Conundrums. Conundrums. Conundrums.
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Alan
Greenspan used the word to describe the curious goings-on in the
bond market. Greenspan raises short-term rates, but long-term yields
fall! It's not supposed to happen that way. The Fed is supposed
to be raising rates in response to strong growth, which is supposed
to be pushing up inflation and bond yields.
We
had an explanation: the world economy is weakening, not getting
stronger...more specifically, the U.S. economy is still sinking
into the long, slow, soft slump we warned about three years ago.
Another
way of looking at it is that long rates are falling because people
see little risk of inflation. They're happy to take 6%, or even
5%, for 30 years.
Alan
Greenspan had an explanation for the interest rate conundrum last
week. He finally noticed that there were a lot of people in Asia
willing to work for a lot less than people in America. This "glut
of labor" is inherently deflationary. It pulls real prices down.
(Nominal prices, of course, are another conundrum. No matter how
fast Wal-Mart can cut prices, the U.S. treasury can theoretically cut the price of the dollar. If it wanted to do so, the Fed could
drop dollar bills from helicopters as Fed governor, Ben Bernanke,
has suggested. Or it could hide it in tin cans all over town, for
little boys to find, as John Maynard Keynes once whimsically suggested.)
But
the real conundrum was why it took so long for people to see what
was obvious all along you can't really build a sustainable, healthy
economy on consumer spending in excess of consumer wages. You have
to earn it before you can spend it. If you do it the other way around,
there comes a time when you must stop spending it so you can repay
what you already spent.
Such
old-fashioned ideas are as out of style as spats. Everyone now believes
the economy can be manipulated, guided, and directed towards any
outcome the central planners want. The collapse of the Berlin Wall
was supposed to represent the victory of freedom over central planning.
But here's a conundrum for you: why does everyone now believe in
central planning?
The
Feds think they can find a short-term interest rate better than
the one that arises naturally from the actions of lenders and borrowers.
It seems to bother no one but us that they, our central bankers,
chose a rate far below what lenders would willingly accept.
"Finding
a new captain for our economic ship," is a headline from Newsday.
It refers, of course, to a replacement for the maestro himself.
(Currently, Ben Bernanke is among the frontrunners.) But what is
interesting in the headline is the way it presumes that we are all
on this economic ship together and we need someone to run the thing
for us. The days when people were individually responsible for piloting
their own economic barks disappeared with the Old Republic and sarsaparilla.
What used to matter was private virtue; if you worked hard enough,
saved your money, and used your head...you could improve your lot
in life. (More below...)
If
you fell into sloth, extravagance or iniquity, on the other hand,
you could expect that your economic fortunes would be diminished.
But so what? It was your own damned fault. But now, we have a no-fault
economy. Now, what matters is having someone in the captain's seat
clever enough to make sure today's lack of virtue doesn't catch
up to us.
What's this? The euro is still falling; it's down to $1.21. Generally,
markets shrugged off the "no" votes on the European constitution.
But the euro is still under pressure. What will happen to the euro?
Who knows...it's a conundrum.
The NY Times has been exploring money matters in a series
of articles. The general drift is as might be expected: the rich
are getting richer; the poor are getting poorer! We have to do something!
It
must be getting harder and harder to remain poor in America today.
"If you can fog a mirror, you can get a mortgage," said a lender
recently. And if you can get a mortgage, you can get your little
boat onto the great current of wealth that is making everyone in
the United States rich at least, in their own minds. Before you
know it, you'll have been swept along into a McMansion.
But
now you can qualify for sympathy no matter how much you make. Beyond
subsistence, wealth is relative. "Advocates for the poor say the
poverty line is far too restrictive to a be a realistic measure
of material deprivation." The Times shows us a person who
is not really "poor" but still someone we should worry about. Irma
Williams was a drug addict, derelict, promiscuous bum eight years
ago with four children she did not take care of. Now, she is a
college graduate earning $27,000 a year. Not a lot of money...but
still more than 10 times as much as the average person in China
or India earns. And naturally, even though the taxpayers paid for
her "rehabilitation," detox, and food stamps and still pay most
of her rent, the poor woman cannot make ends meet and has run-up
$12,000 in student loans and $8,000 in credit card debt. And yet,
when we look at how she spends her money, we see that she could
easily make cut backs. The photo of her in the paper shows she plainly
eats too much. She goes to the beauty parlor and gets manicures.
She has a gym membership. If she were Chinese she would walk to
work, or ride a bicycle rather than pay for transportation.
We
wonder: why should this woman, who has squandered most of her life,
earn 1,000% more than the average Chinese? What has she done to
deserve it? Compared to 3 billion people in Asia, Ms. Williams is
a rich woman.
Yet,
the woman is "poor," say poverty advocates. The poverty line should
be about twice as high as the current official number, they say.
Another conundrum, we guess.
June
14, 2005
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2005 Bill Bonner
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