The Coming Economic Depression
This article is updated regularly with updates appearing at the of the page
By Mark S. Watson
(updated 27 February 2004) - Scroll Down for latest update
This is not what the pundits on TV are telling you. It is not what the newsmen at the nations nationally recognized newspapers are saying, it is not what the FED or the US Treasury Department are saying... publicly.
But they know it just the same. Anyone with access to a computer can find out just how bad things really are. The Federal Reserve has been printing money like there is no tomorrow and yet financial pundits act as though this is simply not important enough to report.
Click Here for Word Document on M1,M2 and M3 From the Fed. (right click save target as)
The Fed's course on the surface seems to be irresponsible, but it really is the only real choice that the Fed has to forestall a major economic downturn in the US that would leave millions jobless and send many of the nations leading banks into insolvency. The Fed knows exactly what is going on, and while Greenspan will never rattle the markets and the American public at large with the whole truth, he must give some hints and allow himself some leeway when he is called before Congress to explain why things are not nearly as rosy as he led the country to believe.
Fiscal problems are being felt in every sector of the economy, except perhaps in law offices. The Governors association announced on 26 November that massive shortfalls in state budgets that totaled 40 billion dollars. With these types of deficits, something has to give. It may be heath care, education, road repairs, unemployment benefits or another essential service but something must give. These deficits were caused by two fundamental things. First, an overly rosy outlook on the nations economic future. This was largely due to the pundits on television, the financial press and the past two US administrations politically motivated economic pronouncements. These forecasts caused state and local governments to invest large amounts of capital in the stock market, eventually costing them billions of dollars. Second, the real effect of the loss of jobs and with it the tax revenues. Today we are seeing the effects of these policies and the real effects of Clinton/Greenspan/Bush economic policies. They have been a recipe for a financial disaster that everyone on the inside knows is coming. If you don't believe me look at the latest personal bankruptcy figures announced on 26 November. They are a clear sign that the economy is not on the mend but is sinking deeper into a recession.
Why Inflate?
The answer to this is simple. Inflation, while bad, is not as bad as deflation. Deflation would be a disaster in two easy steps. With inflation, there are about 10 steps, but each road leads to the same destination; insolvency. Economists, not paid by the US government, large tax-free foundations and the financial press have been warning the American people about the real state of the US economy. The problem here is that no one gets heard in the US mainstream press unless he belongs to one of the three afore mentioned groups. They are increasing becoming an axis of economic disinformation, designed to keep the unsuspecting in the markets to be fleeced by corporate America.
Jobs are still going away at a record pace. Each week new layoffs of at least a thousand persons per lay-off announcement are reported. This is not normal and bodes very ill for any future recovery. These hundreds of thousands of people will not be working, and thus will not be able to purchase things, a key factor of any true forecast of consumer confidence. These jobs are not coming back, and Alan Greenspan knows this. George Bush knows this and it is why he is setting up huge new Government agencies that will eventually employ millions; from homeland security to the proposed new Foreign Aid Department. The President knows that the only way to get out of the economic disaster now unfolding is to inflate the currency, something Greenspan is all too happy to do and to create hundreds of thousands of new federal jobs to keep America employed. This is certainly a bad thing in the long term, but in the short term it may stave off serious social disruptions at least until the next election. The real danger in this path is runaway inflation, foreign disinvestment, and foreign repudiation of the dollar. These are very real dangers as some governments have expressed private concern over the course the US is taking economically. Some have threatened to take their investment elsewhere for both economic and political reasons, still others are seeking a new reserve currency of the world rather than the US dollar. These are the real threats that await any US administration that continues down the road the Bush and Greenspan are now taking us. One day the dollar will become worth less and less until it is finally worthless.
Indeed one of the Federal Reserve Governors has already stated publicly that he will inflate the currency should it become necessary
"The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press - or today, its electronic equivalent - that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost," - Federal Reserve Governor Ben Bernanke
Yes, this man is a sitting Federal Reserve Governor and he is saying that he is planning on printing lots and lots of money. Apparently his Harvard and MIT degrees didn't teach him about what happened in the Weimar Republic. The danger of the US currency becoming worthless is increased exponentially with a man like that sitting on the Federal Reserve Board. So yes, you the reader must be warned, the US Economy is in deep trouble that twelve successive rate cuts have not helped and will not help.
A Crash?
Probably not the kind of crash that happened in 1929, and probably not the kind of depression that happened in the '30's. It will be worse in many respects but the effects will not be felt right away by most Americans. The US is still running massive trade and budget deficits. Over 200 billion dollars for our budget deficit this year IF we don't go to war with Iraq, if we do, those deficits will be considerably higher. Indeed, the federal deficits in America are so massive, that America cannot and does not service all of its debt. Indeed the total the credit market debt is rising at an alarming rate.
If it did, It would eat up more than half of all federal
revenues. That would send the US government into immediate
bankruptcy. These are simple, incontrovertible facts that you simply
will not hear on CNBC, MSNBC, Bloomberg or any financial news show.
However, credit must be given to CNBC that did for once let the truth
leak onto the airwaves in an interview with Paul O'Neill, US Treasury
Secretary when asked about these deficits and our ability to service
them. He said in essence, that the financial system will fall apart
when we can no longer service our debt. And still, very little is
heard about America's missing trillions of dollars that no one can
account for and no one is investigating. What is happening in
America reads like a horror story that is not reported to the people
at large who are given large doses of propaganda to keep them content
and under control while they are being fleeced on a scale that has
never happened before in history. Indeed
the Social Security trust fund has been raided by Congress and the
Administration in order to pay for the last few years of Government
spending and the luxury of lying to Americans by telling them we had
a budget surplus. So a crash like in 1929 is probably not in the
cards, instead will be something very different and much more
destructive. These news is extremely bleak, yet if one listens to the
newsmen on TV, one would think everything is just 'coming up roses'.
The real barometer of economic health will be the status of the US
dollar, and how much foreign investment actually leaves the US in the
coming months. Another barometer will be the true state of US
employment, how many people will be working for the government in the
coming months, how many have taken pay cuts after getting laid off in
the private sector and must find work at jobs that cannot support
their lifestyles and prior purchasing patterns.
It must be
remembered that this is a global problem and no market in the world
has been spared. The problems in the US are echoed in Europe, Asia
and most importantly in Japan. However, these other nations in the
long run are in better shape than the US as none if these other
nations have the massive fiscal, trade and consumer debt that
the US carries. Hence, their economic fortunes will be brighter
than America's. The question mark here will be Asia, whose economic
might was greatly humbled by the machinations of George Soros and the
IMF. Even though some of the Asian Tigers have taken a more defensive
stance with regards to a future attack on their economies, real risks
remain. The vulnerability of Asia is certainly its dependence on
exports to America, its primary market. Should the US dollar fare
badly enough, the Asian economies would suffer a correspondingly
significant risk.
If the FED continues its course in inflating the currency to keep stock prices high and the banks solvent, the dollar will become far less attractive to foreigners. The fundamental weakness of the US economy is known throughout the world. The problem is that if America goes down the proverbial tubes economically, so does much of the rest of the world, as they are dependent on American markets to sell their goods. The dollars demise will not bode well for anyone anywhere, but if the US cannot manage its own affairs economically and continues to show such continued fiscal irresponsibility, then the rest of the world will have little or no choice but to create a new reserve currency of the world. This is the real issue that any intelligent and open-minded person and or investor should seriously consider. Let it be known that the dollar will not crash overnight. It is not time for 'chicken littles' on the Internet the claim the sky is falling. It is however, time to look at the nation's balance sheets with a cold hard look, without the pie in the sky emotionalism that is the foundation of the American financial media. Our financial health as a nation depends on it as well as our personal freedoms.
The American empire is in a dire state and the debate over the past few months in foreign policy circles has been contentious. The debate appears to be between the so-called hawks (derisively referred to as 'chicken hawks', as many are draft dodgers and evaders) and more moderate elements who mostly reside outside the present administration. The debate centered how to maintain American economic, political and military might on a global scale at the same time its consumer driven economy significantly deteriorates. This was the real debate that took place just before the 911. America's foreign policy has now taken shape. It is now an aggressive, unilateral, and violent foreign policy that some in the administration, Colin Powell in particular, was attempting to prevent. The policy advise of the more hawkish elements of the administration led by Cheney and Rumsfeld were all too conveniently reinforced by the attacks of September 11th and the ensuing war. The US Government and more importantly its policy makers now view the American population as a major impediment to its future geopolitical aims. This is reinforced by economic fundamentals that portend a disaster that no one living has seen before in the US. Hence, the extraordinary measures this administration has taken to repress the civil liberties and with them key provisions in the US Constitution, which many in the American establishment view as an antiquated impediment to their naked imperial ambitions.
The nature of our economic predicament is becoming clearer. All Americans know that the US just recently reissued new currency. But the US is yet again ready to introduce another currency into the mainstream. This is a clear sign of a significant change in America's economic structure. Counterfeiting is the reason we are being told, however it is clear to all who have been following the economy over the past couple of years that something very ominous is going on with the US money system in general and with the dollar in particular.
Pyramiding Risk
If massive budgetary deficits are not enough to bring down our economic prosperity, there is the $50 Trillion derivatives pyramid to consider. America's largest banks are fully and completely exposed to enormous risk. These risks should not be underestimated as the exposure the major US banks have to these complex financial instruments is massive. However, unlike many who predict a disaster, a serious banking collapse because of a derivatives meltdown is, in this authors opinion, somewhat less likely than many predict. Successive derivative related financial crisis over the past few years (Barings, LTCM, and a serious scare with two major US Banks in the recent past), have probably prompted policy makers to make contingency plans to deal with such an eventuality with speed and enough secrecy to avoid a major meltdown and panic that would ordinarily ensue if one of these major Banks became suddenly insolvent because of a massive derivative loss. This does not mean that a major meltdown of such a nature that even the FED and the world's Central Banks cannot fix is not possible, on the contrary, it is quite possible, though not quite as possible as many believe. Nevertheless, such a bailout would only exacerbate America's debt and dollar problem as it would require to FED to further inflate an already overinflated currency.
To get a sense of just how exposed the banking system is to a derivatives meltdown here is a chart and a graph:
Dead Broke?
It is becoming apparent that the United States is dead broke and unable to meet is future financial obligations. What is not so apparent is that the United States Government may be at a point in its history that not only are future budgetary considerations in jeopardy, but present fiscal outlays are as well. In short, we at present have no real working budget. We have spent nearly half a trillion dollars in the past 6 months using temporary spending measures. Now foreigners are leaving the US markets. This is an extremely important development that few of the major financial news services are reporting. It boils down to this; The US must attract investors to US securities in order to continue to function. Without massive (in the hundreds of billions of dollars) amounts of incoming capital, the US cannot continue its previous spending patterns. Therefore, some or most of the following will occur if the US cannot obtain foreign capital to finance its debt and budget:
The dollar will tumble to at least 40% of its present value.
Massive (20-50%) spending cuts in federal outlays will ensue.
America's march towards war will be in jeopardy.
Gold's price in dollars will rise sharply and permanently.
Interest rates will have to rise in order to attract foreign investment.
Oil will soar in price to (guesstimate) 40-60 dollars a barrel
Social and economic disruptions will occur in the US as (real) unemployment rises above 30%
Banking Holidays may become commonplace and the new US currency may entail exchanging old dollars for new (devalued) ones.
I know this is now what the pundits are saying on TV. The same pundits that said 'Dow 30,000' and 'there will be no more recessions' and 'techs stocks can only go up'. They lied then and they are lying now. If you listen to them you will be homeless and hungry. That is an absolute certainty as what is happening now is the 'end game' of America's century long dominance in the world. Wall Street knows it, the President knows it and so does the FED. It will be the collapse of the world's greatest economic power and with it the worlds only military super power. These things may not necessarily transpire exactly as stated here. The US has enormous clout and can still strong arm some nations and central banks into investing into US securities and use accounting tricks to stay afloat a (very) little while longer. The main problem is, even if we make such an attempt, will there be enough capital to cover our fiscal needs? The answer is almost certainly not.
Hence the disaster now unfolding will unfold in all of its ugly fury on a completely unsuspecting America.
Out of Bullets (June Update)
Federal and even global policy makers are in a quandary now because they are out of their conventional 'ammunition' to stave off what is becoming and what may have diagnosed, as a global deflationary recession. This has caused some policy makers, including some of the members of the Fed, to call for more unconventional measures to spark growth in the ailing economy. Even the massive tax cut that was recently passed and signed by the President will not assist the US Economy, but rather will certainly cause even larger and more troubling deficits to be accumulated . It is these deficits which are one of the major causes of America's economic malaise. Decreasing taxes for short term political gain is the very sort of thinking that has put America in such a dire economic situation. I must tell you that policy makers in Washington are scared to death. They have no answers and no solutions.
I cannot express just how quickly this economy could collapse. I am not saying that it is just around the corner, although it may very well be. But 13 successive Fed rate cuts as of 25 June, 2003 has not and will not revive this economy. Sooner or later, probably sooner, the US dollar will fall to such an alarming degree that America's economic preeminence will be seriously challenged if not completely undermined. However, another possibility cannot be discounted, that being a banking failure. Let it be noted here that a banking failure will not be advertised as such. The full power of the US government will prevent any such nomenclature from being used. It may be described as a computer glitch or a malfunctioning communications satellite or a computer hacker bringing down a key computer network. Whatever the story will be it will be plausible, it will have major TV News personalities and government pronouncements to support the story. Nevertheless it will be a banking failure. Here are some clues that will tell you that a banking failure has occurred:
You will not be able to get money at your local ATM.
Limited access to money at your local bank. Probably, most banks will be forced to close however, in order to keep panic from spreading, local branches may be open to provide extremely limited services.
Your credit cards will not be accepted.
Most financial news will be strictly controlled and it may become illegal to say the banking system has collapsed.
There will be several days of economic inactivity/uncertainty while the Government implements emergency economic measures.
If such a collapse were to occur, there would be absolutely no warning. One day, which will be like any other day, the disaster will strike. The American people will finally realize an important fundamental fact, that being you cannot borrow yourself into prosperity. I remind you that there will be no such announcement, but if any three or four of the above mentioned things have occurred, you are living in the midst of the greatest banking and economic collapse in human history.
While a banking collapse is certainly a real possibility, the more likely scenario will be the 'slow bleed' scenario. This will entail a prolonged economic recession, coupled with the Fed continually pumping liquidity into the markets and banks, high paying jobs continuing to be shipped to India, and fiscal and budgetary problems become so acute that essential services get cut at the state and local level. While the economy continues to contract and the better jobs are being shipped overseas, American households are going deeper into debt. Here is a chart from the FED.
Source:
The Federal Reserve
In
millions of dollars
Notice the household debt rate for 2002 and 2003 in the Federal Reserve chart. Things are not looking so good for American households. Many have lost good jobs but borrowed money on the hopes of better days ahead. They made an terrible mistake that has them in a financial hole. Many people today are using credit cards to stay afloat, many purchased new cars at very low interest rates and others refinanced their homes or took out home equity mortgages. Many will not be able to pay these loans back, because over the next couple of years, they will lose their jobs. This will only cause troubles for the banks and finance companies.
Debt is the poison pill of the American economy. The only way to fix this economy is a two fold attack. First there must be a significant reduction in federal spending, By at least 20% per year, until all federal outlays are less than 50% of their present levels. Second there must be a debt repudiation of some kind. Consumer debt (especially unsecured debt) should be the primary target, coupled with a vigorous and complete reorganization of current credit related policies. Such policies should make the lender more responsible for unwise lending practices and much more careful before lending to customers. If an across the board 50% debt forgiveness were implemented for all unsecured debt and severely reduced interests rates for all remaining outstanding debt, as well as more favorable terms to the debtor, the economy would being to show more signs of life. However, the old way of amassing large amounts of consumer debt should be strongly discouraged in the future. Giving people more breathing room on the remaining debt will assist in rearranging household priorities in the wake of declining individual incomes.
Of course these things will not happen. The prevailing winds of our leaders are too parochial and unimaginative to propose, let alone implement such a wide ranging solutions. However, given more poor economic performance and the threat of political unrest by large numbers of unemployed Americans, such proposals may not be impossible to bring about in the future. However a general debt forgiveness may not transpire for the following reason. There is a group of international bankers and financiers that may attempt to deliberately crash the system at the proper time in order to bring about a the necessary crisis to bring about a more powerful and global banking institution, a World Central Bank. This can be accomplished by carefully timing a market crash and/or raising real interest rates in order to confiscate the property of the people who can no longer afford to pay their debts. A banking crisis is a real possibility as stated earlier, whether or not the coming crisis will be a real one or one that is a created or planned remains to be seen. Banking collapses are not an historical anachronism, they really happen and the effects are devastating for the average person. Anyone who has studied the history of banking in America during the 1800's will know that banking instability was a constant problem for America. While the financial pundits are telling you that such a thing is only a topic for 'fear-mongers', the reality is that such a collapse is now in progress and that the smart money knows it and is moving to protect itself accordingly. However the crisis that is now upon is is so huge and gargantuan that the effects will be so devastating that no one living has ever seen anything like it, including those older Americans that lived through the great depression.
September 2003 Update
The market has been heading upwards over the past few
weeks but at the same time Jobs are still going away. August saw
another significant drop in payrolls, almost 100,000 jobs. These
numbers are completely inconsistent with the governments claims of 3%
growth in GDP. The government fictions are becoming more and more
egregious and self-evident. Even though the number of actual jobs in
America is shrinking, using its dishonest method of accounting, the
government magically reduced the number of workers by ceasing
to count those that cannot find work. In doing so, it could
claim, using the 'Arthur Andersen' method of accounting, that the
jobless rate actually declined, even though there were significantly
less Jobs! The Governments fictions are being increasingly less
believed by Americans and foreign investors alike. The most important
thing to remember is that the truth and government
pronouncements are mutually exclusive. These things are
happening while many government numbers will pretend an ever elusive
recovery. The fact that Mr. and Mrs. America are out of work or
working in jobs that do not pay a livable wage is the screaming
reality that is starting to hit home in more and more American
households. Another looming problem on the horizon is that of a
growing pension crisis. Many pension funds are woefully underfunded
and years of regulatory loosening have allowed corporations to grow
lax in funding their pensions a few outright stealing money from them
in order to claim fictitious profitability. Now there is a gaping
hole in the Pension Guaranty Benefit Program, a government agency
that exists to guarantee payments to pensioners in case their funds
go broke. This fund is in deep trouble and it means that one of two
things will happen, either; 1) the many people who have paid hard
earned money into their pensions will not get any money back or 2)
the government will have to pony up billions of dollars in order to
make good on those pension plans that will (and have) gone belly up.
Even as corporate America claims earnings are better, there are still
serious accounting 'irregularities' with the latest figures. Problems
with restructuring charges, pension funds, write downs and M&A's
are still present and are readily apparent to astute eyes when
corporations use the pro-forma accounting that is still fashionable
today.
Indeed, the Congress is acting as though the nation does
not have any fiscal problems and is voting for funding of Medicare
prescription costs that it has not and more importantly cannot
fund without pilling up even more debt. The President is asking for
more funding for his war in Iraq, to the tune of some 87 billion
dollars, money that will only add to our already
disastrous debt woes, once again there is no way to fund this without
going further into debt. Unfunded liabilities are a serious problem
for America. The following figures are cumulative and include total
outlays and are not included in our current budget, hence the term
unfunded:
|
Total Debt |
|
---|---|---|
Sector |
Amount |
Per Capita |
Federal Government |
$6.7 Trillion |
$22,000.00 |
State And Local |
$1.4 Trillion |
$5,000.00 |
Social Security |
$10 Trillion |
$36,000.00 |
Medicare (unfunded)* |
$7 Trillion |
$26,000.00 |
Household Debt |
$8.4 Trillion |
$29,000.00 |
Business Debt |
$7.1 Trillion |
$26,000.00 |
Financial Sector |
$10.4 Trillion |
$36,000.00 |
Other Debt |
$.7 Trillion |
$2,000.00 |
Total Debt |
$51.7 Trillion |
$182,000.00 |
Medicare has been estimated at $30.5 Trillion Dollars (Includes Hospital Insurance and Supplemental Medial Insurance (14.4 and 161. Trillion Dollars Respectively) by others. This depends on how far out into the future one wishes to estimate and using various metrics that estimate rises in costs, such as pharmaceuticals. .None of these figures is pinpoint accurate and I have extended Social Security benefits further out than most and am using a much higher inflation rate than most establishment economists care to use. Hence, these figures do not exactly match those of more prominent and 'respectable' institutions.
These outlays for the future of America are dire, even without these, the Governments imbalance is roughly half a trillion dollars. In order to fund these deficits, the American Government will have to raise taxes. Now any such move will never be characterized as such, it will be advertised as a tax cut. But the government will have to raise taxes because foreigners, especially Asians, are freeing themselves from US Federal debt instruments. That means it will be very difficult for the US to raise capital. The only way it can continue on as before is to do something illegal and keep it a secret. Watch the US Treasuries, watch the Bond markets in particular, this should tell you which way the wind is blowing insofar as America's debt crisis is concerned and make no mistake, it is a crisis. Investors in the bond markets are looking closely to see exactly how the Fed will act during this time of uncertainty.
One major problem that is causing American leadership to make
the kinds of decisions that are destroying America is the fact that
these decisions are made without the people having the slightest clue
as to what is really going on and the real issues. Hence,
stupid and destructive decisions are made and the people continue to
vote for those who make them. Another note here is that this latest
market rally is largely a result of insider selling that has
occurred; that is, those on the inside of America's Corporations who
are selling their own stock, and while we cannot be certain, it
appears that the plunge protection team, (which works closely with
the insiders) comes in and buys these stocks at inflated prices,
using public funds in order to keep the prices high. Yes, I do
believe that this is what is happening though I confess the evidence
is scant. Foreigners see this trend are are withdrawing or seriously
considering withdrawing from US securities. Reality and the American
people's perception of reality are currently divorced. The 'trust' in
the US Dollar that has allowed America to live far, far beyond its
means is now on notice, the message is clear and it is flashing ,
'Get your financial house in order or your currency and with it
your global political, military and economic preeminence will become
as extinct as the dodo bird'.
How will it transpire?
There are many views and each has and makes some very good points.
However it appears to this author that it there are only four basic
scenario's that could transpire, barring any external interference
from the powers that be. In other words if the politicians and 'men
of influence' do not intervene to prevent these scenario via
suspicious power outages hitting the number one and number two
financial centers as we saw in August, more wars, or another
mysterious terror attack. I ask all of you to not
discount what are derisively called 'conspiracy theories'. Policy
makers must make contingency plans. This is done all the time.
I know this from when I served in the government and as a consultant.
A global financial meltdown is not a wild eyed-conspiracy theory, it
happened in the 30's and it can, and almost certainly will happen
again. Contingency plans have been made, these
plans will be made with two main goals in mind; 1) to pacify the
people (this is the primary concern, to avoid pandemonium and an
angry populace) and 2) to give policy makers the time to bring in a
solution to the meltdown. This is not conspiracy theory anyone
who thinks that plans have not been laid have not read many of the
banking regulations now on the books. These laws are some of the most
heavily amended acts in US history. The Fed has an interesting
document that may help to explain how they view certain types of
crisis and the legislative and regulatory thinking that went behind
several banking bills in the past; it can be found here.
In short, it is a history of legal 'contingency planning'. You may
call it 'conspiracy theory', nevertheless these bills are now law.
Now Congress the FED or any other government agency is NOT going to
run around yelling about such plans at the top of their lungs for
fear of sparking the events that they are trying to prevent. Thus,
plans for such a monumental collapse that all of the real numbers
portend points to extraordinary methods being used in contingency
planning. These plan are laid very quietly and sometimes they are
classified.
One or more of these are likely to follow in light of the current economic predicament.
Deflationary recession – Where prices fall and fall, workers continue to get laid off as companies struggle to make a profit. People continually wait for major purchases because prices are dropping rapidly.
An inflationary depression. - High inflation as the Fed counterfeits more and more currency to fund our current account deficits and foreigners flee the dollar and dollar denominated securities.
A combination of both. The price of necessities and staples rise higher and higher (energy, food, compulsory insurance) while luxury and non-essential items become cheaper and cheaper as people have less and less disposable income and importing essentials becomes more expensive because of a falling dollar.
Regionalized Depression – Where certain areas of the nation go into a full blown depression while others the recession is relatively minor in comparison.
These scenarios are all possible and none should be dismissed out of had. Much will depend on the Fed and how it handles this emergency. The recent 14 year re-appointment of Ben Bernanke to the Fed Board of Governors leads one to conclude that he may replace Greenspan. This is the man quoted above who thinks we should inflate our way out of our predicament, leading to result number 2 above. The rest will depend on political leadership and those who wield tremendous power, globally, quietly and behind the scenes.
Asia,
Jobs and Bush.
September 28 Update
What is the real situation with regards to the employment in America. How will Americans fare during the coming economic depression? Jobs have been going overseas for the past several years, but since the beginning of the Bush administration the process has only accelerated considerably. One prominent economist stated the problem in this way
“In June it was declared that the recession had ended in November 2001. Yet in the 20 months since, payroll employment has declined by a total of about 1 million jobs, or about 8%. In not one of the seven or eight postwar recoveries has there been any employment decline.” - Kurt Richebächer
In addition to the above it must be noted that this governments figures are skewed in that it has statistically eliminated over half a million workers who have given up looking for non-existent jobs. These statistical shenanigans are very significant politically, because honest accounting of joblessness in America would place the real number of unemployed at around 10%, at least. If the number of underemployed (those with masters degrees and Phd's working in Walmart's across America) were counted, a much bleaker picture emerges. Another game the government plays with the employment figures is to play the revision game. The revision game is played by deliberately understating the number of unemployed when the figures are due out and announce them with great fanfare. Then, when the camera's aren't looking and the financial news pundits have painted the rosy picture to the people, the Government then revises the numbers upwards. These are not small statistical anomalies we are talking about but significant differences. These differences can range from 30-50% of the total! These statistical frauds are not accomplished via happenstance but are specifically designed to lull Americans and to a lesser degree the foreign investing public into a false sense of security as to the overall health of the US economy. Other deceptions are also perpetrated including adding fictional jobs to the economy. This practice gained particular favor during the Clinton Administration. In short the jobs situation in America is dismal and the real problem is this; there is positively no let up in sight. The consumer society of America is dying, and not so slowly.
From Asia the message has gone forth to US Treasury Secretary Snow, the US must mend its ways and reduce its fiscal deficits. Asians are currently reconsidering their US debt holdings in light of a falling dollar, a policy that the New US Treasury Secretary is currently supporting. There has been some movement in this area as far as the markets are concerned. Primarily, US Treasuries took a big hit during the week of 22 September. The dollar did as well as it fell to three year lows. A declining dollar offsets any interest paid by the US government on its bonds and securities and thus makes it very unattractive as an investment vehicle. Ordinarily, a weaker dollar would assist America with its exports and aid US manufacturers in selling their goods overseas. However, these are not ordinary times. The US is so far in debt that it must raise capital on the open market in order to keep financing itself. When foreigners stop buying our debt (treasuries) the US government goes bankrupt. What the Asians are doing now is a telling sign as to how perilous our debt situation in America is viewed overseas. Fortunately the slide of the dollar and the administrations support for this policy has not led to a wholesale flight from the dollar, but given the precarious nature of the economic numbers coming out of Washington, such a flight will ensue once America's previous consumption patterns give way to more fiscally frugal households. Indeed the US Census is reporting that poverty in the US is rising at the same time as incomes are falling. There are 1.7 million more Americans living in poverty this year than last. This only confirms the worst suspicions, that the consumer society is dying a slow death. America's factories head overseas, people are out of work and some are being pushed out into the street. This is not good news for foreign investors either because many are very much dependent on American consumption to keep their industries afloat. This has been the real effect of globalization, a race to the economic bottom, bought and paid for by the worlds largest corporations banks and most powerful elite. Does anyone remember the middle ages? You had two classes of people, the landholders and the serf's. The serf's owned nothing and were allowed to live only at the graces and whims of the landholders. Once the middle-class and intellectuals of any society are destroyed, this is the type of society men are left with. Rights are given by the state (read rich and powerful) and the poor have none. This, I believe is the primary goal of todays trends. It is to bring about 'economic democracy' aka Global Socialism where no-one will have the opportunity to better themselves economically and most private property will be held by the elite and it will be illegal or extremely difficult for anyone except the very rich to hold it. All real economic power will rest with a very wealthy economic elite and they will have the power of life and death over the earths serfs. This control will perhaps not be accomplished through outright murder, but by denying critical medical care, impoverishment or other technological means heretofore unseen. Prepare yourself for such a world because unless the foundational principles enshrined in the US Constitution can be resurrected in America, I fear that such a world is our fate.
If all of the above were not enough, bankruptcies continue on despite the lack of news coverage.
2nd Quarter Bankruptcy Figures
Total Filings 440,257
Non-Business Filings - 430,926
Business Filings - 9,331
Chapter 7 - 317,604
Chapter 11 - 2,599
Chapter 12 - 279
Chapter 13 - 119,745
And this graph show the picture of bankruptcies in this so-called 'recovery':
Source ABI World
________________________
As stated earlier in this long running and rather popular article, this author believes that it is entirely possible that the succession of massive power outages throughout the major population and financial centers of the world could very well be some kind of preparation for an economic collapse (to be used as a cover story). The American governments ability to finance itself is in serious jeopardy. Now I admit that using power outages as a cover for an economic collapse is far from a forgone conclusion but when one really considers the scope and depth of the current economic situation in America such a possibility should be considered especially in light of Italy's Power outage on the weekend of the 27th of September. Now the cause for Italy's outage seem to be storms, at least this is the 'official' line. Keep your eyes on future power outages. Major occurrences have already been;
New York-Ottowa
London
Large part's of Scandinavia
Italy
I post this only as food for thought and for perhaps a few wise souls will make preparations...just in case.
The GDP (5 November Update)
The markets this week began a interesting ride this week due to a miraculous GDP report that came out the US government. The euphoria emanating from the TV does nothing but obscure the real picture that emerges from the report.
Defense spending is up almost 16%
Non defense spending is up just over 7%
Year to year, the Money supply (M1) is up over 8% for the Year ending in September.
Investment in utilities dropped over 18%, year to year.
A miraculous 15% Year to Year increase in Computers and peripherals (some of which has shown to be fictitious by special 'quality' or 'hedonic' adjustments1 which makes takes a 1000 dollar computer and adjusts it upwards to 2000 dollars, thus skewing the numbers in favor of a higher productivity number.
The GDP game in the United States is a massive lie. Consider the following items, which are economically non-productive, but which are buried in the GDP report.
The war in Iraq (which is 15% of federal spending)
All welfare and entitlement spending
All anti-terrorist spending including executive security
Federal Regulatory agencies such as OSHA, EPA, SEC, etc.
Intelligence spending (FBI, CIA, DIA, NSA, etc)
State and local government spending.
These are all counted as GDP even though the above activities are of highly questionable economic value. In fact, if the Government spending goes up 7% and non-governmental economic activity (companies that actually produce things) goes down by 6% the government could still claim an increase in GDP! The GDP numbers are such a political hot potato these days that the numbers should no longer be believed, except perhaps as a barometer of the the political desperation of the sitting administration.
One must marvel at the way in which Wall Street seems to be complicit in the game as these facts are well known. Yet, on such a day when these government fictions are released, the market still rally's ahead fueled by the phony report. These 'smoke and mirror' activities of the government and Wall Street have a definite psychological effect on the uninformed investing public who are, after hearing these numbers and then seeing the rally are more inclined to borrow more money on their homes to invest in Wall Street's 'investment' scams.
Indeed the recent GDP numbers are more of a result of 'no interest' car loans and 'no interest 'till 2005' financing on household items and appliances and people who borrowed money against their homes to continue their unsustainable consumption, the real GDP is significantly less than the governments transparent attempts to support the market proclaim.
Nevertheless it does seem clear that there are signs of life in the manufacturing sector of the economy with orders up. This is the only real substantial (as opposed to fictitious) signs of life that exist today. This may be partly due to the declining dollar which will assist certain industries competitiveness overseas. Yet even this is not enough to really assist an economy that is shedding hundreds of thousands of jobs a month. Indeed, October's jobs numbers were another facet of an abysmal situation. Last month alone (October 2003) saw employers announce over 174,000 job cuts, the most in a year. Consequently, when the real estate Refi's are finished and the 0% financings are no more, the economy will see more significant convulsions. For now, as long as interest rates are where they are and people are still willing to borrow more money against their homes, the economy will continue to lurch along without much more pain than we are seeing now. The fly in the ointment will be an acceleration of the flight from dollar denominated assets globally or a rise in interest rates.
On another note, I advise my readers to watch what is happening in Russia closely. The entire Khodorkovsky affair is one that has enormous implications for future energy consumption as well as the dollar. It is not a coincidence that his arrest was made during negotiations to sell part of Yuko's, Russia's largest oil concern, to US oil companies. This is all occurring shortly after Putin and the head of the European Central Bank issued public statements on the desirability of Russia selling her oil to Europe in Euro's rather than dollars. This would have been an extremely significant break with the entire international trading system that has only allowed oil purchases in US dollars. It is not clear to this author exactly what is going on with the Khodorkovsky affair and hard information is difficult to come by. It is noteworthy to see how visceral the attacks have been on Putin. Never once have I seen any pundit give Putin the benefit if the doubt that maybe the charges have merit (they almost certainly do). Instead, because Putin has had the 'audacity' to arrest a rich oil man, the entire world press goes on the offensive against him, rather than against corruption; against, 'authoritarianism' rather than for the rule of law for all, rich and poor. Keep your eye on this because the howls of the lap-dog press tells me the results will effect who profits from the world's second largest oil reserves. Russian lawmakers are also looking at another oil company, that being Sibneft. It is controlled by another Oligarch named Abrahmovich. Keep an eye on who gets to profit from Russia's enormous oil reserves by watching the governments moves against the owners.
Getting back to GDP, one good barometer of the economy and the GDP is the amount of money the the federal government receives in taxes, how much is spent by Uncle Sam and how much debt as a percentage of GDP is out there. Below we have a table and a chart that tells the story.
Total Federal Receipts 1990-2003
Federal Receipts Outlays Deficit and Debt as a Percentage of GDP
Fiscal Year |
Receipts |
Outlays |
Deficit or Surplus |
Debt |
Receipts |
Outlays |
Deficit or Surplus |
Debt |
|
(in billions of dollars) |
(in billions of dollars) |
(in billions of dollars) |
(as a % of GDP) |
(as a % of GDP) |
(as a % of GDP) |
(as a % of GDP) |
|
2003 |
1836 |
2145 |
-304 |
6600 |
17.10% |
19.90% |
-2.80% |
61.40% |
2002 |
1853 |
2011 |
-158 |
6202 |
17.90% |
19.50% |
-1.50% |
60.20% |
2001 |
1991 |
1863.9 |
127.1 |
5230 |
19.60% |
18.40% |
1.30% |
56.80% |
2000 |
2025.2 |
1789 |
236.2 |
5629 |
20.60% |
18.20% |
2.40% |
57.30% |
1999 |
1827.5 |
1703 |
124.4 |
5606.1 |
20.00% |
18.70% |
1.40% |
61.40% |
1998 |
1721.8 |
1652.6 |
69.2 |
5478.7 |
19.90% |
19.10% |
0.80% |
63.20% |
1997 |
1579.3 |
1601.2 |
-22 |
5369.7 |
19.30% |
19.60% |
-0.30% |
65.60% |
1996 |
1453.1 |
1560.6 |
-107.5 |
5181.9 |
18.90% |
20.30% |
-1.40% |
67.30% |
1995 |
1351.8 |
1515.8 |
-164 |
4921 |
18.50% |
20.70% |
-2.20% |
67.20% |
1994 |
1258.6 |
1461.9 |
-203.3 |
4643.7 |
18.10% |
21.00% |
-2.90% |
66.90% |
1993 |
1154.4 |
1409.5 |
-255.1 |
4351.4 |
17.60% |
21.50% |
-3.90% |
66.30% |
1992 |
1091.3 |
1381.7 |
-290.4 |
4002.1 |
17.50% |
22.20% |
-4.70% |
64.40% |
1991 |
1055 |
1324.4 |
-269.4 |
3598.5 |
17.80% |
22.30% |
-4.50% |
60.70% |
1990 |
1032 |
1253.2 |
-221.2 |
3206.6 |
18.00% |
21.80% |
-3.90% |
55.90% |
1989 |
991.2 |
1143.7 |
-152.5 |
2868 |
18.30% |
21.20% |
-2.80% |
53.10% |
1988 |
909.3 |
1064.5 |
-155.2 |
2601.3 |
18.10% |
21.20% |
-3.10% |
51.90% |
1987 |
854.4 |
1004.2 |
-149.8 |
2346.1 |
18.40% |
21.60% |
-3.20% |
50.50% |
1986 |
769.3 |
990.5 |
-221.2 |
2120.6 |
17.50% |
22.50% |
-5.00% |
48.20% |
1985 |
734.2 |
946.5 |
-212.3 |
1817.5 |
17.70% |
22.90% |
-5.10% |
43.90% |
1984 |
666.5 |
851.9 |
-185.4 |
1564.7 |
17.40% |
22.10% |
-4.80% |
40.80% |
1983 |
600.6 |
808.4 |
-207.8 |
1371.7 |
17.50% |
23.50% |
-6.00% |
39.90% |
1982 |
617.8 |
745.8 |
-128 |
1137.3 |
19.10% |
23.10% |
-4.00% |
35.20% |
1981 |
599.3 |
678.2 |
-78.9 |
994.8 |
19.60% |
22.20% |
-2.60% |
32.50% |
1980 |
517.1 |
590.9 |
-73.8 |
909.1 |
18.90% |
21.60% |
-2.70% |
33.30% |
1979 |
463.3 |
504 |
-40.7 |
829.5 |
18.50% |
20.10% |
-1.60% |
33.10% |
1978 |
399.6 |
458.7 |
-59.1 |
776.6 |
18.00% |
20.70% |
-2.70% |
35.00% |
1977 |
355.6 |
409.2 |
-53.6 |
706.4 |
18.00% |
20.80% |
-2.70% |
35.80% |
1976 |
298.1 |
371.8 |
-73.7 |
629 |
17.20% |
21.40% |
-4.20% |
36.20% |
1975 |
279.1 |
332.3 |
-53.2 |
541.9 |
17.90% |
21.30% |
-3.40% |
34.70% |
1974 |
263.2 |
269.4 |
-6.2 |
483.9 |
18.30% |
18.70% |
-0.40% |
33.60% |
1973 |
230.8 |
245.7 |
-14.9 |
466.3 |
17.60% |
18.80% |
-1.10% |
35.60% |
1972 |
207.3 |
230.7 |
-23.4 |
435.9 |
17.50% |
19.50% |
-2.00% |
36.90% |
1971 |
187.1 |
201.2 |
-23 |
408.2 |
17.30% |
19.40% |
-2.10% |
37.70% |
1970 |
192.8 |
195.6 |
-2.8 |
380.9 |
19.00% |
19.30% |
-0.30% |
37.60% |
1969 |
186.9 |
183.6 |
3.3 |
365.8 |
19.70% |
19.30% |
0.30% |
38.50% |
1968 |
153 |
178.1 |
-25.1 |
368.7 |
17.60% |
20.50% |
-2.90% |
42.50% |
1967 |
148.8 |
157.5 |
-8.7 |
340.4 |
18.30% |
19.40% |
-1.10% |
41.80% |
1966 |
130.8 |
134.5 |
-3.7 |
328.5 |
17.30% |
17.80% |
-0.50% |
43.60% |
1965 |
116.8 |
118.2 |
-1.4 |
322.3 |
17.00% |
17.20% |
-0.20% |
46.90% |
1964 |
112.6 |
118.5 |
-5.9 |
316.1 |
17.60% |
18.50% |
-0.90% |
49.30% |
1963 |
106.6 |
111.3 |
-4.7 |
310.3 |
17.80% |
18.60% |
-0.80% |
51.70% |
1962 |
99.7 |
106.8 |
-7.1 |
302.9 |
17.50% |
18.80% |
-1.30% |
53.30% |
1961 |
94.4 |
97.7 |
-3.3 |
292.6 |
17.70% |
18.40% |
-0.60% |
55.00% |
1960 |
92.5 |
92.2 |
0.3 |
290.5 |
17.80% |
17.80% |
0.10% |
56.00% |
1959 |
79.2 |
92.1 |
-12.9 |
287.5 |
16.10% |
18.70% |
-2.60% |
58.40% |
1958 |
79.6 |
82.4 |
-2.8 |
279.7 |
17.30% |
17.90% |
-0.60% |
60.70% |
1957 |
80 |
76.6 |
3.4 |
272.3 |
17.70% |
17.00% |
0.80% |
60.40% |
1956 |
74.6 |
70.6 |
4 |
272.7 |
17.40% |
16.50% |
0.90% |
63.80% |
1955 |
65.5 |
68.4 |
-2.9 |
274.4 |
16.60% |
17.30% |
-0.80% |
69.40% |
1954 |
69.7 |
70.9 |
-1.2 |
270.8 |
18.40% |
18.70% |
-0.30% |
71.60% |
1953 |
69.6 |
76.1 |
-6.5 |
266 |
18.60% |
20.40% |
-1.70% |
71.20% |
1952 |
66.2 |
67.7 |
-1.5 |
259.1 |
19.00% |
19.40% |
-0.40% |
74.30% |
1951 |
51.6 |
45.5 |
6.1 |
255.3 |
16.10% |
14.20% |
1.90% |
79.50% |
1950 |
39.4 |
42.6 |
-3.2 |
256.9 |
14.40% |
15.60% |
-1.10% |
93.90% |
1949 |
39.4 |
38.8 |
0.6 |
252.6 |
14.50% |
14.30% |
0.20% |
93.00% |
1948 |
41.6 |
29.8 |
11.8 |
252 |
16.20% |
11.60% |
4.60% |
98.30% |
1947 |
38.5 |
34.5 |
4 |
257.1 |
16.40% |
14.70% |
1.70% |
109.60% |
1946 |
39.3 |
55.2 |
-15.9 |
271 |
17.60% |
24.80% |
-7.10% |
121.70% |
1945 |
45.2 |
92.7 |
-47.5 |
260.1 |
20.40% |
41.90% |
-21.50% |
117.50% |
1944 |
43.7 |
91.3 |
-47.6 |
204.1 |
20.90% |
43.70% |
-22.80% |
97.60% |
1943 |
24 |
78.6 |
-54.6 |
142.6 |
13.30% |
43.60% |
-30.30% |
79.20% |
1942 |
14.6 |
35.1 |
-20.5 |
79.2 |
10.10% |
24.40% |
-14.20% |
54.90% |
1941 |
8.7 |
13.7 |
-5 |
57.5 |
7.60% |
12.00% |
-4.30% |
50.50% |
1940 |
6.5 |
9.5 |
-3 |
50.7 |
6.80% |
9.80% |
-3.00% |
52.40% |
2003 Figures are before
the
war in Iraq. Source:
Office
of Management and Budget,
Treasury
Dep't, Commerce
Dep't
*Latest
Estimates from Office
of Management and Budget
Even though we hear the government and media making wild claims of a miraculous recovery, we must ask the question, if this is so, why is the Government, federal, state and local taking in less money...and where are the jobs that go with such a recovery? In the coming election year the governments numbers from the CPI to the GDP; from first time unemployment numbers to the size of the deficit should not be believed. This administration has shown a unashamed propensity to use lies to support its polices (i.e., Iraq war intelligence to the number of US casualties) that its pronouncements, without additional firm and incontrovertible evidence to support its claims, should not be believed.
I'm not buying any 'recovery' talk and neither should you,..at least not yet.
So what about the latest job numbers coming out of the government (Nov '03)? Well as usual, the latest employment figures were dutifully reported by the major news media. Massive new hirings have been reported for the first time in a while and it seems, according the to the financial media, that there are now no valid reasons to doubt the recovery. Nevertheless, there are some serious problems with the numbers that are largely touted as being indicative of a significant economic upturn. These numbers, while showing some activity in the labor markets does not tell the whole story. For example:
The index of total number of hours worked nationwide is actually down
The largest increase in jobs is in administrative rather than manufacturing which pays and average of $7,000 less per year.
Many jobs are in the so called service sector which pays just over the minimum wage.
Nearly half of all job creation has been in outsourcing or so-called 'temp' jobs.
We need a job creation rate of at least 150,000 a month to keep pace with population growth.
While the number of unemployed went down to 6.1%, if workers who have been statistically removed from the workforce were counted, the unemployment rate would be closer to 10%.
10 Days after the report was released, first time filers of unemployment benefits increased by 13,000 to 366,000.
This does not demonstrate any kind of robust recovery, rather it shows a demonstrable downturn in wages and hours worked and with it, living standards. This is borne out by the increase in credit card debt. People are using their credit card to maintain their previous consumption patterns. This is not only unsustainable but very dangerous for the consumers and the banks alike.
Derivatives are on the rise. The continued 'investment' (more like gambling) in derivatives has increased by 20% in the first half of the year to a total of 170 Trillion Dollars. The largest increase has been on interest rate bets that place large amounts of capital in the hopes of a change in interest rates. This market is huge and there is great hopes of profits from it by major investors. But one must ask the question; how 'productive' is betting on the rise of interest rates? What is actually produced by these paper transactions? Who is really benefiting? How much leverage does this market have over Central Bank decisions the world over to stimulate national economies during an economic downturn or tighten when it is necessary? These are questions that go to the fundamental basis of the miracle 'new economy' that is in America and indeed the entire world. Money is increasingly being printed up en-mass and going into unproductive activities like derivatives and highly over priced stocks.
It is this authors firm belief that the entire global financial system is due for a house cleaning. A re-balancing of capital and production needs to occur before any real meaningful recovery will come. This means using capital primarily to be invested into the means of production, rather than as a tool for unproductive speculation. When this occurs and the massive American twin deficits (fiscal and trade)are dealt with in a significant, meaningful, and verifiable fashion, then and only then can we begin to talk of a meaningful economic recovery. In the meantime the growth seen in the American economy looks more like a malignant tumor than economic muscle.
Don’t believe The Hype
January 2004 Update
Three charts to what in 2004
|
|
|
America's much vaunted economic recovery has been touted by the media is somewhat less of a reality than we are led to believe. The GDP purportedly grew at a frantic 8.2% Yet incomes, adjusted for inflation rose only .8%. Jobs are still a serious issue and while economists are also touting miraculous productivity numbers, these numbers are derived from questionable mathematical methodologies. The measurement of service sector productivity reported, according to Stephen Roach, chief Economist at Morgan Stanley, is very poorly measured and is “hopelessly vague for services”. Many government statistics are far too easily manipulated by government statisticians for them to be readily believed. Take the idea of productivity and the entire idea of ‘downsizing’ a company in order to bring about higher productivity numbers. This is a highly questionable process. Many companies are using outsourcing workers especially from India in order to boost their productivity and corporate bottom lines. This coincides many economists view that productivity led downsizing and a jobless recovery go hand in hand. The more work that can be wrung out of a single person, the less likely a large company is to hire another. The rise in productivity along with the miraculous spurt of GDP growth reported late 2003 seems to bear this out. However, such a high rate of GDP growth as dutifully reported would certainly lead to more jobs. And the anemic job growth we are witnessing simply does not support these wild claims of economic activity. For example, such a high GDP growth rate would mean that the economy would be adding between 200-300 hundred thousand jobs a month. This would quickly offset many of the jobs that have already been lost during the recession. This simply has not happened nor is any responsible economist saying that it has or will. These GDP numbers simply cannot be believed. They seemed too carefully timed for boosting consumer confidence just prior to the holiday shopping season (which turned out to be lackluster). To put it bluntly other than the highly politicized release of these fanciful numbers, there is little empirical evidence to support these GDP numbers. This does not mean there has not been any growth whatsoever. That is not the case. Indeed, the weakening dollar does seem to have provided much needed additional competitiveness in select US manufacturing industries. We have seen clear signs that the manufacturing sector is rebounding. December 2003 saw the manufacturing index rise from 62.8 to 66.2, a 20 year high. Thus the weakening dollar, while troubling and quite possibly, eventually disastrous does have some measurable and tangible economic benefits.
Now we come to the crux of the matter the U.S. dollar is in serious trouble. U.S. current account deficits have ballooned to half a trillion dollars. This has helped keep U.S. consumption very high. These inflows (via foreign investors) have been seriously inhibited over the past several months because foreigners have very recently shunned dollar based securities. This is ominous and as long as foreigners shy away from our markets we must print money to keep ourselves from going bankrupt. Simply put, the more the fed prints the lower the dollar will go. The best that can be hoped for is a slow, measured descent rather than a shock. However in the long run it will mean two things for American consumers.
Much higher prices for imports which accounts for the vast majority of America’s consumer goods purchases
Much higher rates of interest for money borrowed.
Thus, this recovery is based more upon the machinations of the Fed (printing money) than in any meaningful economic recovery. America’s balance of payments problem is a serious one and one that will cause serious international trade disruptions in the very near future. If the Euro continues to rise, some economists believe this will help solve America’s payment deficit problem. This is something Europe will fight tooth and nail. In essence, striped away to its fundamental form, what is happening today in the Global financial system is a massive debt default of the US Government. It is a game of economic 'musical chairs' and each nation must protect itself as much as possible from the fallout of an American debt and financial collapse. The simple fact that the US government is having trouble financing its current account debt is the most significant event that transpired in 2004, bar none.
"The main theme continues -- US dollar weakness and continued difficulties faced by the world's largest economy in financing its huge current account deficit," - Mark McFarland, currency strategist at UBS.
What does this statement mean? Once again in the simplest terms, America is broke and cannot go out and borrow like it used to in order to keep itself going. This is not an obscure ‘conspiracy theory’, this is happening now as you read this. The US media has kept the vast majority of this information from you in order to forestall a panic. They do not want you to put two and two together and then protect yourself.
This President’s continued confrontational, unilateral and uninformed decision-making will lead to a serious rift between America’s traditional allies as he continues to fight and war with her traditional enemies. This will only serve to further isolate America. The opening salvo’s of this coming trade war could be seen in the steel quota and tariffs question which was quite a news topic late in 2003. Bush finally had to back down in light of the fact that a serious trade war would undermine his reelection chances, as it would seriously dash any hope of economic recovery. A Bush reelection would certainly mean serious trade problems with our European and eventually Japanese trading partners. Such a war could actually seriously test or even undermine the WTO. Its rules may become obsolete as nations desperately attempt to protect their currencies, markets and jobs. To add insult to injury, America’s war on terror is a very expensive affair, One that America is now trying to get out of paying for by debasing its currency, thus shifting the burden to America’s trading partners. When currencies are devalued essentially a nation is reneging on its financial obligations by repaying its trading partners with something that is worth less than before. Thus America is trying to get Europe and Japan to pay for this war through a debased currency.
As Karen Lissakers put is so well in her book, Banks Borrowers and the Establishment, “The most common form of sovereign debt default is currency debasement, either directly through devaluation or indirectly with inflation” This is what we have seen with the Greenspan policy over the past several years, a concerted effort to inflate ourselves out of our financial mess. The chickens now come home to roost in the form of foreign repudiation of the Dollar and a coming debt crisis in America.
The budgetary surpluses left by Bill Clinton have been erased by President Bush’s reckless and myopic economic, military and security policies. In just a three short years this President’s policies have erased a fiscal surplus, launched the nation into two wars and caused its currency to fall by over 30% percent. He has rattled a long term allies and stirred up old enemies as he marches confidently towards an almost assured reelection. It is his irresponsible policies bear much of the blame for America’s economic predicament, though certainly Alan Greenspan bears much of the blame as well.
The dollar’s volatile trading with the European Union , and Japan will be the economic story of 2004. As the German and French economy begin to show market signs of recovery using far more believable economic measuring methodologies, the appreciating Euro strengthens Europe’s ability in the future to acquire goods and services using its stronger currency. The future of the Global Financial system is at stake. An important tell-tale sign in the future, in my estimation, will be to see how Russia decides to accept payment for its increasingly important strategic oil reserves. As mentioned earlier in this article, Russia and the EU have come to an understanding in principle to sell oil to the EU based in Euro’s rather than dollars. While this is far from a done deal it would appear that the Europeans and the Russians are tiring of the dollar game which consistently puts them at an economic disadvantage and leaves them at the whims of Alan Greenspan whose economic policies are highly questionable. The game leaves the ultimate holder in oil transactions (Russia) holding increasingly worthless US Dollars. However the Russians and the EU will show remarkable restraint over the coming months and even years in pursuing such a policy as it would pave the way for entirely different financial system at which the dollar would no longer be the center point. Each knows that the current United States President, George Bush and his neo-conservative cabinet would never allow Russia and Europe to trade fairly. They would launch an all out war against anyone, including Russia and the EU if they saw their economic and with it political and military preeminence so seriously threatened. This may be one of the reasons that many in the EU have sought to distance EU military security from that of NATO and create a truly pan-European Security policy and with it an effective EU military outside of American interference. It would have been unthinkable just a few short years ago to think that America would launch an invasion against another oil rich nation Iraq under conspicuously false pretenses. American strategists have attempted to drive a wedge between Russia and the EU by proposing US (as opposed to NATO) bases in the Eastern European nations, thus providing a military and economic bulwark against a Russian-EU economic alliance.
This is the dilemma that the Russians and the EU face. Indeed OPEC well recognizes that there is a madman in the White House who will use any and all means to maintain America’s preeminence. Thus this clear and present danger to world peace, which occupies 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, is a force to be reckoned with by those nations who wish to conduct free and fair trade among themselves without America’s continued harassment and interference. OPEC is running scared as they are aware that it is all too easy to be put on the Neo-Conservative list ‘Axis of Evil’ states. Each must tread carefully now, because for the moment each OPEC nation must take dollars in exchange for their Oil. If OPEC decided in unison to accept payment in either Euro’s or Dollars or worse yet, in Euro's only, this would create a serious financial crisis for America. As this is published Russia and OPEC are making plans to establish a ‘business dialog’. It is in light of OPEC's desire (and most likely eventual success) in freeing itself from being forced to sell its oil in dollars that one can better understand American unwillingness to leave Iraq. It is this authors firm belief that this was the plan all along. I and many other economists have said that in the near term the Dollars days were numbered. The US Administration knew that finding a source of oil that was under direct US control was essential, otherwise almost all economic activity in the US would come to a screeching halt when the dollar collapsed and oil could no longer be purchased. Remember; there never was any link between Saddam and Islamic terrorist networks. No evidence offered proved or even insinuated any such link. Additionally, time and time again, we accused Saddam of having weapons he did not posses and top policy makers, inspectors and intelligence analysts said for the record that he did not have them. Our 'War on Terrorism' was the propaganda method used to sell our naked aggression to US voters. Oil was the key and still is, because in 2-3 years barring a serious war with key OPEC nations, Oil well be available for purchase in Euro's and or (gasp!) gold.2
OPEC needs the political support of a major military player in order to break the bonds of the US dollar. It does not want to keep taking paper for its oil so until they can garner this support (Russia? EU? China?) they will have to sit still and take it. If China decided to diversify its 400 Billion dollar currency reserves into another currency say, Euros, this too would be a crisis point. Thus, we can better understand how Bush could warn Taiwan (a long standing friend) during a recent high level Chinese visit and coddle Beijing (a wiley fox than has long standing 'bone to pick' with America). He simply has no choice.
These are only two potential crisis points on the world economic scene and they are very, very real. While any move by OPEC will probably not happen in 2004, look for OPEC to make more, quiet moves diplomatically and politically to meet this dollar crisis. China is unlikely to move its assets out of dollars just yet and anger its most important trading partner. Nevertheless, neither will continue to take severely depreciated pieces of paper in exchange for real goods and hard assets.
Recognizing that America may be attempting to solve its twin deficit problem through a currency debasement, super investors such as Buffet and Soros are abandoning the dollar in favor of other more stable currencies. Additionally it will be nearly impossible for America to attract foreign investors for its Treasury Bills and bonds in future Federal Debt auctions. This is the more perilous question in my opinion, because while economists do believe that it is possible for America to shift these deficits over on to other partners through a currency the basement, the real problem will be how to finance America’s budgetary deficit without using the printing press to such a degree that our currency not only declines but declines to such a degree that is becomes worthless. This is an enormous gamble that is being taken on America’s economic future by Secretary Snow and Greenspan. It is a gamble that is almost certainly going to backfire in an uncertain and unexpected way. One way this could happen is through a series of competitive devaluations. This is one way the Europeans and Asians with the exception of China (whose currency is pegged to the dollar) could get out of seeing their markets and production dry up because of a lack of consumption by Americans. The other is through currency controls. This could happen if the Europeans in particular see the dollar becoming worthless. Unless they were being forced to take these dollars through America’s geopolitical strategies (war, cut off of oil supplies to Europe, etc3). This would certainly a cause of violent reaction in the form of currency control by the Europeans. This is not an unlikely outcome and while currency controls may not be formally introduced they may through some bureaucratic or administrative means be implemented nonetheless. Indeed America’s printing press solution is one that is increasingly being seen as a one that offers diminishing returns over time. This can be seen from the M3 Velocity rate versus GDP chart.
There is clearly a diminishing rate of return on the FED funny money that is pumped in the economy. It’s important here to keep in mind that Europe to Asia and America all recognize that there are serious systemic problems with the dollar, with dollar based securities and the ability of America to finance its deficits and the future method of payment for key commodities in the world most particularly oil.
Make no mistake when the President of the United States tells Taiwan it had better 'behave itself' while cuddling the Chinese dragon you can recognize who is in the driver’s seat today. It is not America. While our financial elite make great pains to appear that they are in the driver’s seat and in control and have a good handle on the situation to the population at large, signs are beginning to to show themselves that this is not only not the case but that there is another battle being waged behind the scenes to see who will have economic preeminence when the dollar fails. China is the largest holdings of U.S. Treasuries and dollar assets in the world today. Nevertheless the threat of the Chinese dumping American securities on the open market in retaliation for its trade policies is not one to be lightly dismissed. And the fact that they have been cutting their overseas holdings over the past few quarters should give us pause to consider. Japan’s problems are also going to two Americas twin deficit problems. It is currently attempting to keep its currency stable against a declining U.S. dollar because such a decline makes Japanese goods in particular automobiles too expensive for Americans to buy. Thus we see the massive currency interventions by the bank of Japan and plans as well as capital being set aside to continue this policy. The Japanese have set aside nearly $930,000,000,000 for currency intervention. This is a mind boggling sum... it’s stifles the imagination to think that much money is being put aside to prop up the U.S. dollar in order to keep Japanese cars on American highways. Yet the Japanese have no other market other than America to keep buying big ticket items. The system is in its entirety, broken and what is being offered now in by central bankers are not solutions but rather only short term fixes that in essence, fix nothing.
And what does this mean? Simple. There will be at dollar crisis in the near term though probably not next year. There are many factors coming together next year ('04). The simple fact that the FED is offering such low and discounted rates on U.S. Treasuries while at the same time the dollar declines in value is going to lead many investors away. In addition, as foreigners begin to sell the U.S. dollars; this will only cause the dollar’s decline to gain momentum as no one wants to hold anything that is consistently dropping in value. It is my estimation that not much can or will be done to stop the dollar’s decline. I believe that there has been a ‘gentleman’s agreement’ between the Europeans and the Americans has probably been reached to let the dollar decline slowly and steadily which is what we’re seeing now. There’s not much Secretary Snow can do about this despite his earlier policy announcements that this was an intentional policy. Inasmuch as he wants to sound as though he’s in the driver’s seat rest assured market forces are running the show. However, this being an election year, other factors may play a more prominently role, especially in light of America’s elite and their ability to mass manipulate public opinion. It is entirely likely that the Dow will continue to rise that may even top 12,000 just before the election in 2004. However., this will all happen while the dollar declines. Next year look for Fed officials and the Treasury Secretary to go on that national television and pontificate to the mass of misinformed and uninformed Americans that the dollar’s decline is “good for America”. This will all happen while gold prices rise, though gold will probably rise at a much slower rate than the dollar’s fall against the Euro. Americans will drink up the propaganda as usual and reelect George Bush by a comfortable margin. It does appear that America’s financial and political elite are quite pleased with Bush’s performance on the world stage. He has treated financial corruption with kid gloves and allowed the wall street fraud-circus to continue to fleece the American people. While the wars are not going quite as well as they would like, contracts are being awarded to key people and companies and they are quite pleased with the increased revenues. Thus despite the poor performance overall in a war in Afghanistan (the Taliban are back) and the fact that our war in Iraq is going very poorly (11,000 Casualties and daily attacks against US Forces), the American establishment is more than happy to pay this price in American blood for their contracts.
Having said these things the market’s rise lately to over 10,000 is an unwarranted an irrational exuberance that is based on very, very shaky economic grounds. Indeed many of the accounting scandals of the late 1990’s are still with us through the use of pro-forma (more accurately described as voodoo) accounting which allows companies to hide certain types of corporate debt. This has not changed it’s still an endemic problem in America’s corporate reporting. Because of it, once again Americans who are putting their hard earned money and retirement into these funds are once again going to get fleeced. They will get no sympathy here or on the world stage. In closing people should remember the old saying, 'Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me', or as Gordon Gecko said in the movie Wall Street, 'A fool and his money should have never gotten together in the first place'.
Update 1 February 2004
The US government has defaulted on some of its 30 Year US Treasury Bonds. Here is the Government press release. Yes, the US government has defaulted on its sovereign debt. We are witnessing the very first phase of the most massive debt default in human history. Be advised, this will not happen overnight. While the US Government is defaulting on its debt the mainstream media do not think this is worthy of bringing to your attention. This process is in full motion now and it cannot be stopped. The real question that must be answered for those who are really looking to hold on their assets and plan on eating and having shelter over the coming decade is this; will we have 'inflation gone wild' scenario or a deflationary depression. Deflation is where the price of assets goes continually downwards. This is not a good thing as it means that the assets that back up most of the debt America has accumulated becomes worth less and less. Mr. and Mrs. America become upside-down in their house, lose their jobs and walk away from the debt. It also means that the price of goods and services continue on a downward spiral. Once again on the surface it seems good to the consumer but here in lies the trap; as prices fall, people wait and wait to make major purchases because they know if they wait a month or so, the price will only descend. With this economic phenomenon, comes falling profits, layoffs less consumers, more layoffs, etc. This is the Fed's main fear. Yet it appears that this is probably the more likely scenario we will experience. However, deflation will not be seen in key and essential goods and services. These include, gasoline, heating oil, natural gas, auto insurance, home insurance, health care costs, etc. These will see marked increases in price while other artificially inflated assets, such as most paper financial instruments and housing will decrease in price. Indeed, I especially see fossil fuels moving steadily and significantly upwards over the next few years. Even now the first sign of the specter of deflation can be seen. It can be found in the wages of Americans now as opposed to before the recovery
“The weak job market is also reflected in today's data on national income. The final quarter in 2003 saw real labor compensation grow at an annualized rate of only 1.6%, too slow to generate a healthy self-sustaining recovery. Since the last recession ended two years earlier, labor compensation has crept up by only 1.7%.” - Economic Policy Institute
“According to the payroll survey, employment has fallen by 726,000 jobs since the end of the recession in November 2001 and employment has fallen by 2.4 million since the start of the recession in March 2001. In contrast, the household survey indicates that employment has risen by 2.0 million since the recovery began and by 600,000 since the start of the recession”. - Economic Policy Institute
Such anemic job 'creation' does not a recovery make. The Bush administration has sought to eliminate overtime pay for most white-collar workers. This is being done by a revision to the The Fair Labor Standards Act. Bush's revision would render nearly 8 million American workers ineligible for overtime. This may help his large corporate campaign donors to ease their payroll liabilities but it will not assist the overall economy to heal in a way that allows Americans to maintain their lifestyles, which in the view of the globalists (like Bush), is far too lavish. Herein lies the crux of the matter for any and all Americans. America's standard of living is going to decline significantly. This cannot be helped. One way or another the American consumer society is in for a major and long term adjustment. As long as 'Free Trade4' is the mantra of both the Democratic and Republican party as it is today, and as long as Americans do not have enough sense to inform themselves as to the real issues that are causing Americans to lose jobs and incomes, these trends will accelerate. This is because politicians know that if they do not move quickly to remove protections for workers and pass more free trade legislation, they may be discovered for what they really are; men who are funded by foreign interests to push an agenda for foreign agents to the detriment of American citizens.
A deflationary scenario is probably in the cards especially under Mr. Greenspan's inept fiscal leadership. His stewardship of the FED insures that the worst possible scenario plays out. That being a debt default and a complete reorganization of the global financial system. No, this will not happen tomorrow, not before the election though it will probably transpire before the end of the decade. The trick the Central bankers are trying to pull of is a soft landing for the Dollar, the reserve currency of the world, rather than a crash. A crash brings with it too many economic, political and social uncertainties that are difficult to predict and plan for. Thus we will see the continued spiral downwards of the dollar over the next few years. However, a sudden unexpected event could trigger a much quicker decline. Such a decline could be caused by serious political instability in America or other such events such as:
If Bush should try to steal the election in 2004 (again) coupled with serious social unrest
An assassination of the President and or much of his cabinet
A serious terror attack such as a nuclear bomb or dirty bomb being used on America soil
A devastating natural disaster in a major US metropolitan area
The state of California declaring bankruptcy
A derivatives meltdown in the financial markets
Despite the real risks to the dollar and the US economy, the loss of Jobs and the the US Treasury debt default; somehow, establishment economists, which are almost always wrong, are upbeat about the economy. That is fine, they are paid to be. Should they become too downbeat they would certainly lose their jobs at many of the nations finest establishment financed think-tanks, schools and corporations. So it should behoove the readers not to put too much stock in corporate-paid economists optimism. Such 'optimism' is usually paid for with a good salary and generous benefits and very lucrative speaking and lecture tours.
Interest Rates: To Raise Or Not To Raise
The Fed is certainly in a pickle. As one recent radio commentator put it, the FED is desperately trying to stop a collapse of the dollar or and a second great depression (not recession). The problems facing the FED are really just that serious. The decline of the US dollar, the difficulty in the US finding lenders to fund its current account deficit and the need to attract the lending will almost certainly force the FED to raise rates in the near term (3-6 months). The first increase will probably be very small and almost symbolic to assure the markets that the Fed will act to attract the necessary capital to fund the US governments spending spree. Yet the debt-laden US economy will shudder at a rise in rates. Much of the consumption that is transpiring in the US today is fueled by people pulling equity out of their homes and then going on shopping sprees, buying new cars, boats, vacations, home furnishings, etc. Once rates rise significantly this will no longer be profitable or in many cases even possible. Consumption will drop significantly leading to even more job losses and the deflationary spiral that many economists fear. Future investment into America's ailing industries would become more problematic should rates rise significantly. This the the crux the Fed has put itself into with the loose monetary policies of the 1990's. Is there any answer?
Some believe yes. They seem to think that the asset bubbles in the United States are sustainable and that a falling dollar will not impact the global economy in a very negative way, at least not for a long period of time. As long as we can force others to throw billions of dollars to prop up our currency and buy our debt, they think this can continue indefinitely. Others believe that, even given the possibility that these assumptions are correct, the huge imbalances created by Rubin/Snow/O'Neill/Greenspan's polices are the real problem and that this is where the real trouble lies. Once again I must emphasize that many of the economists who are so optimistic about the global economy hail from the corporate board-rooms are are paid quite handsomely as mentioned earlier, for their bullish sentiments. Does this mean that they are wrong? It is this authors opinion that they are, once again, dead wrong. These economists failed to predict the collapse of the NASDAQ, the fall of the Dow, the massive bankruptcies that followed (Enron/WorldCom/Conesco/Adelphia/Kmart) and this jobless so-called recovery that we must now endure. Most of these so-called economists simply lack the real independence that is required to publicly assess the situation in an honest and straight forward manner. Hence the eternal optimism and bullish-sentiment. Additionally, despite the monotonous repetition that we are in a 'jobless recovery', I submit that there is no such thing, and to be forced to use that kind of 'new-economy' terminology to describe what is happening, shows that what we are experiencing is simply a 'dead-cat bounce' in the stock market that is fueled by Greenspan's irresponsible monetary policies. 'New economy' economists must come up with a positive sounding term to describe the slow motion disaster that is now in motion to keep 'Ma and Pa America' from cashing in the 401K's and battening down their personal economic 'hatches' for the next major wave of bankruptcies, layoffs and social safety-net cuts by state and local governments. In the long term it is likely that the Fed will be able to keep the economy on life-support through the elections. This is not a foregone conclusion but given the adeptness of the FED and the financial media at putting various shades of lipstick on the same old debt ridden pig, it may very well pull it off another year.
It is quite possible that despite the growing antipathy towards this administration and its inept policies, it will be re-elected in November, though probably not by a majority and almost certainly with more sophisticated election fraud techniques than we saw in 2000. The new electronic voting machines appear to be designed specifically to steal as many votes as possible. This is a serious problem on the horizon that I see coming. Even absentee Military votes are now becoming an issue, as many in the military are vehemently anti-Bush. I do not think the people will sit still for another Florida style scenario all over again and I think there is a moderate to high probability that there will be at least some social unrest in November should such an attempt be made. The Bush administration may pull off an 'October Surprise' and suddenly roll out the former CIA asset Osama Bin Laden as war trophy. Some have suggested that he may already have been 'captured', but the release of that information will be timed for full pre-election benefit. Also remember that October is when we will need to go out and borrow yet another half a trillion dollars-plus to keep our economy afloat. Where will it come from? Your guess is as good as mine, but those who hold stock in green ink manufacturing plants and paper mills that contract with the Treasury Department probably won't do too badly come 'round October of this year.
Budgets Of Mass Destruction:
It is amazing to me to see how clueless some of the news commentators on the TV are who so blithely look at America's debt and budgetary crisis. The President has proposed a massive budget with increases in military spending and no one seriously takes the administration to task (seriously) for its record deficits. We clearly do not have the money for these programs and piling up more debt is simply not an answer that will bring prosperity to Americans. Now, if the Presidents real intention is to crash the American economy and bring in some new kind of economic and with it political system, then I would say that his budget is the way that these aims can be accomplished. I am not saying that this is the case, I cannot look into his mind. Nevertheless, when Central bankers around the world, the IMF, the G7 all are issuing warnings to the US Administration on its deficits, this should give us all pause to consider that this President is not interested in the cooperating with our trading partners and certainly is not interested in the American worker. He adds insult to injury by offering amnesty to immigration criminals when millions of Americans are looking for work. This man who grew up in a privileged and pampered world does not seem to care about working Americans or their families. It is difficult to say if this Presidents policies are based on his oft-debated limited mental abilities or spring simply from a small minded malice. What are the real aims of his economic policies? This is not an idle question. This President seems intent on removing wage protections on US workers, allowing Corporations to ship jobs overseas, flood the nation with cheap illegal labor, crashing our currency and saddling Americans with more debt that the next administration will have to deal with. These actions are not only irresponsible but taken as a whole, display a darker side to this Presidents character. Does he hate Americans? Indeed this is the same President who told us that Saddam had Weapons of Mass Destruction that is now telling us that these massive deficits don't matter.
As irresponsible as these budgets are, at least there are some cuts. He is proposing that 65 programs be eliminated all together and other real cuts (as opposed to just slowing the growth of spending) in The EPA and in the National Institutes for Health. These cuts are a good idea, but then he increases spending for the military by 7% and homeland security by 10%. This money will almost certainly go to sweetheart contracts to Bush donors (Halliburton?) and do little to enhance America's overall Security, which increasingly needs to include economic security for the nation in the form or realistic and responsible budgets. More on Bush's cuts can be found here. In light of these meager cuts the media seems to want to let Bush off the hook and not inform Americans where all of this money is coming from. The only commentator on TV that I have seen that has shown the slightest bit of courage in telling the people of America's real economic troubles is Lou Dobbs. He has done a good job of bringing key economic issues into America's living rooms. That last Major TV commentator that tried to do that suddenly and mysteriously left a government funded Television Corporation a couple of years ago after decades of employment there.
Note: I realize that this update was more of a political nature than an economic one. However, one simply cannot look at America's economic predicament without analyzing the political decisions made and the decision makers that are implementing these policies. It would be like trying to give a detailed description of the combustion engine without ever mentioning the word gasoline. Such a description would be incomplete and somewhat deceptive. Therefore, I decided to look at some of Bush's economic policies and since this is an election year, I thought my readers would find it relevant.
27 Feb 2004 Update
The Train Wreck Continues.
Coming to a neighborhood near you - foreclosures. Foreclosures are becoming such a problem in some areas that moratoriums on auctions are being proposed. Predatory lending, default on Second and third Mortgages and unemployment are the primary causes for most foreclosures. While the legality of these moratorium is questionable it does show an alarming trend in the housing, lending and banking sectors of the economy. This will only translate into serious problems for state and county governments as tax receipts for these properties will either not be paid or be deferred. This adds insult to injury as many local governments are already dealing with fiscal shortfalls. Who is going to buy these homes? This is the problem that we will see in the housing markets nationwide. As jobs go to India, no one will have the money to pay a $2000 a month mortgage. Eventually this will drive home prices downwards, at least in certain regions of the nation. It does seem that other parts of the nation (like where I live in the DC area) will not see such declines right away because the entire local economy is based largely on Federal tax receipts and Federal Debt. This is because a sizable portion of the residents are people that are employed by or are contracted to the Federal Government. Thus, this region has been somewhat insulated by what is happening in other parts of the nation. Yet in other parts of the nation housing prices are skyrocketing. Parts of Northern California has a median price for a single family house at half a million dollars. These prices are outrageously high, not so much because people can really afford these homes but lenders are creating new types of mortgages to get people who could never afford these homes qualified. Interest only loans, various creative approaches to financing are also coming to market. Where as the old rule of spending 2- 3 times ones annual income on a home, now the rule is 4-5 times and in some cases even higher. This saddles the homeowners with a huge debt load and when the market heads south as it sooner or later will, these poor souls will wind up upside down on their mortgages. Yet, with the market as hot as it now, with prices in California rising about 20% per year, many buyers see this as a golden opportunity to get 'in' on the boom. As far as foreclosures are concerned, there are real problems underneath the surface. The market euphoria is based on the expectation that Jobs that pay enough to support a high mortgage are being created, but this is patently untrue.
MBA's delinquency rate does not include loans that are in the process of foreclosure. While seasonally adjusted delinquency rates dropped dramatically during third-quarter 2003, the percentage of all loans in the foreclosure process remained flat and the percentage of new foreclosures in the quarter increased. The foreclosure inventory percentage at the end of the third quarter was 1.12 percent, unchanged from last quarter but three basis points lower than the third-quarter 2002 rate of 1.15 percent. - Mortgage Bankers Association
Deciphering the housing market is an important part to solving the puzzle of what is keeping the US economy afloat. Mortgages, debt and refi's are the primary drivers of the economy and as long as rates stay low, it will remain so as lenders are not looking too closely at the creditworthiness of their borrowers. Rather, they see it as just adding another asset (loan) to their balance sheets. Here we can see where the coming economic depression is becoming somewhat regionalized. Debt and the accumulation if it are not being discouraged but rather encouraged by the US government, the FED and lenders. What will happen when these people find their job has been shipped to India? What happens when a Merger and Acquisition makes them redundant? What happens when those who are employed by state and local governments get the axe because of a declining tax base? You figure it out. The housing bubble however is not going to be the first bubble to burst in my estimation. Other problems exist that will probably weigh in first.
As already mentioned in this article the biggest problem is funding the deficit and attracting lenders. This year Japan has set aside $575 Billion for US dollar purchases in order to shore up the dollar to keep their imports from becoming too expensive for Americans. The Chinese have set aside about $150 Billion for the same purpose. That makes about three quarters of a trillion dollars set aside for the sole purpose of propping up Uncle Sam and thus protecting their markets. This has assisted in keeping the rate of inflation in the US for many consumer goods at a moderate rate, however the rate of inflation for other commodities is rising rapidly, from fuel to soy beans, steel to copper, inflation is not only present but rising rapidly.
Corn - http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/CN/5
Copper - http://stockcharts.com/gallery?$COPPER
Natural Gas - http://stockcharts.com/gallery?$NATGAS
Gold - http://stockcharts.com/gallery?$GOLD
Soy Beans - http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/SB/34
Note: Please do not pay attention to daily fluctuations, but rather, note the long term trend.
The trend is upwards for the prices of key goods and downwards for the US dollar. Indeed it is rather suspicious that the Government has delayed the release of the Producer Price Index report. With the price of many commodities rising so fast the real numbers will certainly be either buried in the report or a new methodology will be created to say that a 140% rise in prices is really only a .05% rise in price. The policy of Greenspan, The Fed and Congresses' drunken sailor spending are wholly responsible for the predicament that America is in right now, it is disrupting the value of the dollar and will soon begin to disrupt trade. Japan and China cannot continue to dump so much money into the Washington DC 'black hole', not even to protect their markets. Sooner or later they will have to step back in order to protect their own currencies so as not to disrupt trade with other smaller trading partners. Throwing money into the American sinkhole, they realize, is only a short term solution. If America cannot get its fiscal house in order and bring down its deficits, they will be forced to (reluctantly) withdraw their support. Let us remember this; foreign central banks own 1.6 trillion dollars of US treasury debt this is 36% of all outstanding treasuries. In other words, America is accumulating debts at the rate of about one million dollars a minute! America's twin deficits (all the borrowing the government has done in our name, trade and fiscal) have not and will not pay for Social Security, Medicare, Infrastructure, business development or even education. It has only fueled reckless Congressional spending, pork barrel programs, and even some rather substantial theft and corruption (of the criminal nature). If the borrowing had gone into future investment or even investing for future liabilities (Social Security) then perhaps our massive deficits would have some purpose. Instead it fueled mindless consumption and stock market excesses. Where does this leave us?
The United States' net indebtedness to the rest of the world is approximately $3 trillion or 30% of US GDP. It increased by approximately $500 billion, or 5% of GDP, last year and it will increase by a similar amount again this year and the year after and every year into the future until a sharp fall in the value of the dollar against the currencies of all its major trading partners puts an end to the gapping US current account deficit or until the United States is so heavily indebted to the rest of the world that it becomes incapable of servicing the interest on its multi-trillion dollar debt. - Richard Duncan - Asia, its reserves and the coming dollar crisis
The Consumer is tapped out and any hope for more consumption by American consumers needs to be tempered by the fact that they are already up to their necks in debt. American consumers have now passed the $2 Trillion mark for consumer debt and pays about $2000 in finance charges and fees. Somehow economists think that Americans can go even deeper into debt to fuel more consumption. Delinquencies are already in record territory at 4.09% according to the American Bankers Association. How can anyone think that a real prolonged economic recovery is underway?
Household
debt to Disposable Personal Income.
While Greenspan goes up to the Hill and testifies that he is confident of an economic recovery, incomes are declining and debts per household are steadily increasing. This will not bring about any kind of a recovery, as he well knows. However, he simply cannot go up there and say 'no recovery exists nor is it likely to exist for the foreseeable future'. No way! He must sound as confident as he can so as not to rattle the markets. Yet he is becoming bolder and bolder in his official statements (text of Greenspans testimony) warning of a looming budgetary crisis if Congress does not reign in spending. He has also mentioned a looming crisis in the mortgage industry. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae as they are referred to, have have about $4 Trillion in mortgage debt that they guarantee. These entities are quasi-governmental. While they are not actually guaranteed by the government they do have certain privileges that others do not, such as have a direct line of 'credit' of $2.5 billion at the US Treasury should they need it. Additionally, the markets assume that they are de-facto guaranteed by the Government because of their size and federal supervision. Greenspan sees this as a near term rather than a long term one, here is a statement from his testimony;
"To fend off possible future systemic difficulties, which we assess as likely if GSE expansion continues unabated, preventive actions are required sooner rather than later” Greenspan
Now the heads of both Freddie and Fannie quickly responded saying that a problem was unlikely. Nevertheless, serious accounting irregularities recently discovered show that the problems that exist are not likely to be trumpeted by the heads of these institutions. Let us remember that Freddie Mac recently paid a $125 million fine for misrepresenting earnings. Indeed, the affair reminded one of the cowboy Enron days, Freddie was heavily involved in derivatives and herein lies the risk; if interest rates rise significantly, these GSE's could implode not unlike Long Term Capital Management did. This could and almost certainly would bring down the entire US financial system. Perhaps we can see at least one of the reasons Greenspan has been hesitant to raise rates and why he is sounding alarm bells to congress on these entities. Read between the lines, 'I gotta raise rates in the medium term guys, if I do that Freddie and Fannie are going to go under, fix this problem or there will be hell to pay!'
Greenspan also offered another solution to America's fiscal crisis, cut social security. His suggestion of course is to raise the retirement age. It seems that if they can raise the retirement age to the day after ones death, this would solve the fiscal shortfalls that we are facing. They are so massive that a reorganization of Social security will have to be addressed by the next congress. Therefore be assured that congressional elections this year will be especially important because Congress will be forced to come up with at least a temporary solution in the next couple of years. In short there will only be two things that can be done; raise taxes or cut benefits. One or the other, short and simple. Remember this, President Clinton allowed the trust fund for Social Security to be raided. That was how he balanced the budget and claimed a surplus. Congress allowed it because they could fund their pork-barrel programs on your retirement money. This is one of the reasons that we are in the predicament that we are in. The United States Congress, the Unites States Senate and the President of the United States have perpetrated a massive fraud on the taxpayers. The American people will pay for this deception in a horrible almost unthinkable way. But it is my opinion that Americans are to blame for this predicament. When Clinton stole the social security trust fund, people applauded him and supported him until the day he left office. The same can be said of the Congressmen and Senators who assisted him in this theft. Even today the primary challenger to the Bush administration is another insider that brought you the mess that we are in. How can people expect anything but more fraud, debt and lies? How can they presume to think they deserve more? The people went right back to the polls and put these thieves back in office. Americans have no one but themselves to blame for this mess. Well, no one but themselves will pay for it... and pay they most dearly will.
Now, when the baby-boomers are about to retire (that is, those who have paid into this system their entire adult lives), Greenspan wants to pay them at a later date and perhaps (though this is never said but it is a looming reality) they will not get paid at all. Social Security is an area of concern to Greenspan because its liabilities go to the overall perception of economic health of the nation with foreign investors, upon which we are now completely dependent to maintain our government budgets and fiscal outlays. Thus, their willingness to continue to invest in (prop-up) the American economy is now of paramount importance.
Liars For Dollars
The phenomenon of Cable TV financial news reporting here should be quickly mentioned here. One must remember the rampant conflicts of interest that plagued so many of the nations top financial news networks and the classic 'pump and dump' routines that were common just a couple of years ago. Big names in financial TV were named. The activities of these charlatans makes one wonder if the Gambino crime family moved its operations from the NY Harbor and the sanitation authority into the offices of Wall Street and the financial press. The antics still continue, no mention is made of the dollar crisis, the social security crisis, the Freddie and Fannie crisis, the looming bankruptcy of the State of California. No, it is always good news about some massively overvalued tech-stock or getting 'in' on a questionable merger and acquisition. Spin, spin, spin is all you hear from these networks, spin designed to get Mr. and Mrs. America back in Wall Streets scams and retirement robbery corporations. One network is particularly bad, as it is partially owned by a major defense contractor, its objectivity should be seriously questioned. It is my observation that their advice is not geared to assist the average investor but to drive their money into the stocks that most benefit themselves, their investors and advertisers.
In closing, economists are saying that the
economy is strong. There are many positive signs that lead one to
come to that conclusion. However, a closer look underneath the
surface show many deep problems in the US economy that are not going
to go away with a barrel full of hope and cannot be 'grown' out of
with even the rosiest of economic scenarios. They require very tough
choices and a major readjustment of national priorities if America is
to remain a dominant power at the end of this decade, and that is not
very far off at all.
Now another aspect of the economy that I want to cover is the supposed economic boom that we are experiencing now. One of the first things that needs to be remembered very briefly here, especially when we are looking at Corporate earnings, is that they are inflated. Pro-forma accounting is still with us and it's skewed and rosy impressions are deceiving many investors into stocks that will one day, just like Enron, go belly up with seemingly no rhyme or reason. Signs of a stock or company that may be hiding its true situation were listed in John Dorfman's article on Thirteen Tip-Offs That Earnings May Be Inflated published by Bloomberg. He listed tell-tale signs that a company may be in trouble despite a rosy balance sheet. The accounting troubles that brought you Enron, WorldCom, Adelphia and the rest is still very much present and will take your retirement down the same proverbial toilet. It would be wise to remember this when you hear of stunning earnings reports coming from bubble vision's financial charlatans when they trumpet another market rally on Wall Street.
By,
Mark S. Watson
Great links
Prudent Bear's Credit Bubble Bulletin
Crash News - A daily snippet of the real financial news
Depression TV - The depression will not be televised...
Preventing A Banking Crisis in The Future
Usury Inc,- A great site updated regularly dealing with the ensuing financial crisis.
Peak Oil - One factor that is already beginning to weigh on the US economy in is the fact that oil production world wide is set to permanently decline in the near term. This paper deals with this issue.
Economic Red Alert – Usury, Inc
Books Of Interest
A Look at the great depression, and the crash behind it by one of America's most important economists. |
Conquer the Crash first presents the economic facts that show why a massive deflation is inevitable. The second part is practical — virtually each of the 21 chapter titles explains "How To," "What To" and "Should You." Many analysts indicate that this massive deflation is already underway
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Creature From Jeckyll Island. (Griffin). If you want to know why some people hate the Federal Reserve so much, this books explains the actions of the Fed in a light not to be seen or heard in the Mainstream. It is a frightening look at what many feel to be an unconstitutional and corrupt organization that has failed at its stated purpose but succeeded brilliantly accomplishing other objectives. |
This book is exactly what is says it is; a look at how banks can and do control many of America's largest corporations. This is a hard detailed and extremely well researched work that, while somewhat dated, is even more relevant today than ever before.
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The Dollar Crisis – A book by Richad Duncan, a former Salomon banker, and World Bank staffer. It details the dollar crisis in a lucid and concise way. |
Defrauding America : Encyclopedia of...Defrauding America
In the above article I talk about government corruption as just one of the causes of the coming depression. This explosive third edition of DEFRAUDING AMERICA is an unprecedented expose of secret & illegal CIA & other government operations revealed by the author, a former federal investigator & his group of over 30 FBI, CIA, DIA, DEA, & other agents & operatives. This book is packed with facts & documentation, no conspiracy theories. The heads of secret CIA airline & financial operations reveal such unlawful activities as CIA drug trafficking, looting of HUD & savings & loans, & Washington-ordered "termination" of American POWs in Indochina. If you don't believe that there is massive fraud in the Federal government, be assured that after you read this, you will. You will know that this fraud is massive and know why it continues to this very day. You simply cannot understand why this economy is going down without at least touching on the massive fraud and corruption that exists in Washington. |
How To Profit From The Coming Real Estate Bust
You don't need to be an economist or a financial expert to grasp the warning signals he points to: credit policies that have become shockingly easy, to the point where a down payment on a home has become optional; high levels of consumer debt, and soaring home prices. Meanwhile, job creation and income growth are stuck in neutral and profligate government spending has undermined the value of the dollar and left the U.S. up to its neck in debt to the rest of the world. Rock-bottom interest rates have been pumping air into the bubble, of course, but so has the relatively new process of securitization, a feat of financial engineering that allows government-sponsored agencies like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to create a virtual bottomless pit of new credit that is beyond the reach of anyone to regulate. Rubino does an admirable job of walking the reader, step by step, through this financial maze, explaining how it has held together so far, and how it could fall apart. He posits a number of scenarios for how things could play out, from the merely worrisome to the terrifying.
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When faced with a harsh, sudden crisis, financial situation or lost of a loved one, it is very easy to panic, fret and doubt who is really in control of your life as a Christian. This book is truly a message from God to those who find themselves in despair during life's tribulations. It also exposes the destiny of nations, the United States among others, during an impending global economic depression. While other hoard Gold, make bomb shelters and buy firearms, God has something different in mind for his people. God's Plan to Protect His People in the...
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Disclaimer: The above article is commentary and is not investment advice. The author is in no way connected to the wall street gang and therefore cannot dispense financial advise within the parameters set forth by Wall Street and the legal profession, nor will the author attempt to do so. This article is not investment advise nor is should it be construed as such.
1Granted these adjustments are far more important to the Consumer Price Index than GDP, but they are not completely unrelated.
2I realize that this is more political analysis than economic, but these issues will have long ranging and far reaching political effects and thus cannot be ignored. It is like trying to sail a boat without checking the wind direction and speed.
3This is unthinkable now, it will not be when banks start to fail, millions are put out of work and there is serious internal unrest in Western Nations.
4Free Trade, as it is advertised today, is a sham. It is a form of corporate welfare that provides various subsides to large international conglomerates and undermines workers rights, decreases wages and worker protections and often shifts the tax burden from corporations to working people. It is a horribly one-sided policy that has wrecked havoc wherever its polices come to fruition. It is not that the free trade is a bad idea, it certainly is not. It is simply that the way is is being executed around the globe benefits no-one but the very rich and powerful. More can be found here.