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Germany may repatriate 10% of Gold stored in the US

For decades around half of the German government's gold reserves worth some $80 billion has been stored in a vault deep below the US Federal Reserve building.

 

BERLIN(BullionStreet): "German politicians are applying more pressure on authorities to repatriate country's huge gold reserves stored in the US.

 

"They demanded that the Bundesbank is required to count and weigh the gold it holds every year but those kept in the US have not been weighed or counted once in three decades.

 

"They added that the present scenario of financial crisis, Germans feel anxious about their national wealth and want to be sure they can count on their gold.

 

"The euro crisis forms the background to what is a slight paranoia in Germany right now, analysts said ..."

 

Just 10%? why not all?

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Inflation Propaganda Exposed | Peter Schiff | Safehaven.com

Inflation Propaganda Exposed | Peter Schiff | Safehaven.com | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it

Economists who hold the popular view that expanding the money supply will provide the best medicine for our ailing economy dismiss the inflationary concerns of monetary hawks, like me, by pointing to the supposedly low inflation that has occurred during the current period of rampant Fed activism. In a recent blog post aimed specifically at me, Paul Krugman noted that the sub 2.5% increases in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) over the past few years are all that is needed to prove me wrong. In fact, Krugman and others have even suggested that the CPI itself overstates inflation and that the Fed would be better able to help the economy if less strict methodologies were used. However, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that the CPI is essentially meaningless as it woefully under reports rising prices.

 

Magazines and newspapers provide a good case in point. The truth has not been exposed through the economic reporting that these outlets provide, but in the prices that are permanently fixed to their covers. For instance, from 1999 to 2002 the Bureau of Labor Statistic's (BLS) "Newspaper and Magazine Index" (a component of the CPI) increased by 37.1%. But a perusal of the cover prices of the 10 most popular newspapers and magazines (WSJ, Washington Post, Time, Sports Illustrated, U.S. News & World Report, Newsweek, People, NY Times, USA Today, and the LA Times) over the same time frame showed an average cover price increase of 131.5% (3.5 times faster than the BLS' stats). This is not even in the same ballpark.

 

Some defenders of the BLS may conclude that prices were held down by the availability of free online news content or the convenience of digital delivery. But that is beside the point. Prior to the digital age, the BLS could have claimed that newspaper costs were held down by public libraries that provided free access. It's also true that online publications deliver less value on some fronts. Not only do many people enjoy the tactile process of reading physical newspapers or magazines, but they offer the secondary value in helping to kindle fires, housebreak puppies, pack dishes, and line birdcages. ...

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