temporary car. It would also be the time to take all
equity out of the house and other assets and get the proceeds expatriated.
Retain
nothing that you can’t walk away from quickly. Begin now to
prepare for the next phase of your life and be ready to move.
If, by some magic, all of the present
indicators of a coming crisis reverse themselves and your home country becomes
both solvent and prosperous once again, you will have done nothing but create a
position of freedom for yourself—one out of which you could reverse. However,
if a crisis is as inevitable as all the indicators suggest, survival will
depend upon the preparation that you create
now.
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Jeff Thomas is British and resides in the Caribbean. The son of an economist and historian, he learned early to be distrustful of governments as a general principle. Although he spent his career creating and developing businesses, for eight years, he penned a weekly newspaper column on the theme of limiting government. He began his study of economics around 1990, learning initially from Sir John Templeton, then Harry Schulz and Doug Casey and later others of an Austrian persuasion. He is now a regular feature writer for Casey Research’s International Man (http://www.internationalman.com) and Strategic Wealth Preservation in the Cayman Islands.
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The author is not affiliated with, endorsed or sponsored by Sprott Money Ltd. The views and opinions expressed in this material are those of the author or guest speaker, are subject to change and may not necessarily reflect the opinions of Sprott Money Ltd. Sprott Money does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, timeliness and reliability of the information or any results from its use.