Category: A4architect

a4architect posts

  • Book

    Book for Primary school-3 posters per class=8×3=24 posters in total.
    Standard :
    1.
    Types of houses.
    Huts, bungalows, maisonettes, flats, office blocks, skyscrapers.

    2.
    Types of building materials for houses.
    Stone house, soil block house, glass house, igloo house, hut/grass house, container house.

    3. House construction ingredients.
    Cement, sand, water, ballast, glass, paint, roofing sheets, wood for formwork, door frame, door, fascia board, roof truss, steel fro window frame, roof truss, door handle.

    4. house construction method.
    Manual stone by stone, prefabricated panel, crane for high rise. Concrete mixers, manual mixer, truck mixer, vibrator, wheel barrow, dump truck. Hammer,hand tools, trowel, spade,
    5.Building elements that comprise the whole building: foundation, wall, roof, finishes, external works, septic tank, fence, gate, car park, landscaping.
    6. Building elements based on type of house-bungalow-foundation, high-rise, raft foundation
    7. Building materials based on house type-bungalow-stone, rcof, foundation, highrise, PEB, heavy RC Foundation, glass walling, sprinkler system, alarm system, cctv, steel structures, stabilized soil block,
    8. House plan and how to read a plan. How to interpret plan, how to draw person,tree ,car, object on plan,elevation and section.
    Architect Francis Gichuhi.
    www.a4architect.com

  • Inspiration Art: Wooden furniture

    Our beautiful and elegant pieces of furniture and unique gift items are made from Railway Sleeper Wood – cut over a century ago to be used as railway “ties” during the opening of the vast interiors of Asia and Africa – the era of the great steam engine.

    The most exotic woods such as Burma Teak (golden brown to light brown), Red Jarrah (rich dark red), Yellow Jarrah (honey yellow sometimes with black, blue, red or orange streaks), Rhodeshian Teak (dark brown) were used. These offered the much needed strength and exceptional durability.

    Now, these sleepers are being replaced by iron and concrete – ironically allowing the most befitting use for such beautiful woods. Exposed for over a century to the full fury of natural elements wind, rain, heat, cold and to add to that the human element – heavy trains thundering over them, the sleepers develop a very unique character with interesting and individual grains, grooves, abrasions and holes. This is the most rustic – sometimes called “distressed” look – one can get on wood.

    These sleepers are brought to our workshop, cleaned and then selected for a particular piece of furniture or an exclusive gift item.

    The design is worked around what nature has “carved” over a hundred years. The wood is then carefully prepared. For it is only with Human Hands that what has been crafted by nature can be finished. The Gallery’s skilled Craftsmen meticulously and lovingly bring out the grains of these beautiful woods and create unique pieces of furniture. Each piece has a chequered historic past, having been part of the Great African and Asian Railway systems throughout these two huge continents. No two pieces of this furniture will ever be the same – thus making them individual works of Art.

    These woods are extremely difficult to work with making the whole process extremely labour intensive thus creating the much needed employment.

    Once you have possessed this beautiful piece of furniture or a special gift, you will not want to part with it – will be enjoyed by generation to come and will become an “heirloom”.

    I would like to mention:-

    • The furniture is made from sleepers which are one hundred years and older.

    • When Railway Lines were laid in 18th and 19th century in India/Asia, the wood used were BURMA TEAK and ‘SAAL” because of its strength and its natural oil which “repels” termites, (thus there was no need for “treatment of the wood against termites”).

    • Burma Teak today is considered to be among the finest wood (is greatly “sought after” wood) for furniture. In fact, now there is a “ban” on cutting indigenous Burma Teak!

    • Nature has done the “carving” for 100+ years – with really amazing “distressness” and realizing that no human can do such work – each one different – making it “Work of ART”, we saw great opportunity to make the very unique furniture from these sleepers.

    • We do not plane the wood – so as not to lose its originality. We have developed our own system to clean every “grove and holes” (imagine the state of sleeper after 100+ years under railways open to all the forces of nature!) to perfection.

    • Thus after cleaning we just cut and assemble the pieces as per our design.

    • The final product is a unique piece of furniture – a piece of Art / Sculpture!

    Kind regards
    Inspiration Art Ltd

    Chandu Dodhia
    Managing Director

  • THE BASIC LAWS OF HUMAN STUPIDITY

    THE BASIC LAWS OF HUMAN STUPIDITY
    by Carlo M. Cipolla
    illustrations by James Donnelly

    http://www.cantrip.org/stupidity.html?seenIEPage=1

    The first basic law of human stupidity asserts without ambiguity that:

    Always and inevitably everyone underestimates the number of stupid individuals in circulation.

    At first, the statement sounds trivial, vague and horribly ungenerous. Closer scrutiny will however reveal its realistic veracity. No matter how high are one’s estimates of human stupidity, one is repeatedly and recurrently startled by the fact that:

    a) people whom one had once judged rational and intelligent turn out to be unashamedly stupid.

    b) day after day, with unceasing monotony, one is harassed in one’s activities by stupid individuals who appear suddenly and unexpectedly in the most inconvenient places and at the most improbable moments.

    The First Basic Law prevents me from attributing a specific numerical value to the fraction of stupid people within the total population: any numerical estimate would turn out to be an underestimate. Thus in the following pages I will denote the fraction of stupid people within a population by the symbol σ.

    THE SECOND BASIC LAW

    Cultural trends now fashionable in the West favour an egalitarian approach to life. People like to think of human beings as the output of a perfectly engineered mass production machine. Geneticists and sociologists especially go out of their way to prove, with an impressive apparatus of scientific data and formulations that all men are naturally equal and if some are more equal than others, this is attributable to nurture and not to nature. I take an exception to this general view. It is my firm conviction, supported by years of observation and experimentation, that men are not equal, that some are stupid and others are not, and that the difference is determined by nature and not by cultural forces or factors. One is stupid in the same way one is red-haired; one belongs to the stupid set as one belongs to a blood group. A stupid man is born a stupid man by an act of Providence. Although convinced that fraction of human beings are stupid and that they are so because of genetic traits, I am not a reactionary trying to reintroduce surreptitiously class or race discrimination. I firmly believe that stupidity is an indiscriminate privilege of all human groups and is uniformly distributed according to a constant proportion. This fact is scientifically expressed by the Second Basic Law which states that

    The probability that a certain person will be stupid is independent of any other characteristic of that person.

    In this regard, Nature seems indeed to have outdone herself. It is well known that Nature manages, rather mysteriously, to keep constant the relative frequency of certain natural phenomena. For instance, whether men proliferate at the Northern Pole or at the Equator, whether the matching couples are developed or underdeveloped, whether they are black, red, white or yellow the female to male ratio among the newly born is a constant, with a very slight prevalence of males. We do not know how Nature achieves this remarkable result but we know that in order to achieve it Nature must operate with large numbers. The most remarkable fact about the frequency of stupidity is that Nature succeeds in making this frequency equal to the probability quite independently from the size of the group.

    Thus one finds the same percentage of stupid people whether one is considering very large groups or one is dealing with very small ones. No other set of observable phenomena offers such striking proof of the powers of Nature.

    The evidence that education has nothing to do with the probability was provided by experiments carried on in a large number of universities all over the world. One may distinguish the composite population which constitutes a university in five major groups, namely the blue-collar workers, the white-collar employees, the students, the administrators and the professors.

    Whenever I analyzed the blue-collar workers I found that the fraction σ of them were stupid. As σ’s value was higher than I expected (First Law), paying my tribute to fashion I thought at first that segregation, poverty, lack of education were to be blamed. But moving up the social ladder I found that the same ratio was prevalent among the white-collar employees and among the students. More impressive still were the results among the professors. Whether I considered a large university or a small college, a famous institution or an obscure one, I found that the same fraction σ of the professors are stupid. So bewildered was I by the results, that I made a special point to extend my research to a specially selected group, to a real elite, the Nobel laureates. The result confirmed Nature’s supreme powers: σ fraction of the Nobel laureates are stupid.

    This idea was hard to accept and digest but too many experimental results proved its fundamental veracity. The Second Basic Law is an iron law, and it does not admit exceptions. The Women’s Liberation Movement will support the Second Basic Law as it shows that stupid individuals are proportionately as numerous among men as among women. The underdeveloped of the Third World will probably take solace at the Second Basic Law as they can find in it the proof that after all the developed are not so developed. Whether the Second Basic Law is liked or not, however, its implications are frightening: the Law implies that whether you move in distinguished circles or you take refuge among the head-hunters of Polynesia, whether you lock yourself into a monastery or decide to spend the rest of your life in the company of beautiful and lascivious women, you always have to face the same percentage of stupid people – which percentage (in accordance with the First Law) will always surpass your expectations.

    THE THIRD (AND GOLDEN) BASIC LAW

    The Third Basic Law assumes, although it does not state it explicitly, that human beings fall into four basic categories: the helpless, the intelligent, the bandit and the stupid. It will be easily recognized by the perspicacious reader that these four categories correspond to the four areas I, H, S, B, of the basic graph (see below).

    If Tom takes an action and suffers a loss while producing a gain to Dick, Tom’s mark will fall in field H: Tom acted helplessly. If Tom takes an action by which he makes a gain while yielding a gain also to Dick, Tom’s mark will fall in area I: Tom acted intelligently. If Tom takes an action by which he makes a gain causing Dick a loss, Tom’s mark will fall in area B: Tom acted as a bandit. Stupidity is related to area S and to all positions on axis Y below point O. As the Third Basic Law explicitly clarifies:

    A stupid person is a person who causes losses to another person or to a group of persons while himself deriving no gain and even possibly incurring losses.

    When confronted for the first time with the Third Basic Law, rational people instinctively react with feelings of skepticism and incredulity. The fact is that reasonable people have difficulty in conceiving and understanding unreasonable behaviour. But let us abandon the lofty plane of theory and let us look pragmatically at our daily life. We all recollect occasions in which a fellow took an action which resulted in his gain and our loss: we had to deal with a bandit. We also recollect cases in which a fellow took an action which resulted in his loss and our gain: we had to deal with a helpless person. We can recollect cases in which a fellow took an action by which both parties gained: he was intelligent. Such cases do indeed occur. But upon thoughtful reflection you must admit that these are not the events which punctuate most frequently our daily life. Our daily life is mostly, made of cases in which we lose money and/or time and/or energy and/or appetite, cheerfulness and good health because of the improbable action of some preposterous creature who has nothing to gain and indeed gains nothing from causing us embarrassment, difficulties or harm. Nobody knows, understands or can possibly explain why that preposterous creature does what he does. In fact there is no explanation – or better there is only one explanation: the person in question is stupid.

    FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION

    Most people do not act consistently. Under certain circumstances a given person acts intelligently and under different circumstances the same person will act helplessly. The only important exception to the rule is represented by the stupid people who normally show a strong proclivity toward perfect consistency in all fields of human endeavours.

    From all that proceeds, it does not follow that we can chart on the basic graph only stupid individuals. We can calculate for each person his weighted average position in the plane of figure 1 quite independently from his degree of inconsistency. A helpless person may occasionally behave intelligently and on occasion he may perform a bandit’s action. But since the person in question is fundamentally helpless most of his action will have the characteristics of helplessness. Thus the overall weighted average position of all the actions of such a person will place him in the H quadrant of the basic graph.

    The fact that it is possible to place on the graph individuals instead of their actions allows some digression about the frequency of the bandit and stupid types.

    The perfect bandit is one who, with his actions, causes to other individuals losses equal to his gains. The crudest type of banditry is theft. A person who robs you of 100 pounds without causing you an extra loss or harm is a perfect bandit: you lose 100 pounds, he gains 100 pounds. In the basic graph the perfect bandits would appear on a 45-degree diagonal line that divides the area B into two perfectly symmetrical sub-areas (line OM of figure 2).

    However the “perfect” bandits are relatively few. The line OM divides the area B into two sub-areas, B1, and B2, and by far the largest majority of the bandits falls somewhere in one of these two sub-areas.

    The bandits who fall in area B1 are those individuals whose actions yield to them profits which are larger than the losses they cause to other people. All bandits who are entitled to a position in area B1 are bandits with overtones of intelligence and as they get closer to the right side of the X axis they share more and more the characteristics of the intelligent person.

    Unfortunately the individuals entitled to a position in the B1 area are not very numerous. Most bandits actually fall in area B2. The individuals who fall in this area are those whose actions yield to them gains inferior to the losses inflicted to other people. If someone kills you in order to rob you of fifty pounds or if he murders you in order to spend a weekend with your wife at Monte Carlo, we can be sure that he is not a perfect bandit. Even by using his values to measure his gains (but still using your values to measure your losses) he falls in the B2 area very close to the border of sheer stupidity. Generals who cause vast destruction and innumerable casualties in return for a promotion or a medal fall in the same area.

    The frequency distribution of the stupid people is totally different from that of the bandit. While bandits are mostly scattered over an area stupid people are heavily concentrated along one line, specifically on the Y axis below point O. The reason for this is that by far the majority of stupid people are basically and unwaveringly stupid – in other words they perseveringly insist in causing harm and losses to other people without deriving any gain, whether positive or negative.

    There are however people who by their improbable actions not only cause damages to other people but in addition hurt themselves. They are a sort of super-stupid who, in our system of accounting, will appear somewhere in the area S to the left of the Y axis.

    THE POWER OF STUPIDITY

    It is not difficult to understand how social, political and institutional power enhances the damaging potential of a stupid person. But one still has to explain and understand what essentially it is that makes a stupid person dangerous to other people – in other words what constitutes the power of stupidity.

    Essentially stupid people are dangerous and damaging because reasonable people find it difficult to imagine and understand unreasonable behaviour. An intelligent person may understand the logic of a bandit. The bandit’s actions follow a pattern of rationality: nasty rationality, if you like, but still rationality. The bandit wants a plus on his account. Since he is not intelligent enough to devise ways of obtaining the plus as well as providing you with a plus, he will produce his plus by causing a minus to appear on your account. All this is bad, but it is rational and if you are rational you can predict it. You can foresee a bandit’s actions, his nasty manoeuvres and ugly aspirations and often can build up your defenses.

    With a stupid person all this is absolutely impossible as explained by the Third Basic Law. A stupid creature will harass you for no reason, for no advantage, without any plan or scheme and at the most improbable times and places. You have no rational way of telling if and when and how and why the stupid creature attacks. When confronted with a stupid individual you are completely at his mercy. Because the stupid person’s actions do not conform to the rules of rationality, it follows that:

    a) one is generally caught by surprise by the attack; b) even when one becomes aware of the attack, one cannot organize a rational defense, because the attack itself lacks any rational structure.

    The fact that the activity and movements of a stupid creature are absolutely erratic and irrational not only makes defense problematic but it also makes any counter-attack extremely difficult – like trying to shoot at an object which is capable of the most improbable and unimaginable movements. This is what both Dickens and Schiller had in mind when the former stated that “with stupidity and sound digestion man may front much” and the latter wrote that “against stupidity the very Gods fight in vain.”

    THE FOURTH BASIC LAW

    That helpless people, namely those who in our accounting system fall into the H area, do not normally recognize how dangerous stupid people are, is not at all surprising. Their failure is just another expression of their helplessness. The truly amazing fact, however, is that also intelligent people and bandits often fail to recognize the power to damage inherent in stupidity. It is extremely difficult to explain why this should happen and one can only remark that when confronted with stupid individuals often intelligent men as well as bandits make the mistake of indulging in feelings of self-complacency and contemptuousness instead of immediately secreting adequate quantities of adrenaline and building up defenses.

    One is tempted to believe that a stupid man will only do harm to himself but this is confusing stupidity with helplessness. On occasion one is tempted to associate oneself with a stupid individual in order to use him for one’s own schemes. Such a manoeuvre cannot but have disastrous effects because a) it is based on a complete misunderstanding of the essential nature of stupidity and b) it gives the stupid person added scope for the exercise of his gifts. One may hope to outmanoeuvre the stupid and, up to a point, one may actually do so. But because of the erratic behaviour of the stupid, one cannot foresee all the stupid’s actions and reactions and before long one will be pulverized by the unpredictable moves of the stupid partner.

    This is clearly summarized in the Fourth Basic Law which states that:

    Non-stupid people always underestimate the damaging power of stupid individuals. In particular non-stupid people constantly forget that at all times and places and under any circumstances to deal and/or associate with stupid people always turns out to be a costly mistake.

    Through centuries and millennia, in public as in private life, countless individuals have failed to take account of the Fourth Basic Law and the failure has caused mankind incalculable losses.

    THE FIFTH BASIC LAW

    Instead of considering the welfare of the individual let us consider the welfare of the society, regarded in this context as the algebraic sum of the individual conditions. A full understanding of the Fifth Basic Law is essential to the analysis. It may be parenthetically added here that of the Five Basic Laws, the Fifth is certainly the best known and its corollary is quoted very frequently. The Fifth Basic Law states that:

    A stupid person is the most dangerous type of person.

    The corollary of the Law is that:

    A stupid person is more dangerous than a bandit.

    The result of the action of a perfect bandit (the person who falls on line OM of figure 2) is purely and simply a transfer of wealth and/or welfare. After the action of a perfect bandit, the bandit has a plus on his account which plus is exactly equivalent to the minus he has caused to another person. The society as a whole is neither better nor worse off. If all members of a society were perfect bandits the society would remain stagnant but there would be no major disaster. The whole business would amount to massive transfers of wealth and welfare in favour of those who would take action. If all members of the society would take action in regular turns, not only the society as a whole but also individuals would find themselves in a perfectly steady state of no change.

    When stupid people are at work, the story is totally different. Stupid people cause losses to other people with no counterpart of gains on their own account. Thus the society as a whole is impoverished. The system of accounting which finds expression in the basic graphs shows that while all actions of individuals falling to the right of the line POM (see fig. 3) add to the welfare of a society; although in different degrees, the actions of all individuals falling to the left of the same line POM cause a deterioration.

    In other words the helpless with overtones of intelligence (area H1), the bandits with overtones of intelligence (area B1) and above all the intelligent (area I) all contribute, though in different degrees, to accrue to the welfare of a society. On the other hand the bandits with overtones of stupidity (area B2) and the helpless with overtones of stupidity (area H1) manage to add losses to those caused by stupid people thus enhancing the nefarious destructive power of the latter group.

    All this suggests some reflection on the performance of societies. According to the Second Basic Law, the fraction of stupid people is a constant σ which is not affected by time, space, race, class or any other socio- cultural or historical variable. It would be a profound mistake to believe the number of stupid people in a declining society is greater than in a developing society. Both such societies are plagued by the same percentage of stupid people. The difference between the two societies is that in the society which performs poorly:

    a) the stupid members of the society are allowed by the other members to become more active and take more actions; b) there is a change in the composition of the non-stupid section with a relative decline of populations of areas I, H1 and B1 and a proportionate increase of populations H2 and B2.

    This theoretical presumption is abundantly confirmed by an exhaustive analysis of historical cases. In fact the historical analysis allows us to reformulate the theoretical conclusions in a more factual way and with more realistic detail.

    Whether one considers classical, or medieval, or modern or contemporary times one is impressed by the fact that any country moving uphill has its unavoidable σ fraction of stupid people. However the country moving uphill also has an unusually high fraction of intelligent people who manage to keep the σ fraction at bay and at the same time produce enough gains for themselves and the other members of the community to make progress a certainty.

    In a country which is moving downhill, the fraction of stupid people is still equal to σ; however in the remaining population one notices among those in power an alarming proliferation of the bandits with overtones of stupidity (sub-area B1 of quadrant B in figure 3) and among those not in power an equally alarming growth in the number of helpless individuals (area H in basic graph, fig.1). Such change in the composition of the non-stupid population inevitably strengthens the destructive power of the σ fraction and makes decline a certainty. And the country goes to Hell.

    http://www.cantrip.org/stupidity.html?seenIEPage=1

  • The mechanics of inflation .The great government swindle and how it works.

    The mechanics of inflation .The great government swindle and how it works.

    http://www.abelard.org/inflation.php

    Inflation – the mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle and how it works is one of a series of documents about economics and money at abelard.org.

    – note: this document is non-linear, the position of text and boxes relative to other text and boxes is not particularly significant. Start wherever you like and expect to travel widely about this document as you read. Or start from the beginning and work your way through, if that gives you joy.

    Money and value

    It is useful first to distinguish money from value. Money is the pretty coloured paper stuff you keep in your purse, the numbers in your bank account and any other intermediary means of keeping score and used for the purpose exchanging goods.

    Wealth on the other hand is anything humans value, such as houses, bananas and land. Most of this document is about money, human responses to money and the trickery applied to money, especially by ‘governments’.

    It is important to understand that money and value are two very different animals.

    The price of any object is exactly what someone is prepared to pay for it right now.

    See also perceived value.return to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ document

    Value of money
    Do not read this box yet if you are easily confused!

    It is not entirely correct to treat money as if it has no intrinsic value.

    The value of an object is exactly what someone is prepared to pay for it right now. Put another way, the value of an object is established by people wanting that object, the value is not intrinsic to the ‘object’. A farmer may value a load of horse manure rather differently than the resident of a studio flat.

    Items of money are in fact objects (if you wish to get even deeper in, refer to Why Aristotelean logic does not work). Money objects are indeed valued by humans, thus money does have a real value. For example, the person wishing to sell the horse manure will very like be inclined to take money in exchange for the load, although if offered a brand new shiny motor car or a large sparkly diamond may well like that price even more.

    Money is constantly exchanged for other items, including money from other countries and other negotiable instruments. The international exchange rates give an idea of the current value or desirability placed upon various issues of money.

    See also PPP.

    See also perceived value.

    It is quite possible that what is expensive today will be cheap tomorrow. Gold may be valued in the spring, but after a long drought when food is short, you may well find it difficult to buy food with uneatable gold. It is important in understanding the world (and money) to be constantly aware that the world isreturn to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ document dynamic, it is ever changing (and you with it!) even as you read this document.
    Supply and demand

    Money is objects which people tend to aspire to; just as is dinner, a coat, a car or a fancy bauble. There is a limited assigned amount of ‘money’ in any society, just as there are a limited number of dinners or cars. In most modern states, the supply of money is in the monopoly control of governments. Governments use this monopoly position as a means of control and manipulation. Governments change the amount of money available according to their own purposes.

    Any person who sets up to produce more money, governments label ‘forgers’, then attack those people viciously. However, the real forgers are the governments. They produce more money at will and with that money, they buy goods for the mere price of the printed paper or an edict to their controlled banks. The paper they issue has no intrinsic value beyond the paper upon which it is printed. In the past the paper could be exchanged for gold or other substantial assets—government monetary monopoly has stopped that.

    Despite myths to the contrary, there is no good reason why any person should not produce a more reliable money backed by gold or by a basket of commodities. The only factor standing in the way of such honest money is the power of the state, a power that the state is most reluctant to yield.

    For further details, refer to private money section in E.M.U. and inflation – a civil liberty issue.

    For a society with honest money, read And then there were none by Eric Frank Russell, a science fiction story .
    Understanding money – Mechanics of inflation [2] [3]

    Inflation and rising prices are not the ‘same’.

    “Lenin was right. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.”

    J M Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, ch. 6.

    The reality of inflation is that governments steal money from their citizens with absolutely no intention of repaying that money. They can do this to a great extent because most people cannot add up and because governments can project draconian force. You might note that economics is not taught in schools. Adolph said, “what joy it is for the leaders that the public are stupid”. In Mein Kampf, he lays out plans to ensure that the eastern nations that he intended to colonise/enslave, were kept uneducated. Economics, or the understanding of money, is one of the fundamental skills that are essential for any citizen who is to aspire to freedom. Once the public understands money, the manipulative power of government is greatly reduced.

    “Suppose that by the working of natural laws individuals pursuing their own interests with enlightenment in conditions of freedom always tend to promote the general interest at the same time!”

    J M Keynes, The end of laissez-faire, p. 274.

    A central issue of the manner of government power is the monopolisation of overwhelming force. One of the uses of that force is the establishment of a monopoly over the control of money, and that, a money that is mere printed paper with no intrinsic exchange value.

    Money is what a psychologist calls a conditioned reinforcer, which means that, if you give people these worthless pieces of paper, other humans are inclined to give you useful things in exchange. Money use depends upon the belief that others will act in like manner at a future date.

    Once belief in a form of money ceases, that object (eg dollar bills) ceases to function as money, that is, it ceases to be money!

    Inflation is caused by increasing the quantity of money relative to the traded goods within a society. That effect can also be achieved by lowering the quantity of tradable goods. It is not caused by anything else, ever (well, not nearly ever!). Deflation is simply the reverse process. Deflationary policies were pursued by several countries in the wake of the first World War. [J M Keynes, The end of laissez-faire, p.150]

    The sums that explain inflation are not difficult to understand, in reality they are very simple: an average ten-year-old child could understand the sums, given a reasonably able teacher. However, for the lack of such teaching, currently it is simple enough for governments and bankers, and for the seriously rich to easily cheat the mass of the population with impunity, by manipulating the fiat or ticket money [4]

    Learning some simple arithmetic is a major road to freedom. However, due to the abominably poor teaching of mathematics that abounds in our society, most of the population is terrified of the simplest of sums. This is despite the reality that those sums are merely the means of conveying rather simple ideas; ideas that may also be expressed in plain English. In view of this widespread fear, I am going to place the simple details and sums in boxes, so that those who are too fearful may skip over those details, at least until they feel safer with the general ideas.return to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ document
    The lenders’ multiplier

    When you deposit £100 in your bank account, the bank, or banks, will effectively lend that money out to approximately 8 to 12 other people dependent upon the deposit ratio, naturally charging each of them interest, often upwards of 20% interest, as in the case of credit card debt, for example. They will of course pay you some minuscule level of interest for the privilege of ‘looking after’ your money. They will also attempt to charge you under any spurious excuse they can dream up, such as giving you a statement of the amount in your account or writing you some form letter.
    return to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ document
    Why governments so love inflation

    The amount of goods and services traded within the UK in one year is approximately £800 billion. That figure is known as the GDP (gross domestic product). Of that total over £300 billion is spent, supposedly on our behalf, by the ‘government’. That is roughly 40% of all your money spent in Britain each year is spent by your ever loving government. In order to spend that money government first has to take that money, which eventually means the goods, away from you.

    As people do not like almost half of their wages being appropriated by government, government resorts to very many deliberately confusing tactics in order to take your wages from you by stealth.

    As a politician once said, “the objective is to pluck the geese in such a manner as to obtain the greatest number of feathers with the least amount of hissing”.

    It may not come as a great surprise that, when governments ‘borrow’ from you, they have no intention of repaying the money they have supposedly borrowed. This is much of what inflation is all about. Inflation is a trick to make you think you are being repaid money that you lend the government, when they are in fact stealing the money from you. The objective is, that the longer that you leave your money in savings, the less it will be worth. I shall now outline the mechanism by which this trick is worked. I shall base my outline on a figure of 10% inflation,[5] I could have chosen a higher or lower figure but it is the idea that is the point.
    Stage 1

    First the government ‘borrows’, usually from its citizens/subjects in an advanced economy, something around 50% of the GNP.[6] That is more than one year’s taxation; say £400 billion in the U.K.
    Stage 2

    During the course of the year, the government then instructs its wholly owned subsidiary, the central bank (the Bank of England), to print say, an extra £8 billion.[7] Keep in mind that this sum is then multiplied by about 8 or 12 times as it is borrowed and deposited within the banking system. That is, another £80 billion appears from thin air. The process of putting this game into action is left in the hands of the ‘commercial’ banks. These banks are not fully independent businesses, as is often thought or pretended; they are heavily controlled and regulated instruments of the state. For this service, they are handsomely rewarded by being allowed to cream off a percentage of the profits of the scam. The system is a casino and the wheel is fixed.

    The result of this activity is 10% more money floating around at the end of a year than there was at the beginning of the year![8] The result is that, all things being equal (which they are only approximately), the general level of prices throughout the economy rises by about 10%. Which of course amounts to every pound being worth nearly 10%[9] less at the end of the year than it was at the beginning. That is, you can at the end of the year purchase 10% less bread or booze or chrissy presents with your pound than you could at the beginning of the year.
    Consequences:

    By this process the government gets several advantages.

    First, naturally by printing £8 billion , the government gets £8 billion worth of goods and services for absolutely nothing but a few bits of paper! Another accurate word for such a process is ‘forgery’ (for honest money, see the i.o.u. system described in And then there were none).

    Second, the debt that they ‘borrowed’ from the people has gone down in value by maybe 10%! In other terms, the £400 billion owed by the government is, after one year, worth a bit more than £360 billion. That is a gain for the government of most of £40 billion!

    Third, a great many people mistakenly think that the value of their houses and wages have gone up by a fair old whack, whereas all that has gone up is the price! (Remember, value and price are very different matters). That has the potential to make people think that the government is ‘doing a good job’ while the government is cheating them rotten – quite a trick.

    Fourth, because of the rising wages (again, definitely not rising value of wages!), the real level of wages at which tax is paid goes down, so you in fact pay more tax. For example, if you start the year earning £100 a week and tax is paid after the first £30, you will pay tax on £70 (7/10ths of your wages). In one year’s time, assuming that your wages keep up with inflation, you will be earning £110 pounds per week. You will still start paying tax on the money over £30 per week, so now you will be paying tax on £80 (8/11 the of your wages) which is a greater part (proportion of your wages). In fact this means that next year you will pay an extra 4% in tax, yet another bonus for a rapacious government and more tax for you to pay. This process, by the way, is known as ‘bracket creep’.

    Fifth, the value of all allowances such as family allowances and unemployment benefit and pensions goes down.

    Little wonder that governments love inflation so very much!
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    Keep right on borrowing!

    Keeping in mind the effect on government debt of 10% inflation, it becomes clear that the government could ‘borrow’ another £40 billion at the end of the year and end up owing no more in real terms than they did at the beginning of the year. £40 billion is about 1/8th of the total of UK taxation for one year, and that does not of course take into account all those other benefits like taxing people at lower real levels of wages, and the lower benefits paid out by governments.

    Now of course this wondrous effect would gradually disappear if government ever did pay off the national debt, or allow it to erode and disappear by inflation.

    Therefore in order to keep up the advantages of inflation to government, it is important that government does keep right on ‘borrowing’. For without a ‘debt’, there would be no debt left to erode!
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    How is interest decided?

    You will constantly be informed that the Bank of England or, until recently, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, sets the basic rate of interest. This is untrue, the market decides interest, not the bank or chancellor as is pretended.

    As with the price of all goods, the banks will get the highest possible rate of interest possible from its ‘customers’. They will also pay the lowest rate possible to those who deposit money in their banks. Over a very long period of reasonably honest money, that rate of interest was in the region of 3%, give or take a bit. That was approximately what those who borrowed money were prepared to pay and what satisfied those who lent money. There was some small difference between these rates, due to the percentage that the banks creamed of for the service of organising the transactions. And remember, the banks lent many times over, thus, in reality. making a considerable profit on the deals.

    Now, every banker knows full well, that a poor or uneducated person is much less able, or even likely, to repay than a rich person with assets to impound and a reputation to defend. Further, the banker also knows full well that the poor person usually needs the money far more than the rich person. So the banker tends to take the poor customer for a much greater rate of interest than the rich person. Hence the crazy rates of interest charged on credit cards and the like.

    So, why is the basic interest rate not 2 or 3%? Well, because when the government are making the value of money ever less, those lending money demand a premium to compensate for the losses through inflation. Thus the posted interest becomes something like 3% plus the inflation rate! It really is as simple as that.

    A more detailed description of the way in which government manipulates the money supply, with its knock-on effects on nominal interest rates [**] can be seen at the supply of money and how governments manipulate interest rates.

    ** The nominal interest rate is the real interest rate (approximately 3%) plus the amount of ‘interest’ demanded by the market in order to offset the continually devaluing value of the money being engineered by the government.
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    Quantity of money

    At any one time there exists a fixed quantity of money just as there exists a fixed quantity of cars or refrigerators. Consider a monopoly refrigerator manufacturer. They may fix the price of refrigerators at what ever level they wish, simply by increasing or decreasing the number of refrigerators manufactured or released in a given time period. Several markets are more or less managed in such a manner: diamonds, oil or the electricity supply can be examples.

    Money can likewise be controlled in such a manner. Thus governments tend to rig the current value of money by controlling the supply and by making it very difficult for rival suppliers to set up in business. There is no sound or legitimate reason for governments to control or own the supply of money.

    The constant assumption that government has some legitimate place in the supply and control of money is a myth fostered by governments. [10]

    There is no good reason why you should not issue money, assuming that you are prepared to legitimately redeem that money at a pre-arranged rate, your money would in fact be of greater legitimacy than that issued by governments who start off with no such intention. (See And then there were none.)
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    So what exactly is ‘inflation’ and how does it operate?

    Consider that in any economy such as the UK the people have access to a particular quantity of desirable goods and services (see Why Aristotelean logic does not work), such as land, tables and people’s time giving them manicures or cooking their dinner. They also have a fixed amount of money to assist in their trading these goods among themselves.

    We know from observation that, in general, they trade among themselves at a fairly constant rate.

    Then, suddenly and rather secretly, government prints 1% more money. Afterwards, over a period of time, prices will tend to rise by about 10% (see the multiplier box).

    The goods won’t go up in value, the money has merely become worth less because there is more of it (see supply and demand).
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    Seignorage

    There is one case in which the printing of extra money has some measly justification: that is that the productivity of the country, and thence the amount of desirable tradable goods, has increased. This does happen with fairly predictable regularity in a modern economy, at a rate of about 2 or 3% a year. Now clearly the producers of the extra goods should be the people who issue any extra money to cover these goods, but the government instead horns in on the act and produces the money itself and duly exchanges that money for the goods produced by others. This trick is called seignorage [11]

    You will meet this trick in another form in reserve currency.
    And now for inflation

    Not satisfied with seignorage, and thinking it a good wheeze anyway, governments eventually caught on to the advantage of producing even more paper over and above that ‘needed’ [12] for trade. Once more, government gets goods for virtually nothing in exchange for the extra money that it prints. This surplus money has all the various advantages for the government delineated elsewhere and a very great deal of disadvantage for the average member of the population. But then, whoever suggested government was your honest friend?

    There is another prime manner in which inflation can occur. This is when an economy shrinks, for then there are less goods while the amount of money remains the same. Strangely, a great many commentators confuse a growing economy as inflationary and a contracting economy as deflationary, such is the innumeracy abroad in the land. The confusion seems to be that as an economy expands, so labour becomes in short supply; thus the price of labour increases and this rising price becomes confused with inflation.

    Any rising price in one part of the economy will always be matched with falling prices elsewhere in the economy, as long as both the supply of money and the propensity to trade remain stable (see also velocity of money). Inflation, on the other hand, is due almost always to the government printing worthless money in order to cheat you out of your property. Inflation results in a general rise in prices, not a rise in prices for a good that is currently in short supply. Naturally the government does everything it can in order to confuse the two situations, constantly lying and pretending that rising wages or some such is ‘causing’ inflation. Most are taken in by this, after all government also widely controls the universities and has a cosy relationship with the media and banking combines.
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    The supply of money and how governments manipulate interest rates

    The government primarily uses three methods to manipulate the supply of money in the economy.

    1. The government extracts ‘assets’ (see next paragraph) from the banks. [13] Now you and I would call it borrowing money from the banks, but governments and banks tend to prefer fancy jargon, which has the added advantage of confusing the great majority of people.

    By this borrowing of money from the banks, which really means borrowing it from the customers of the banks, the government achieves the effect of the banks and customers having less money. The banks are left with a piece of paper, which they call an ‘asset’ but is in fact an i.o.u.

    As the banks now have less money to lend, the rate of interest is driven up. This is because there is less money for them to lend to their customers, and thus more competition for the money that remains available for borrowing. Remember, shortage drives up prices. Thus the government can drive up the price of borrowing, by borrowing rather large amounts of the available money for itself, money that it is then often inclined to waste on foolish and inefficient pet schemes.

    To increase the amount of money floating around, this process is simply reversed. The government buys back the assets/i.o.u.s, so leaving the banks with more money to lend out.

    2. Remember that governments have the banks very much under their control. Part of this control is exercised by forcing the banks to deposit part of your money with the government. They call this the reserve ratio. Remember also the effect of the multiplier. By forcing the banks to keep an extra billion pounds on deposit, the effect is to take maybe ten billion pounds out of the system!

    The deposit or reserve ratio [14] is supposed to protect the banks against insolvency, at least that is the propaganda. In a free market, the banks would decide on the reserves they intend to keep. The more the reserves the safer, but maybe the less profitable will be the bank. In a free system, customers would be able to choose whether they wished to deposit their money with a more profitable or a more risky bank. Likewise, the shareholders would be faced with similar decisions. A more risky bank might well pay a higher rate of interest on any money you deposited, so the choice becomes real. However, this is not a free market, this is a government monopoly, so the government sets the reserve ratio for all the banks under its control.

    3. Now comes by far the worst element of government manipulation of the money supply; it is no exaggeration to refer to this element as criminal forgery.

    The government simply expands the money supply, by printing more money with which it buys goods from the public with no intention whatsoever of repaying the theft thereby enabled. It is important to keep right on remembering that the effect of this extra forged money on the amount of money in circulation is expanded approximately ten times by the time the banks have applied the multiplier.
    Summary

    In both sections 1 and 2 above, there is every expectation that these processes be reversed at some future date, that is, the supply of money as effected by the first two types of manipulation is reversible and likely to be reversed over time. These processes may be expected to wax and wane as with the tides.

    The third method is something entirely different. It is deliberately designed, government theft by stealth from the population. There is no intention of reversing the process, just an endless process of systematic theft.

    For another twist in the tale, see also reserve currency.
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    Reserve currency
    The exchange rate

    When a government debauches (inflates) its currency, people of ability who have money make strong attempts to unload as much of that currency as they can. One way of doing that is to sell the local currency for a foreign currency that is being inflated less. This process is one reason that a currency becomes ‘overvalued’, i.e., more people want the safer currency and less want the more unreliable currency. In reality it is not ‘overvalued’ at all for, as you will remember, the value of any item is exactly what a person will pay for it right now!

    A currency is only ‘overvalued’ relative to its current PPP. However, many people will be betting it won’t stay that way!

    Most sensible people expect the new proposed euro to become a soft (i.e. inflationary) currency, so the markets have marked the price of the euro down in order to compensate for that perceived risk. In the meantime, the British currency has been transferred to an ‘independent’ central bank. Alert bodies interpret this to mean that there will probably be less government interference in the money supply and therefore less inflation in Britain than in the past: therefore the value placed upon pounds rises.
    Importing and exporting inflation

    Sometimes, large numbers of people outside a country start to trust the stability of another country and also the stability of the money regime of that country; in other words they trust that the country doesn’t tend to inflate, or at least not outrageously. If those people live in a country where the inflation is ‘outrageous’, they start to trade in the currency of the more stable country. When this happens, the external currency being favoured is said to be a reserve currency.

    It is not enough for a country to start printing paper and calling it money, it is also necessary that people accept and use the paper as money. In the extreme case, if everybody refused to hold euros or accept them in payment, the euro would not become money, it would just be worthless paper.

    A currency is money, if and only if, the people are prepared to accept it as money.

    The British currency used to be used widely as a reserve currency and it is just possible that condition is returning. The US dollar is the prime reserve currency at this time. Any currency that is used to hold cash reserves, in preference to your own currency, is acting as a reserve currency. Intelligent people, countries and companies attempt to spread risk by holding several currencies.

    There are considerable advantages that accrue to a country that manages to establish itself as a reserve currency. There is also a very great potential danger.

    If a country can establish reserve currency status and get its money used in another burg, it has the same effect as an increase in internal production. It is counter inflationary, the same amount of money covering more goods and trading. So the country with the reserve currency can more easily print more money as a seignorage. This exports the potential inflation to the other country because the money in the other country is becoming less popular. The other country’s money then steadily covers less and less goods, thus making their money ever less valuable.

    The very grave danger is that the reserve currency loses trust, or even that a foreign government bans its use, when it will all quickly come flooding back to the issuing country, thus setting off inflation there. If the amounts are large, the effects will likewise be large. A country with a reserve currency must take the value of its money with great seriousness, if it is to maintain that useful status.
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    Moral hazard

    So, what do the banks prefer? In a corrupt world, banks like instability! Bankers like confusion; yours!

    In an environment where government plays games with money, no business can plan effectively, even including the local country’s client banking system. Thus regularly, banks go effectively bankrupt, and businesses are widely less efficient that would be the case could they plan in a stable and an honest environment.

    Further more, where government behaves in a dishonest manner, it gives a very powerful message to the mass of society.

    If people cannot trust money and also cannot trust government to provide a stable set of rules for the conduct of the relationships known as business, those people are less likely to engage in the relationships known as ‘business’. This results in lower production and less socially positive interactions. Among other effects, people start to attempt to trade by other, less efficient, means such as barter, in order to avoid the unpredictability and the dishonesty inherent in inflating money and dishonest government.[29]

    Remember that the government is at the heart of this monetary manipulation, and the banks are both their agents and their servants. There is a strong incestuous relationship between government and banking, where the government is a monetary monopolist. You will find that old chancellors do not die, they just end up with lucrative sinecures in the banking system.

    When it suits the government to have more money sloshing around, almost invariably before an election, the money supply is expanded. After the election is safely over, money is once again tightened and taxes raised, only for the process to be repeated when the next election approaches. Those who believe the lies that government and the banking system purvey, attempt to run their businesses on a basis of rational planning, rather than setting policy according to the election cycle that is really driving government policy. This leads to many a bankruptcy and much confusion. At times, with a government in some difficulty, the manipulations become rather gross, resulting in considerable business disruption. During such a (quite common) disturbance, so many businesses and individuals tend to get into difficulties that the banking system itself comes under pressure, also becoming effectively bankrupt.

    Naturally, the government cannot stand the heat of large numbers of people being no longer able to reclaim their money from the banks, so the government simply raises taxes, manipulates the money supply and thus the interest rates, until the banks are once more in profit, and rolls onward to the next manufactured ‘crisis’.

    Now, the banking system knows perfectly well that the government will bail them out if difficulties arise. So, they start to lend your money to the projects that promise the greatest returns, that is, to the projects that are most risky. This, of course, much increases the likelihood that the banks will once more get into difficulties, but remember, no worries: the taxpayer will be forced by the government to bail them out. In the trade this process is called moral hazard! [15]

    An effective parasite tends to debilitate the victim but not to kill it, for that would remove the source of sustenance. While many a small business goes to the wall, large businesses with large reserves and accumulated institutional experience can absorb the assets of the damaged businesses at knock-down rates [16]. The next round of inflation will also tend to wipe out the debts of the survivors, also ensuring that obviously large groups of unemployed to not appear to embarrass the politicians whom these companies often tend to fund.

    Banks are run for self interest and ego, bankers are constantly making errors of judgement, often on the grand scale. [17]
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    What is money worth?
    GNP or GDP

    Short for Gross National Product or Gross Domestic Product. These terms mean more or less the same thing. [18]

    A country may be imagined as a business corporation and the money issued as the shares in that corporation. The holders of money may then be thought of as the shareholders of that country. People or corporations seeking to own a slice of that country must acquire the shares of the country.

    You want to follow the crookery and confusion further? See corporate corruption, politics and the ‘law’.
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    Exchange rates and PPP (purchase power parity)

    Exchange rates do not reflect the purchase prices across different ‘countries’. The pound is currently (2000) very strong, thus you may buy far more abroad with your pounds than was the case a few years back.

    PPP is worked out by first comparing the local prices of a basket of goodies across different countries, then normalising to assess a better value for the money across those countries, than the value indicated by current exchange rates. [19]

    Thus, dollars are presently worth far more in America, than they are in England when changed into pounds at the current exchange rate. Hence, the real value of wages to an American is much higher than the real wages of a person in Britain, far higher than the current exchange rate would suggest. Without this conversion, real GDP-per-capita comparisons do not make sense.

    These differences between exchange rate and PPP are heavily exploited by intelligent entities.
    The advantages of a strong currency

    Governments try to con you into imagining that a weak currency has advantages. The idea is ludicrous. Would you rather your wages purchased less goods rather than more every year? Would you rather that those nice foreigners allowed you to stay in their hotels and eat their food at a greater cost to yourself? Of course you wouldn’t!

    Naturally, you would rather that they give you more for the things that you sell to them, but sadly that ain’’t going to happen. You are either going to have to produce a better product or to sell it cheaper, or even start doing something else! Whichever way you go, selling for a bigger number of pounds or dollars or francs isn’t going to help you much if the money is simply worth less.

    No, the only reason a government would suggest that you would want money that is worth less is that it is they that are making it worth less by continually printing more of it!

    If you are providing a service, for example manufacturing items to sell into a market where the money is, in your judgement, undervalued relative to your home money, you have various options. You may reduce the price of the items in the other country, whence if you try to change the money into your own currency, you will get less than you might have wished.

    However you might also keep the money invested abroad until the foreign money becomes worth more like the amount of pounds that you think you should get for it. You could also purchase your supplies from abroad, thus getting them at a price that seems cheap to you, or even buy a manufacturing unit abroad at an apparently cheap price and hire labour at a price that also looks cheap to you, thus expanding your empire.
    Transaction costs

    Any time you try to take advantages of these difference, you may be sure that various sharks will surround you seeking a cut.

    For example, when you change your money from one currency to another, the banks will attempt to get as much out of you as they can. Travel agents are quite as likely to charge you a huge 5% or more. If you are richer or better informed you may well pay 1% or less, ignorance is an exploitable market opportunity.

    If you buy a house, sure enough there will be lawyers and others lining up for a cut. There is essentially little difference between buying a bunch of bananas and buying a house. The largest problem being that if the bananas turn out to have gone off, your loss is relatively small; whereas you can lose rather more if your house falls down or it did not belong to the avowed seller. So you pay the lawyers to protect you from the liars. Trouble is, it is hardly unknown for the lawyers to lie and also to take the biggest fee they can manage. In recent times in England, lawyers even formed a cartel in order to set a very high fee which they then all charged and so became unavoidable, for want of competition. Rather like that which most of your high-street vendors attempt at present.

    If you buy a house in France, the lawyer is also a government tax agent. You will pay approximately 10% of the purchase price to the lawyer and often, four different levels of government—I kid you not. Believe it or not, the estate agent is also another goverment tax agent. So if you sell, the agent will charge you most of ten percent, of which three-quarters also ends up in the government tax coffers. If you want a mortgage, you guessed it, they will tax you on that as well. There should be signs up:

    “Government involved? Beware: shark-infested waters.”
    Arbitrage

    Arbitrage is taking advantage of different prices in different places by buying in the cheap place and selling in the expensive place. For example, you might buy a house in Liverpool and bring it down to London to sell, though you may decide that the transaction costs wipe out your intended profits.

    In like manner, taking your ‘over-valued’ pounds and translating them into cheap dollars may not help a great deal if you don’t want to fly to America in order to eat cheap American hamburgers, especially after some bureau de change have siphoned off a goodly slice.

    Keep also in mind that, should you wish eventually to return your assets to ‘home’ by selling your foreign investment, yes, there they are again, those sharks wanting yet another bite out of your pretty arse.
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    How to calculate inflation
    RPI (retail price index) and CPI (consumer price index)

    Are theseand other similar indices inflation?

    Most definitely not.

    So why do they try to make you think these indices are inflation?

    If I were to set out to design an index that deliberately covered up and obscured the real situation with inflation, I would design the U.K. RPI. If I were even more dishonest, I would attempt to confuse it in the minds of the public with inflation, by constantly referring to it as price inflation or simply inflation.

    The CPI is an extremely poor indicator of inflation. Such indices are constructed by checking periodically the prices of goods purchased by the average household, and then comparing changes on a regular basis. This is exactly what is done with the UK CPI. However, the index carefully leaves out house prices, wages and stock market prices; that is, it leaves out the very items most effected by inflation.

    If you do not want your money eroded and therefore stolen by government, you do not hold money, you hold assets. That is, you buy shares in companies, houses, fine art, in fact anything rather than hold inflating money. This process of course, pushes up asset prices to the extent that, in the UK, houses are now priced at approximately twice what they were priced at in 1950, in real terms. That is, even when prices are adjusted for inflation, this is a direct effect of an inflationary government policy. See also gold market.

    The goods that do make up the basket of items that are used to calculate the CPI are subject to constant heavy downward pressure, and they have been since the industrial revolution. This downward pressure continues to increase. This pressure is due to two prime factors:

    1] industrial production is getting ever more efficient and

    2] competition is ever widening. In particular, a great deal is now manufactured using third-world, comparatively cheap, labour.

    RPI figures can also be depressed further when the exchange rate for a currency is over-valued relative to the PPP. At the time of writing (September 2000), this is a factor in the UK RPI figures. See also reserve currency.
    How I calculate inflation for my own decisions

    As I have no trust at all in these UK indices as measurements, I use my own calculation of inflation based upon the real causes of inflation; and a damned sight simpler it is than the government flummery.

    It goes like this.

    Take the percentage figure for monetary expansion for the last year (known as M4 in the UK), and subtract from it the increase in GDP production. At this moment, the reported [20] figures are:
    M4 expansion 6.8% minus GDP expansion, which is currently 3.1%, which comes to 3.7% inflation, not the more comfortable 2.2% rate indicated by the RPI. [21]
    You may continue to believe the government games. Me, I will act on the basis of my own calculations, thank you very much.
    Lags

    Inflation is deliberately and systematically operated by stealth and dishonesty. Its prime purpose, amongst many other dishonourable aims, is to steal the savings of the uneducated and the old. When new money is printed and pumped into the economy, the government tend not to announce that they are herby reducing the value of all wages and old age pensions by 3.7%, so the powerless and the innumerate do not immediately realise that the wages they are asking should immediately rise by 3.7% just to keep their incomes standing still. Nor does the small business person running the corner shop catch on straight away that when they go to buy replacement stock the prices will have risen by 3.7%, so they unknowingly sell the goods cheaply at the old price.

    Thus lags are built into the system, only over a period of time do the prices and wages start to rise to meet all that extra money the government has printed. These lags can easily be one or two years, by which time the government is usually busy printing even more worthless paper with which it immediately starts buying your labour and your property.

    This printing process is therefore normally accelerated a year or so before an election, [22] in order to make you feel richer, and thus encourage you to vote the current lot back into power. Then as soon as the election is safely out of the way, the money supply is choked off, driving up interest rates on the goods you brought just prior to the election.

    Thus your mortgage goes up and there is talk of over-heating and prudence. All these activities are deliberate government actions, they do not happen by chance and they are not beyond government control. You are merely being lied to and manipulated both deliberately and systematically. This is why I regard inflation as a criminal act.
    Political considerations

    Some economists, for instance James Tobin of Yale University (1972), say that a small amount of inflation, say 2.5 to 3 percent, allows greater job market flexibility. Essentially this is because Joe Six-pack doesn’t realise his wage packet is decreasing if the numbers stay the same. Such slow inflation then, has the potential to ease downward wage flexibility where particular skills are becoming less marketable. Without flexibility, it is argued that there would be more worker unrest and more unemployment.

    This view, concerning helpful levels of inflation, I accept as an interim measure until populations are better educated.

    Another element of inflation is that it is used in order to let countries and companies off the results of failed investment or borrowing decisions. This is done by using inflation as a tax on the mass of workers and savers. It could be argued that this avoids depressions such as those that have hit world markets at regular 50-60 year intervals under a more rigid ‘morality’ (see also the paper by Greenspan and Parks. )

    It is possible to argue that this process is ‘a good thing’, but I have yet to see it thus argued, even though it is widely practised. As an elitist, it is possible to suggest that removing resources from the mass in order to enable their masters to continue to function, thus providing jobs and continuity, is a necessary process.

    I would prefer to remove such dishonesty and manipulation from the system by concerted education.

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    The velocity of money

    There is one other rare, but possible, source of inflation. If people start participating in an accelerated number of money transactions, then the money will start to move around more quickly. This will have the same effect as if there were more money in the economy because each bit of money will be used more often!

    The good news is that empiric (real world experience) data shows that this does not often happen, so it is not something to worry about over-much. A cause for increased velocity could be a panic, where for example the population ceases to trust the local currency and so tries to unload it as fast as they can. In the history of the German hyper-inflation [23] of the early 1930s, there are stories of people rushing out with their money in suitcases and by barrow the moment they were paid, in order to spend it before it became worth ever less.

    Such a situation can set up a positive feedback loop. The greater the panic, then the more people trying to get rid of money, the greater still becomes the panic, hence the greater the money velocity.
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    The roundabout

    In order to get the victim hooked, governments and their banking side-kicks have another con game in reserve. In time, if a government inflates to a level at which the populace no longer trusts them and so start to look elsewhere than government money in order to protect their assets. The government now has a problem, for they cannot then so easily steal the assets from citizens. At this point, the government starts a new policy: it starts promoting the French franc fort or starts a new currency such as the new franc. This policy is then carried on for a few years until people once more trust the currency. At which point, guess what, yes, they start to inflate again.

    Within the limits that government can get away with inflating a currency, the trick goes as follows:

    Stage 1: Start to inflate; this is known as a loose or easy monetary ‘policy’. It is invariably promoted as good for industry or some such lie. During this stage, it takes a while for most people to catch on; they are encouraged to borrow as heavily as possible and this is supposed to promote ‘growth’ and spending.

    Stage 2: As the markets start to adjust and the price of assets rise, people notice that they can borrow cheaply to buy a house or some other property. People also notice that, as the price of the houses keeps rising, the interest payments are eaten up by increasing prices (people are further encouraged to think this price rise is a rise in value!).

    Stage 3:Eventually those lending the money start to catch on to the reality that they are receiving no real interest and that in fact their money will no longer buy anything like as much as it would a year or two previously, e.g. a house! So they start demanding considerably higher interest on their money. Suddenly, the purchaser of the house finds their wages will no longer pay the mortgage interest. They struggle and struggle and scrimp and save to pay the interest, but eventually they can just no longer keep up.

    Stage 4: One fine day, the bank manager calls them in, takes out the onion, and tells them with a sad smirk he will now be ‘forced’ to repossess the house to repay their loan. Of course, many many people are now in this position, and very few can any longer afford to buy houses, so the house prices now slip ever downward. Of course, the ‘owner’ of the house has, like as not, already paid a very large proportion of the original house price in ‘interest’. But now the bank takes the house to pay off the original debt. Those who still have ready money, like those who lent the money to the banks in the first place, then buy the house at a nice low price. When a large number of these transfers have been satisfactorily completed, once again, money becomes ‘easy’ again and the roundabout starts upon the next circuit.

    While unloading these houses, the banks also tend to jump the price of the property a bit and lend to their ‘friends’, [24] at ‘advantageous’ rates. These people then sit in the property while the prices rise and rise. Then, as they see the signs of the next squeeze, they sell the house or whatever for a very tidy profit and go and live in the sun on some of the proceeds, while awaiting the next lot to go bust so they can buy the property back again at a bargain basement price.
    return to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ document
    Perception of value, and inflation
    Example 1

    Nothing on earth has value of its ‘own’ ‘merit’. ‘Objects’ have value in the minds and judgement of others. The tree may value shade, the owl may value a vole and the human may value beads, a bridge or a machine gun.

    GNP is an attempt to measure what humans in a given society value this year and the actions that they take to produce those items valued: a set of beads or cut diamonds, a haircut or an hour with a friendly lady, a car or a dome, or even Scotland.

    The United Kingdom currently suffers under a monopoly currency. If tomorrow morn, every person in these isles took a great distaste to Scotland and headed south to England, Scotland would cease to exist as an item of value and trade. Assuming that the current residents of Scotland carried their money with them on their flight, the amount of money would remain unchanged but the amount of desired tradable goods would shrink handsomely.

    This lowering of desired goods would result in considerable inflation, assuming no interference in the money supply by government.
    Example 2

    Consider instead, a single Scotsman of some energy and productivity who is engaged in distilling whisky on the Spey. He decides to travel to London to seek greater fortune and ends up providing a puppet show for tourists. The money again remains the same, the whisky produced is less, but the tourists enjoy the show. The price of whisky rises a little and less of it is quaffed. A puppet show appears from a few rags and tatters and is valued by customers. Given that the money saved on the lowered consumption of whisky ends up spent on entrance fees to the puppet show, there is no inflation; just a transfer of what is valued.
    Example 3

    Assume the idiots who insist that Europe now has a single currency are able to enforce their foolish project, and given that…

    the Éire [25] economy and environment rapidly become more productive and interesting to many Europeans. So they are motivated to move from other parts of Europe. This sends up the prices of land and housing in Éire. It lowers the prices of housing or whatever from wherever the incomers come. Again this is not inflation, it is rising prices in one area, offset by falling prices (due to lowered desirability) elsewhere.
    Summary

    The removing of an item from the list of desired objects is inflationary.
    An addition to this list is counter-inflationary (deflationary).
    A change in the desirability of any ‘particular’ perceived good, results in a change of prices: it has no effect upon inflation. [26]

    The current widespread talk of inflation in the Éireann economy is a misunderstanding of inflation. In a single currency area, it makes no serious sense to speak of differing rates of inflation in different areas.

    In reality, the very high growth of productivity in Éire must tend to drive European inflation downward and therefore with it, to a small degree, the inflation caused in Éire (and the rest of Europe) by the profligate printing of money by the Euro-bank.

    return to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ document

    Keynes was one of the great mathematicians and thinkers of the 20th century. Much that is now called Keynesianism or neo-Keynesianism would meet with Keynes’ disapproval, for Keynes was an enemy of inflation because he understood inflation for what it is: dishonesty and the debauchery of money.

    I work for a Government I despise for ends I think criminal.
    John Maynard Keynes, Letter to Duncan Grant, 15 December 1917

    However, Keynes was also a pragmatist, an elitist and a humanist.

    If the Treasury were to fill old bottles with banknotes, bury them at suitable depths in disused coalmines which are then filled up to the surface with town rubbish, and leave it to private enterprise on well-tried principles of laissez-faire to dig the notes up again (the right to do so being obtained, of course, by tendering for leases of the note-bearing territory) there need be no more unemployment and, with the help of the repercussions, the real income of the community, and its capital wealth also, would probably become a good deal greater than it actually is. It would, indeed, be more sensible to build houses and the like; but as there are political and practical difficulties in the way of this, the above would be better than nothing.
    John Maynard Keynes, General Theory, bk. 3

    Capitalism, wisely managed, can probably be made more efficient for attaining economic ends than any alternative system yet in sight, but that in itself it is in many ways extremely objectionable.
    John Maynard Keynes, The End of Laissez-faire, p.294

    Rather akin to Churchill’s statement that

    Many forms of Government have been tried, and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed, it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except all those other forms that have been tried from time to time.
    Hansard 11 Nov. 1947, col. 206.

    Marxian Socialism must always remain a portent to the historians of Opinion – how a doctrine so illogical and so dull can have exercised so powerful and enduring an influence over the minds of men, and, through them, the events of history.
    John Maynard Keynes, The End of Laissez-faire

    return to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ documentTo understand economics in the current society it is necessary to look at elements of psychology and politics.
    Are rising prices the ‘same’ as inflation?

    No, they most definitely are not. This is a widespread error commonly made, and this misunderstanding is enthusiastically exploited by venal politicians and by others.[27] Society is a cacophony of vested interests all calling for and attempting to grab more, more and ever more. It very much suits these vested interests to mislead others concerning the nature of inflation; for common ignorance of the nature of inflation opens considerable opportunities for profit and exploitation.

    With stable money, every wage rise for one vested interest results in a wage drop for others in society.
    Summary

    Inflation is not caused by pressure for wage increases, it is not caused by rising oil prices, it is not caused by consumer demand, it is not caused by attempts by suppliers to raise their prices–it is always and everywhere related to governments printing money.

    Price increases are not inflation, every price rise in one part of the economy results in a price drop some other place. Prices of particular goods rise because they become more popular, desirable or fashionable. Prices rise because of shortages in the market place. Prices fall for the reverse reasons.

    Real rising prices such as those driven by oil shortages can, in the context of a fixed income, drive down your standard of living as surely as inflation can drive down the value of your fixed income. But to remain clear-headed and to understand economics, it is essential to separate these processes in your thinking.

    Inflation is when all (or average) prices rise at the ‘same’ time. This happens when the quantity of money issued by the government is increased, or alternately when the amount of goods produced and traded falls. In other words recession, [28] is inflationary. Modern governments have a great propensity to fiddle with the quantity of money in the economy, in the main in order to forward their own nefarious ambitions. Governments do not, on the whole, manipulate money because they are your bosom pals.return to index in ‘mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle’ document

    Related further reading
    marker at abelard.org inflation – the mechanics of inflation: the great government swindle and how it works marker at abelard.org Transferring value (money) using the internet
    marker at abelard.org GDP and other quality of life measurements marker at abelard.org e-gold: a developing example of an independent monetary system
    marker at abelard.org EMU (European Monetary Union) and inflation

    return to abelard.org main site news and comment at abelard.org documents on alternative energies documents on alternative energies Japan zone sum will set you free art gallery the web pilot – mastering the Internet short briefings documents on energy and society Link to abelard.org’s RSS newsfeed
    bibliography
    Kevin Danaher (editor) Fifty years is enough: The case against the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund 1994, 0896084957, pbk, $16 [amazon.com]
    Adolph Hitler

    Mein Kampf

    Hurst and Blackett Ltd.: this translation of Mein Kampf was first published on 21 March, 1939.

    reprint:
    1999, 0395925037, $14.40 [amazon.com]
    1999, 0395925037, to special order
    £11.99 [amazon.co.uk]
    John Maynard Keynes The Economic Consequences of the Peace

    First published 1919

    2001, Simon Publications, 1931541132, pbk
    to special order £19.95 [amazon.co.uk] / $35.95 [amazon.com]
    John Maynard Keynes The End of laissez-faire in
    Essays in Persuasion, the Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes

    First published 1926

    1991, W W Norton & Co, 0393001903
    pbk, $10.47 [amazon.com] / £9.09 [amazon.co.uk]
    John Maynard Keynes

    General Theory

    (The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes: Vol.7: the ‘General Theory’ of Employment, Interest and Money)

    First published 1936

    1997, Prometheus Books, 1573921394, pbk
    £11.00 [amazon.co.uk] / $11.20 [amazon.com]

    endnotes

    This document concentrates primarily upon the nature of inflation because inflation is generally not understood with clarity, nor well presented by the current literature. I have introduced several standard ideas of economics during the course of this document, but only in order to make as clear as possible the distorting lens that intrudes everywhere that fiat money exists. For wider discussion of these common notions of economics, there are many standard texts. I have listed the best one of which I am aware at my Recommended reading list.

    The numbers I shall be using throughout this document are approximate. They remain quite accurate enough for the purposes of understanding what is going on, but a mathematician, statistician or an accountant would be a little more precise. Numbers are no different from other words, they can be used with more or less precision. Some slight lack of accuracy can often more easily ‘get the message across’ than endless, neurotic qualification. Specific exemplar numbers given for economies are dated as at 1st September 2000.

    Part of the means by which the mathematical sophisticates of the banking system and government fool the people is by obfuscating the message in small print and unnecessary detail. The insistence of ‘precision’ becomes yet another weapon for confusing the intended victim, otherwise known in the trade as ‘the customer’ or ‘the voter’.

    Monetary values and exchange rates are constantly changing. This document was finalised in September 2000 it is most likely things have changed between then and the date at which you are reading this document. The examples are for illustration, not for up-to-date accuracy. If you wish to find out the current situation you must check elsewhere.

    These are the usual terms for monetary systems that are not backed by real assets.

    Part of the game of government’s running monopoly fiat monetary systems, is to disguise as well as possible the amount of inflation they are generating. For this purpose, governments set up a measure, called the retail price index in the UK, and pretend that it is a reasonable measure of inflation. They even widely call the index inflation. Such measures are in reality more flummery, as is explained elsewhere.

    Often very much more. For example, the figures for Italy and Belgium have recently been well over 100% of GNP. Another interesting effect of this is that, by inflating the euro, other euro-countries are now paying tens of billions of the accumulated debts of Italy and Belgium.

    This £8 billion is almost pure profit for the government (in other words, yet more tax) and is carefully hidden in the Bank of England’s accounts under the word “Sundries”.

    The current UK GNP is running at over £700 billion.

    Well, more like 9% actually for the picky mathematicians who are watching!

    See also private money in EMU is bad for you.

    It originally meant the charge made for the costs of producing/minting money; but now it is a very nice little earner where all that is needed is paper, ink and a printing press.

    It isn’t really ‘needed’ to any degree for, without the printing of extra money, trade can quite easily proceed with prices slowly dropping a few percent during a year. This process is known as deflation and it can also cause some difficulties if it is not understood.

    By using the central bank as an intermediary.

    The percentage of the bank money being held by the government is called the deposit ratio.

    Because the banks can take outrageous risk with your money in the pursuit of profits, while knowing full well that if their ‘investments’ go wrong, the government (tax payer) will bail them out. Thus we have a profit making machine with negligible to non-existent risk. Nice work if you can get it.

    This also enables monopolies by removing up-start competition.

    Danaher, Kevin: Fifty years is enough: The case against the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

    GDP refers to internal transactions, whereas GNP also includes international debts and receipts. For Éire there is much foreign investment, so the GDP looks a lot better than the GNP after all those foreign companies repatriate their profits.

    On the other hand, the UK owns huge overseas assets which offset the huge assets in the U.K. owned by foreigners, so for the UK the GDP and GNP calculations come out roughly similar.

    A useful version, for 30 or so countries, is published each year around April by The Economist magazine. It is based on the McDonald’s hamburger outlets around the world. To produce a hamburger requires a shop, the produce of farms, transport of the produce, the hiring of staff etcetera, the index therefore gives a reasonable snapshot of an economy and a comparison of a standardised product across economies. More sophisticated versions are available from the likes of the World Bank.

    ‘Reported’, because I never fully trust government figures.

    Governments keep changing the indices, in order to keep people confused and in order to lower the percentages by which they will raise wages or pensions. At present, the RPÏ includes some housing costs but not wage or stock market changes, whereas the CPI doesn’t even include housing costs.

    Actually the RPI is now at 3.3% (as at year 2000) but the government nowadays prefers what it calls the RPIX, that is, it excludes interest rate costs. These costs have been removed because they tend to show government inflation rather more clearly (for why, see also here). Meanwhile, house price rises are 8%, wages are rising at about 4.5% and the stock market is currently up about 5.4% on the year. You will note that my own private measure of inflation is far closer to the real figures than the real figures are to the RPI. (Regarding house prices, see also here.)

    By 2010, in a difficult economy after a dose of falling house prices and near zero government interest rates, so once again governments are moving to change the indices they present and use.

    Because then the effects will not appear until after the election.

    ‘Extreme’, or ‘very fast’ inflation.

    By offering ‘advantageous’ rates, the bank persuades the next round of potential victims that they can afford to take on a loan that is likely to become, in its turn, difficult to service. Most people buying large items, rather foolishly, attend to the regular outgoings rather than to the real price they are paying; including all those monthly payments. Eager purchasers are also inclined to overlook the likelihood that the bank will in due course, very likely start raising the payments (they call it ‘renegotiating’!) as the roundabout continues to revolve. Remember, the banks are everybody’s friends.

    Now known as the Republic of Ireland.

    This is not strictly true. As often in this document, I am seeking to keep the concepts clear and simple. In fact many goods become steadily valued ever less, e.g. last year’s car is widely less valued than the latest model; and then in a decade or two it is sometimes regarded as a collector’s item, when it may go up beyond the original price! Such drops in value are called ‘depreciation’. An allowance for depreciation should appear in GNP figures. I have not checked whether it does.Thus unaccounted perceived depreciation can be a form of creeping inflation, which eventually results in the object being taken out of the pool of items that humans perceive to have value.

    See also first and second round effects of external prices rises on inflation

    A period when production decreases.

    For more discussion, see corporate corruption, politics and the ‘law’

    For more details of CPI and RPI updating weights for 2010 [16-page .pdf]
    http://www.abelard.org/inflation.php

  • Fiat Money, Fiat Inflation. Why we need a dollar as good as gold.

    Fiat Money, Fiat Inflation
    Why we need a dollar as good as gold.
    Mar 21, 2011, Vol. 16, No. 26 • By LEWIS E. LEHRMAN
    Single Page Print Larger Text Smaller Text Alerts

    Since the beginning of 2009, oil prices have almost tripled, gasoline prices are up about 50 percent, and basic food prices, such as corn, soybeans, and wheat, have almost doubled around the world. Cotton and copper prices have reached all time highs; major rises in sugar, spice, and wheat prices have been creating food riots in poor countries, where basic goods inflation is rampant. That inflation is in part financed by the flood abroad of excess dollars created over the last couple of years by the Federal Reserve.
    Fiat Money, Fiat Inflation

    Those dollars also made possible the emerging market equity boom of 2009-2010. But foreign authorities are now raising interest rates as growth shifts to the United States and Europe. The years 2011-2012 will witness a Fed-fueled expansion in the United States. Unless there is a major oil spike from here, growth for 2011 in the United States will be above the new consensus of 3.5 percent—perhaps as high as 5 percent this year, with about 8 percent unemployment at year-end.

    At first, the enormous Fed credit creation of 2008-2010 could not be fully absorbed by a U.S. economy in recession. But much of this new Fed credit has flooded stocks, bonds, and commodities. The excess credit went abroad, too, causing a fall in the dollar and creating bull markets and booming economies in the developing world. At the same time, inflation intensified, with riots and political turmoil as a result.

    There is little new in this latest postwar boom cycle, associated as it is with the world dollar standard we have been living under since the end of gold convertibility and the Bretton Woods monetary system in 1971. With expansive credit policy and Fed financing of the U.S. government deficit, every boom and bust cycle has been enabled by the Fed. At this moment, we are witnessing in the U.S. equity market, and once again in the decline of the dollar, the predictable effects of Federal Reserve money and credit creation. This latest Fed credit boom has begun with commodity inflation. The extraordinary Treasury deficit, financed by the Fed at home, is financed abroad by the official reserve currency status of the dollar. For example, in addition to the Fed purchases of U.S. government securities, foreign financial authorities have absorbed at least $4 trillion of U.S. government securities, against which foreign central banks have created their own domestic money. And the U.S. budget deficit can continue to expand so long as there is undisciplined Fed and foreign credit to finance it.

    To finance the government deficit, the Treasury now sells bills and bonds at a rate of about $120 billion a month, or about $1.5 trillion per year. But this new Fed-created money, which finances the government deficit, is not associated with any production of new goods and services. Thus, total monetary demand, or purchasing power, exceeds the existing supply of goods, equities, and services at prevailing prices, with the predictable result that prices rise. But some of the excess dollars go abroad, creating booms and inflation in emerging markets. As prices rise faster than wages, profits rise. Production increases. A boom is underway.

    But it’s a boom that turns into a bubble. And there are social effects, not only financial effects. This insidious international monetary and fiscal arrangement has been a primary cause of the increasing inequality of wealth in American society. At home, bankers and speculators have been and are the first in line, along with the Treasury, to get zero interest money and credit from the Fed. They are first to get bailed out. Then with new money, they finance stocks, bonds, and commodities, anticipating, as in the past, a Fed-created boom.

    Prices rise first for the most volatile goods, especially stocks, commodities, and financial claims, because they are relatively liquid vehicles for speculators and banks. This is the story of the past two years, with stocks and commodities advancing amidst a sluggish U.S. economy. This is also the story of postwar Fed-created booms. Each cycle experiences an inflation boom, often in different assets, e.g., Internet stocks in the late ’90s and real estate in the last boom and bust.

    Inflation at the consumer level has been muted by high unemployment and unused production facilities. But the social effects are already discernible. The near-zero interest rates maintained by the Fed have primarily benefited the large banks and their speculator clients. A nimble financial class, in possession of cheap credit, is able both to enrich itself and to protect itself against inflation.
    But middle-income professionals and workers, on salaries and wages, and those on fixed incomes and pensions, are impoverished by the very same inflationary process that subsidizes speculators and bankers. Those on fixed incomes will likely earn very little or even a negative return on their savings. Thus, they save less. New investment then depends increasingly on bank debt, leverage, and speculation. The unequal access to Fed credit was everywhere apparent during the government bailout of favored brokers and bankers in 2008 and 2009, while millions of not so nimble citizens were forced into bankruptcy. This ugly chapter is only the most recent in the book of sixty years of financial disorder.

    The inequality of wealth and privilege in American society is intensified by the Fed-induced inflationary process. The subsidized banking and financial community, along with the chaos of floating exchange rates and an overvalued dollar, underwritten by China and other undervalued currencies, has submerged the American manufacturing sector, dependent as it is on goods traded in a competitive world market. In a word, the government deficit and the Federal Reserve work hand in hand, perhaps unintentionally, to undermine the essential equity and comity necessary in a democratic society. Equal opportunity and the harmony of the American community cannot survive perennial inflation.

    If the defect is inflation and an unstable dollar, what is the remedy?

    A dollar convertible to gold would provide the necessary discipline to secure the long-term value of middle income savings, to backstop the drive for a balanced budget, and to end the dollar standard and the special access of the government and the financial class to limitless cheap Fed money. And the world trading community would benefit from a common currency, a nonnational, neutral, monetary standard that cannot be manipulated and created at will by the government of any one country.
    Click here to find out more!
    Related Stories

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    That is to say, dollar convertibility to gold, a nonnational common currency, should be restored. And dollar convertibility to gold should become a cooperative project of the major powers. This historic common currency of civilization was, during the Industrial Revolution and until recent times, the indispensable guarantee of stable purchasing power, necessary for both long-term savings and long-term investment, not to mention its utility for preserving the long-term purchasing power of working people and pensioners. In a word, the gold standard puts control of the supply of money into the hands of the people, because excess creation of credit and paper money can be redeemed for gold at the fixed statutory price. The monetary authorities are thus required to limit the creation of new credit in order to preserve the legally guaranteed value of the currency.

    To accomplish this reform, the United States can lead, first, by announcing future convertibility, on a date certain, of the U.S. dollar, to be defined in statute as a weight unit of gold, as the Constitution suggests; second, by convening a new Bretton Woods conference to establish mutual gold convertibility of the currencies of the major powers.

    A dollar as good as gold is the way out. It is the way to restore real American savings and competitiveness. It is the way to restore economic growth and full employment without inflation. It is the way to restore America’s financial self-respect, and to regain its needful role as the legitimate and beneficent leader of the world.

    Lewis E. Lehrman is chairman of the Lehrman Institute.
    http://www.weeklystandard.com/articles/fiat-money-fiat-inflation_554098.html?page=1

  • Dunning-Kruger effect

    Dunning-Kruger effect
    http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Dunning-Kruger_effect

    The Dunning-Kruger effect occurs when incompetent people not only fail to realise their incompetence, but consider themselves much more competent than everyone else. Basically – they’re too stupid to know that they’re stupid.

    If you have no doubts whatsoever about your brilliance, you could just be that damn good. On the other hand…

    The Dunning-Kruger effect is a slightly more specific case of the bias known as illusory superiority, where people tend to overestimate their good points compared to others. The effect has been shown by experiment in several ways. Dunning and Kruger tested students on a series of criteria such as humour, grammar, and logic and compared the actual test results with each student’s estimations of their performance. Those who scored lowest on the test, in the bottom quartile, were found to have “grossly overestimated” their scores. Conversely, those with the highest scores underestimated their performance in comparison to others.

    The tendency for those who scored well to underestimate their performance was explained as a form of psychological projection: those who found the tasks easy (and thus scored highly) mistakenly thought that they would also be easy for others. This is similar to “impostor syndrome” — found notably in graduate students and high achieving women — whereby high achievers fail to recognise their talents as they think that others must be equally good.

    And what about the underachievers who overestimated their performance? In the words of Dunning and Kruger, “this overestimation occurs, in part, because people who are unskilled in these domains suffer a dual burden: Not only do these people reach erroneous conclusions and make unfortunate choices, but their incompetence robs them of the metacognitive ability to realize it.”

    The effect can also be summarised by the phrase “a little knowledge is a dangerous thing”.[1] A small amount of knowledge can mislead a person into thinking that they’re an expert because this small amount of knowledge isn’t a well known fact. For a potent example, consider former children’s TV presenter and science advocate Johnny Ball, who in 2009 stunned audiences by denying the existence of climate change. His reasoning was based on the fact that water vapour as a greenhouse gas is much more prevalent and thus much more powerful than carbon dioxide — and because combustion reactions also produce water, it should be water we’re worried about, not carbon dioxide.[2] Sound reasoning to an amateur, but anyone minimally qualified in atmospheric chemistry would tell you that the water isn’t a problem because the atmosphere has a way of getting rid of excess water — it’s called “rain”. Thus its concentration (for given temperatures and pressures) remains more or less constant globally.[3]
    [edit] Origins
    In a nutshell.

    The effect is named after the valiant scientists who properly proved its existence in their seminal, 2000 Ig Nobel Prize winning[4] paper Unskilled and Unaware of It,[5] doubtless at great risk to personal sanity.

    The idea that people who don’t know enough also don’t know enough to realise that they don’t know enough (“Dunning-Kruger effect” is so much simpler to get your tongue around) isn’t particularly new. Bertrand Russell in The Triumph of Stupidity in the mid 1930s said that “The fundamental cause of the trouble is that in the modern world the stupid are cocksure while the intelligent are full of doubt.” Even earlier, Charles Darwin, in The Descent of Man in 1871, stated “ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge”. Following a 2008 study by Helmuth Nyborg, which showed a slight but significant negative correlation between religiosity and IQ[6], Nyborg theorised that this is because “…people with a high intelligence are more skeptical” – in other words, those with higher intelligence will also be more doubting about their ability to be right, because they possess the cognitive ability to gauge themselves better.[7]

    http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Dunning-Kruger_effect

  • Fiat Money History in the US

    Fiat Money History in the US

    OVERVIEW
    In a fiat money system, money is not backed by a physical commodity (i.e.: gold). Instead, the only thing that gives the money value is its relative scarcity and the faith placed in it by the people that use it. A good primer on the history of fiat money in the US can be found in a video provided by the Mises.org website.

    In a fiat monetary system, there is no restrain on the amount of money that can be created. This allows unlimited credit creation. Initially, a rapid growth in the availability of credit is often mistaken for economic growth, as spending and business profits grow and frequently there is a rapid growth in equity prices. In the long run, however, the economy tends to suffer much more by the following contraction than it gained from the expansion in credit. This expansion in credit can be seen in the Debt/GDP ratio. We track the bubbles created by this expansion of debt at the inflation / deflation page.

    In most cases, a fiat monetary system comes into existence as a result of excessive public debt. When the government is unable to repay all its debt in gold or silver, the temptation to remove physical backing rather than to default becomes irresistible. This was the case in 18th century France during the Law scheme, as well as in the 70s in the US, when Nixon removed the last link between the dollar and gold which is still in effect today.

    Hyper-inflation is the terminal stage of any fiat currency. In hyper-inflation, money looses most of its value practically overnight. Hyper-inflation is often the result of increasing regular inflation to the point where all confidence in money is lost. In a fiat monetary system, the value of money is based on confidence, and once that confidence is gone, money irreversibly becomes worthless, regardless of its scarcity. Gold has replaced every fiat currency for the past 3000 years.

    The United States has so far avoided hyper-inflation by shifting between a fiat and gold standard over the past 200 years.

    1785-1861 – FIXED Gold standard 76 years

    The founding fathers were concerned about the unrestrained control of the money supply. One thing they all agreed upon was the limitation on the issuance of money,
    Thomas Jefferson warned of the damage that would be caused if the people assigned control of the money supply to the banking sector, “I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. Already they have raised up a money aristocracy that has set the government at defiance. This issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people to whom it properly belongs. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of the moneyed corporations which already dare to challenge our Government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws of our country” Thomas Jefferson, 1791

    Many of the founding fathers experienced the damage caused by fiat currency. Most of the revolutionary war was financed by worthless currency called “Continentals”.

    The Continental Currency (“Not worth a Continental”) that American colonists issued for the Continental Congress to finance the Revolutionary War was replaced by the US Dollar in 1785 when The Continental Congress adopted the dollar as the unit for national currency. At that time, private bank-note companies printed a variety of notes. After adoption of the Constitution in 1789, Congress chartered the First Bank of the United States and authorized it to issue paper bank notes to eliminate confusion and simplify trade. The U.S. Constitution (Section 10) forbids any state from making anything but gold or silver a legal tender. The Federal Monetary System was established in 1792 with the creation of the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia. The first American coins were struck in 1793. The U.S. Coinage Act of 1792, consistent with the Constitution, provided for a U.S. Mint, which stamped silver and gold coins. The importance of this Act cannot be stressed enough.
    One dollar was defined by statute as a specific weight of gold.
    The Act also invoked the death penalty for anyone found to be debasing money.
    President George Washington mentions the importance of the national currency backed by gold and silver throughout his initial term of office and he contributed his own silver for the initial coins minted.
    The purchase of The US Mint in Philadelphia, was the first money appropriated by Congress for a building to be used for a public purpose. It was purchased for a total of $4,266.67 on July 18, 1792.
    1862-1879 – FLOATING fiat currency 7 years

    The first use of fiat money (called Greenbacks) in the United States was in 1862, it was used as a tool to pay for the enormous cost of the Civil War. Greenbacks were a debt of the U.S. government, redeemable in gold at a future unspecified date. They were circulated along with Gold certificates, backed by the government’s promise to pay in gold.
    1880-1914 – FIXED Gold standard 34 years

    The US dollar was hard pegged to gold resulting in domestic price stability and virtually no inflation. The financial needs of WW1 ended this.
    1915-1925 – FLOATING Fiat currency 10 years
    In order to “pay” for WW1 countries had to print a lot of paper currency which by necessity mandated a delinking from gold because there wasn’t enough gold to support the paper.
    1926-1931 – FIXED Gold standard, 5 years

    The gold exchange standard was established wherein each country pegged its currency to the US dollar and British pound which were then supposed to be backed by the dollar. When the depression began countries tried to cash in their pounds and dollars for gold. That “run” on gold forced the end of the gold exchange standard.
    1931-1945 – FLOATING Fiat currency, 14 years
    Fiat currencies reign worldwide leading to huge economic imbalances from country to country and was of the major contributing factors to the beginning of WW2.
    1945-1968 – FIXED – Gold standard, 26 years
    1944 Bretton Woods Accord (similar to gold exchange standard of 1926-1931) Two main currencies again, the US dollar and British pound. A run to convert pounds to gold collapsed the pound and began the end of the Bretton woods accord. It took 3 years while governments tried to salvage the system and also to determine what to do next. Kind of like having one leg on the boat and the other on shore. 1963 – New Federal Reserve notes with no promise to pay in “lawful money” was released. No guarantees, no value. This is also the year of the disappearance of the $1 silver certificate. Once again, a subtle shift in plain view.

    1965 – Silver is completely eliminated in all coins save the Kennedy half-dollar, which was reduced to 40 percent silver by President Lyndon Johnson’s authorization. The Coinage Act of 1965 signed by Lyndon Johnson, terminates the original legislation signed by George Washington 173 years earlier (carrying the death penalty) enabling the US Treasury to eliminate the silver content of all currency.

    1968 – June 24 – President Johnson issued a proclamation that all Federal Reserve Silver Certificates were merely fiat legal tender and could not really be redeemed in silver.

    1971 – FLOATING – Fiat currency, 5 months
    August of 1971 President Nixon ended the international gold standard and for the first time no currency in the world had a gold backing.
    1971-1973 – FIXED – Dollar standard, 2 years
    The Smithsonian Agreement was passed pegging world currencies to the dollar rather than gold as a fixed exchange rate.
    1973-? – FLOATING – Fiat currency, 30 years
    The Basel Accord established the current floating exchange of currency rates we are operating under today.

    A good barometer of the size of a currency’s leverage is the percentage of total Debt to GDP (Gross Domestic Product). Currently, that percentage (299%) is higher than the level the nation experienced during the depression era 1930’s. With budget deficits projected for 2003 and 2004, the US will soon exceed this already inflated level.

    http://www.kwaves.com/fiat.htm

  • Inflation is an Invisible Tax

    Inflation is an Invisible Tax
    By Eli James

    Many people cannot see throught the con game that is called fiat money. Even Sheldon Emry failed to understand that fiat money is the bankers’ primary weapon against civilization. He taught that it is impossible to have gold-backed money. But that is only true when the bankers control the gold. Under the US Constitution, the government is supposed to hold onto its gold and use it to back any issuance of paper money. When Woodrow Wilson created the Federal Reserve Bank, he turned the issuance of the nation’s currency over to a private corporation of bankers. This violates the USConstitutionk, which still states “Congress shall have the power to coin money.” The key word here is COIN. Real money is always in the form of a valuable, stable commodity, such as gold and silver. Any unstable currency will cause fluctuation of value, thus violating the “just weights and measures” law of the Bible. Throughout history, bankers have always sought control of the currency, so that they could issue it and speculate on its fluctuations.

    The fact is that the international bankers have always implemented fiat money currencies in the place of gold and silver. There is a very simple reason for this: He who controls the gold controls the world. The gold and silver are supposed to belong to the people, not to the bankers. Those who argue against a gold-backed currency do not unmderstand that the reason why the bankers want to deprive the people of their gold and silver is so that the bankers can substitute their fiat currency instead.

    The bankers also hire so-called economists to tell you that gold-backed currency is not necessary. Sheldon Emry fell for this ruse because he did not have a thorough understanding of how the bankers play this game.

    Since it is impossible to inflate the volume of gold and silver as currency, the bankers cannot use such currency to manipulate the economy. Those who argue against gold-backed money are actually playing into the hands of the bankers, who, historically, have ALWAYS legislated ways to prevent the people from using gold and silver as money.

    Fiat money is how bankers rob the people of our wealth. This is why the Jewish bankers had FDR make it illegal for Americans to own gold. This enabled the bankers to buy it low and sell it high. Roosevelt’s gold recall was nothing but robbery, in the name of economics. As long as gold and silver are forbidden as currency, the people will have a fluctuating medium of exchange, which violates Yahweh’s law against unjust weights and measures. This is why our Constitution specifies that a dollar is to defined in terms of a weight of silver.

    The most important factor is who controls the currency supply. This is why Mayer Amschel rothschild stated, “Give me the power to control a nation’s currency and I care not who makes its laws.” The strategic purpose of the Federal Reserve Bank’s creation was so that the bankers could gain control of the issuance of money, no matter what form it takes. Once they have control of issuance, the bankers gradually remove the gold and silver coins as currency and replace them, first, with backed currency, and finally, with unbacked fiat money. To the bankers, the backed currency is just an intermediate stage on the road to fiat money. First, the public must be weaned off of actual coins by issuing backed currency. This stratagem gets the people used to paper money. After a couple of generations gets used to this form of paper money, then the bankers invariably remove the backing, so they can issue fiat money in whatever quantities they desire.

    Those who argue against gold and silver backing simply do not understand this process. They blame the gold instead of the bankers. Even Bill Still of “Money Masters” fame doesn’t understand this. The fact is that the bankers themselves have promoted this myth in order to fool otherwise intelligent analysts.

    When I was growing up in Chicago in the 1950’s, the prevalent saying about the US Dollar was, “The dollar is as good as gold.” Why? Because we still had backed currency in circulation; and anyone who had a gold certificate or a silver certificate could take it to a bank and demand actual gold or silver for that certificate. Thse backed currencies actually stated, “Pay to the bearer on demand” whatever the weight of gold or silver the note was worth. This has never been true of any fiat currency. Fiat money is just worthless paper. Commodity-backed paper currency at least has a value in terms of the commodity that backs it. Banks are legally obligated to provide real money (gold and silver) in exchange for the certificate.

    The Bible completely accepts gold and silver coins as money. The Israelites routinely used gold and silver as money; and there is no statement in the Bible that says it should not be used as such. There is a reason why the bankers always fnagle a way to remove gold and silver coins from circulation. They want the power to issue their own fiat currency, by which they can spend it into circulation without the people knowing the purposes for which it is spent. This is why inflation is the invisible tax.
    By Eli James

  • OIL IN AFRICA

    OIL IN AFRICA
    African countries that produce oil are listed below, starting with the highest producer all the way to the lowest. I have analyzed the % of citizens living below KES 80 per day for each country and the main international players in each.

    1. Nigeria.

    2.8m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1956
    Oil Discovery Nationality: British. Royal Dutch Shell
    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:70%
    http://www.indexmundi.com/nigeria/population_below_poverty_line.html
    Conclusion:
    The largest oil producer in Africa has over 70% of its population in deep poverty. Royal Dutch Shell has been controlling this oil industry since 1950s.

    2. Algeria.

    2.1m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1956
    Oil Discovery Nationality: Algerian. Sonatrach.
    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:23%
    http://www.indexmundi.com/algeria/population_below_poverty_line.html
    Conclusion:
    The 2nd largest oil producer in Africa has 23% of its population living below KES 80 per day. Its own National Oil company controls the oil industry hence solid poverty reduction felt by all Algerians.

    3. Angola.

    1.9m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1955
    Oil Discovery Nationality: Portugal. ChevronTexaco-American.
    After 2002 civil war: China involved in oil industry.

    Africa and China: At a crossroads in Angola


    http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndy/2012-03/28/content_14927698.htm

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:40.5%
    http://www.indexmundi.com/angola/population_below_poverty_line.html
    Conclusion:
    The 3rd largest oil producer in Africa has 40.5% of its population living below KES 80 per day.

    After entering into deals with China in regards to Oil mining, the Civil war ended and the poverty level reduced.

    4. Libya.

    1.7m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1959
    Oil Discovery Nationality: British. Esso[ExxonMobil].
    After 1974: Libya nationalized its oil industry.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Libya_under_Muammar_Gaddafi

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:33%
    http://www.indexmundi.com/libya/population_below_poverty_line.html
    Conclusion:
    Libya has 33% of its population living below KES 80 per day.

    5. Egypt.

    0.56m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1886
    Oil Discovery Nationality: British. Shell
    After 1961: Egypt nationalized its oil industry.

    http://www.oilegypt.com/webpro1/oil/oilegypt/shell/history.asp

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:20%
    http://www.indexmundi.com/egypt/population_below_poverty_line.html

    Conclusion: A new political regime in Egypt means uncertainty in terms of increase or reduction in poverty levels.

    6. Sudan.

    0.5m barrels per day.

    ¾ of oil in South Sudan. ¼ of Oil in Northern Sudan.
    Oil Discovery date: 1959
    Oil Discovery Nationality: Italian. Agip Oil
    After 1974: USA.Chevron TexaCo.
    2005:End of Civil war.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Sudanese_Civil_War

    Currently: China is a major investor in Sudan oil.

    China, Sudan Discuss Oil Dispute

    South Sudan % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:90%
    http://www.wvafrica.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=152&Itemid=169

    North Sudan % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:40%
    https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/su.html

    Conclusion: North Sudan has over 60% of its population living above the KES 80 per day range. Northern Sudan has strategic relationships with China regarding oil.
    South Sudan has 90% of its population living below KES 80 per day i.e one of the poorest countries in the world. Southern Sudan recently expelled a Chinese national due to Oil revenue sharing allegations.

    South Sudan Expels Chinese Oil Executive

    7. Equatorial Guinea.

    0.35m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1995
    Oil Discovery Nationality: American. ExxonMobil

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:76.8%
    http://data.worldbank.org/country/equatorial-guinea

    Conclusion: Despite having oil revenue, Equatorial Guinea has 76.8% of its citizens living on less than KES 80 per day.

    8. Chad.

    0.24m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 2003
    Oil Discovery Nationality: American. Esso/WorldBank

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:80%
    http://www.indexmundi.com/chad/population_below_poverty_line.html

    Conclusion: Despite having oil revenue, Chad has 80% of its citizens living on less than KES 80 per day.

    9. Congo Brazzaville.

    0.22m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1980
    Oil Discovery Nationality:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/2255297.stm

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:70%
    http://www.amurt.org/en/current-projects/congo-brazzaville/

    Conclusion: Despite having oil revenue, Congo Brazzaville has 70% of its citizens living on less than KES 80 per day. Political instability and civil strive contributes to poverty in Congo Brazzaville.

    10. Gabon.

    0.19m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 1967
    Oil Discovery Nationality:USA. Shell Oil

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:32.7%
    http://data.worldbank.org/country/gabon

    Conclusion: Gabon has long ties with China.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/3450969.stm

    Other Countries:

    11. South Africa. 0.11m barrels per day
    12. Tunisia. 0.09m barrels per day
    13. Cameroon. 0.08m barrels per day
    14. Cote de Ivore. 0.06m barrels per day
    15. DR Congo. 0.02m barrels per day
    16. Ghana. 0.007m barrels per day
    17. Morocco. 0.004m barrels per day

    New Entrants:

    Uganda.

    0.00m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 2006
    Oil Discovery Nationality:Britain. Tullow Oil

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:24.5%
    http://data.worldbank.org/country/uganda

    Kenya.

    0.00m barrels per day.
    Oil Discovery date: 2012
    Oil Discovery Nationality:Britain. Tullow Oil

    % of population living on less than KES 80 per day:45.9%
    http://data.worldbank.org/country/kenya

    Architect Francis Gichuhi Kamau
    info@a4architect.com
    +254721410684

  • Going green in these harsh climes

    Going green in these harsh climes
    By MWAURA SAMORA msamora@ke.nationmedia.com
    Posted Wednesday, February 29 2012 at 16:25

    Buildings account for at least 40 per cent of a country’s energy consumption, and one of the best ways to cut down on these huge energy needs lies in our roofs and walls. Discerning architects could create energy-saving concepts because those same walls and roofs are the links between the building and the outer environment

    The collective attention of conservationists was last month directed towards Gigiri, Nairobi, where the United Nations Environmental Programme’s (Unep) global ministerial environmental forum debated ways to make the world as “green” as possible. Before this, Unep had already declared 2012 the International Year of Sustainable Energy for All.

    But while the world’s attention is fixed on these lofty plans on how to reverse the wanton destruction of global habitats in years past and prevent — what scientists have called an ‘environmental Armageddon’ — a local architect says the journey to a sustainable world starts with the small steps of adjusting our building styles.

    “Green architecture is not only aesthetically appealing and environmentally friendly, but also economically viable in the long run since it embraces methods that save on power and water usage,” explains Francis Gichuhi, an architectural consultant who specialises in designing green buildings.

    “New structures are rapidly adopting this concept, not just because of its resource-friendly nature and cost-cutting, but also the now popular global obsession with matters green.”

    Sustainable construction is a relatively new concept in Kenya, where the first truly green building is the Unep headquarters in Gigiri. Although several other projects are underway across the city, the Unep building remains one of the greenest beacons across Africa.

    Through his company, Prism Designs Africa, Gichuhi has drawn from his 11-year experience of designing green houses across Africa and parts of India to come up with a concept called Diamond Eco-House, where one can complete an entire bungalow at a competitive rate by building in stages of one room at a time as long as one has a piece of land.

    “One only needs to have a piece of land and Sh80,000 to get a one-room house in three weeks,” explains the architect, who says the house is called Diamond because of the shape it takes when all the rooms are complete. “The reason the house is affordable is that it utilises interlocking stabilised soil blocks which are much cheaper than ordinary stones.”

    The blocks are made of sand that is pressed to a rock-hard status using a machine, hence it’s much cheaper than the ordinary stone while having the same hardiness and hardness. Although the stabilised soil blocks are better suited for residential buildings that rarely exceed one or two storeys, they are recommended for in-fills and partitions in high-rise commercial structures.
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    “Another economic plus for using the stabilised soil blocks is the fact that you don’t need plaster since the blocks are made in such a way that they join by interlocking,” he observes. “The blocks can also be made on site if the soil quality is good, which, besides lowering the costs further, increases environmental relevance since no carbon is released during transportation.”

    Unlike most standard homes, the Diamond Eco-House has a twin waste-water piping system, with one carrying foul water from the toilet while the other drains the grey water from kitchen sinks and washbasins. Gichuhi points out that while the foul water is hard to recycle since it needs complex specialised treatment, the grey water can be re-used — after simple filtration — in the toilet and to irrigate gardens.

    “A 10-storey building with 50 tenants per floor, each using five litres of water per day for non-drinking purposes, leads to a total water consumption of around 2,500 litres on a daily basis,” the architect notes. “Recycling 30 per cent of this amount across the Nairobi Central Business District, for instance, would translate into hundreds of thousands of shillings in savings besides conserving many litres of the precious commodity”.

    This, combined with run-off collections, which he says should be made mandatory for every building, would go very far in ensuring residents’ water needs are met even when the taps run dry.

    Unfortunately, no building in the city has implemented an efficient recycling system, which means all the water flushed down the drains goes to waste.

    According to Green Building Workgroup, an American environmental architecture organisation, buildings account for at least 40 per cent of a country’s energy consumption. This percentage is higher in countries that experience extreme winter conditions in the Northern Hemisphere.

    One of the biggest solutions to cutting down drastically the energy consumption of a building, according to Gichuhi, lies in its roof and walls. These are the main areas where the architect can create energy-saving concepts because walls and roofs are the links between the building and the outer environment.

    “When called upon to adopt green designs, one of the options is a technology called building integrated photovoltaic (BIP) system, where solar panels replace a piece of the wall, window or roof,” he says.

    “While the solar panel still serves the purpose of the part it has replaced, it has the added value of generating energy.”

    However, the popularity of this concept is still very low because solar panels are relatively expensive compared to other building materials. This is because, Gichuhi laments, they have to be imported, mostly from Asian countries, despite the fact that the technology required to make them is very basic and simple.

    “In China, for instance, by the time children complete their primary studies, they are able to cobble together a fully functioning solar cell using a simple wire and a piece of silicon,” the architect says.

    “By the time they get to university as architects, they have accumulated enough technical know-how to design complex photovoltaic designs that are exported to Africa for sale.”

    Although there is no institution in Kenya that teaches students how to make solar panels, tutorial materials explaining the step-by-step procedure abound online, and these, Gichuhi says, should be used by the government to popularise the technology through the education system.

    “The concept should be legislated so that every citizen who has electricity in their house is required by law to contribute power to the grid by mounting solar panels on their roof. This will help the country move away from weather-reliant power generation methods and reduce the frequent power blackouts.”

    In Germany, one of the world’s greenest economies, elaborate government initiatives have triggered a national interest in green energy production by the citizenry in the last five years. As a result, 50 per cent of solar energy production, which contributes around three per cent to the national grid, is in the hands of private individuals.
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    Through a system known as feed-in tariffs, grid operators are required by law to pay for renewable energy supplied to them by citizens for a fixed price in a period of 15 to 20 years, and this has created a surge in the production of renewable energy by citizens. The payment can either be in cash or electricity bill subsidies.

    The German renewable energy production policy is backed by a legal requirement where every new house built should not waste more than 75kWh/m2 per year. With no meaningful energy-saving measures put in place in many Kenyan houses, it is obvious that we waste far much more than this annually.

    “Assuming a metre square of solar panel in Kenya produces approximately 2kW per day after 10 hours of daylight — Kenya is right in the tropics — if just one per cent of the country’s total surface area is put under this system, it would produce approximately 14,000 MW daily,” Gichuhi analyses. “Nairobi consumes around 5,000 MW on a daily basis. Therefore the total energy generated by solar from one per cent of the country’s total surface area in a day can sustain the capital’s total energy needs for three days.”

    Taking into consideration that Kenya enjoys more hours of sunshine per day than Germany, such a people-driven power production programme would be a huge boost to Kenya Power’s output.

    “The blackouts that Kenyans have to endure on a daily basis would be drastically reduced while individuals and corporate entities will have their power bills drastically reduced.”

    Another green initiative that high-rise building designers are gradually embracing is the concept of rooftop gardens, or “green roofs”. Although still not very popular in Kenya, Gichuhi says architectural consultants have been selling the idea aggressively to investors.

    “Besides reducing carbon footprints and regulating the buildings’ temperatures, roof gardens improve the scenery by cutting the monotony of run-on mabatis and tiles,” he observes. “For these reasons, high-rise developers should be compelled to dedicate a fraction of their buildings to a garden, especially in the roofs.”

    To jump-start the culture of green roofs in Kenyan urban centres, he says the up-coming Konza and Tatu cities should stipulate that every roof should have some greenery. “If need be, the Ruiru and Mavoko county councils, under whose jurisdiction these mega projects fall, should draft a law that will make green roofs mandatory,” Gichuhi adds.

    Through simulations, Japanese scientists established that, if 50 per cent of high-rise buildings in Tokyo had roof gardens, they would reduce their internal air temperatures by almost a degree, with owners saving about $1.6 million dollars (Sh128 million) per day in electricity bills.

    Construction of roof gardens is only possible where the roofing is flat, a concept that most green architects advocate for because, besides the ability to accommodate a garden, flat roofs also use less timber, hence reducing the number of trees that have to be felled.

    Unlike in Southern Africa, where roofing styles are influenced by traditional flat-roofed concepts, East, Central and Western African building designs have high roof pitches which are more costly.

    “Most of our styles follow the 1967 Building Code, which was heavily influenced by Europeans, whose roofs are made steeper in order to shed off snow during winter,” he says. “My hope is that the current Building Code that is awaiting approval by Parliament is drafted to reflect methods that are appropriate to our environment.”

    Francis Gichuhi Kamau, Architect.
    www.a4architect.com
    info@a4architect.com
    0721410684