5 things repatriating gold bullion says about the country – The Real Asset Co.
This week few will have missed reports that Germany is getting closer
to bringing its gold bullion reserves home. Following questions asked
in Parliament earlier this year regarding the 3,396 tonnes of gold
bullion, federal auditors have now instructed the Bundesbank to
regularly inspect the gold bullion reserves held in the US Federal
Reserve, Bank of England and Banque de France.
Der Speigel also report that the Bundesbank is planning to ship 150
tonnes of the gold reserves from the New York Federal Reserve back onto
home soil, over the next three years. It is also only now becoming clear
that the Bundesbank reduced 1,100 tonnes of gold holdings with the Bank
of England to 500 tonnes between 2000 and 2001.
The mainstream media coverage of Germany’s actions regarding their
gold reserves seems to have an underlying accusatory tone to it. It’s
almost as if by the Bundesbank openly admitting it is looking out for
its own finances, for its own country and its
citizens, it is being unpatriotic to the global cause of pretending that
a highly leveraged, fiat money, banker-centric, government-spending
driven economy is exactly how things work best.
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