Bankrupting Complacency
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
"Debt."
We
were being interviewed yesterday by a French financial publication
and had been asked to explain why we were so "negative"
on the U.S economy.
"Debt
levels are too high. The last time it was so cheap to borrow money back in the Eisenhower era total debt in the U.S. was less than
150% of GDP. In fact, it was almost always under 150% of GDP...except
during bubble periods. Now, it's higher than it's ever been, at
more than 300% of GDP. The New York Times tells us that the
average family's debt went up by 50% over the last 13 years...from
$54,000 to $79,000. And over the last 18 months, the Feds have been
adding to the national debt at the rate of $2 billion per day.
"Of
course, many economists including Alan 'Bubbles' Greenspan himself pretend to see no problem. They seem to argue that you can continue
to borrow forever. But we all know it's not true. At some point,
lenders refuse to lend more...and/or the debtor himself can no longer
afford to keep up with his interest payments.
"Just
think about it...if you really could increase your debt indefinitely,
who wouldn't? Borrowing is now a whole lot easier than working for
a living. Inside work. Clean. No heavy lifting. Try to imagine a
man who uses mortgages and credit cards...increasing his debt year
after year...Or a family that, generation after generation, merely
lived on a expanding line of credit...Or a nation to which the rest
of the world lent more and more of its savings...
"No
happy examples come to mind. Because they don't exist. People try
to live off of credit, but they usually end up disgraced...or blow
their brains out."
"But
here in France we are great admirers of the U.S. economy," replied
the reporter. "The U.S. GDP is growing faster than in Europe. And
surely you have some of the best people in the world working at
the Fed. They must see the problems. They must have a way of managing
them..."
"Ah,"
came our ready response. "All over the world, people think that
the world economy is a machine and that economics itself is the
science of how to make the machine run properly. They conclude that
the good scientists at the Fed such as Professor Bernanke from
Princeton will make the proper adjustments. The trouble is, the
world economy is not a machine and economics if it is a science
at all is a human science, not a hard science. If you heat up
water to 212 degrees Fahrenheit, depending on pressure and so forth,
it boils. Every time. But human responses are impossible to predict.
They depend on whatever fool idea humans happen to have at the time.
"Imagine
that you do your maths (as they say in England) and that you come
to the realization that as a scientific observation stocks produce
greater profits than bonds. If this were accepted as scientifically
valid...it would be irrational for investors to put their money
into anything other than stocks. Stocks would, then, rise dramatically convincing even diehard skeptics, who would then buy stocks, too.
Stocks would be hot...while bonds would cool down and ice over.
Pretty soon, bonds would yield 10% or more (in 1978 you could get
15% from a U.S. government bond!)...and stocks would produce no
yield at all...and no hope of capital gains, for all the world's
money would be already invested in them.
"But
the observation that stocks outperform bonds is based on investors'
attitudes and reactions from a period when investors did not believe
that stocks were better investments. Stock prices from the period much lower reflected the belief that stocks were, on the contrary,
risky...and that investors needed a greater return to make up for
the risk.
"And
so it doesn't take long for the sharp, cynical investor to see that
the 'stocks are always better than bonds' idea is flawed. The smart
money pulls out of the boiling stock market...just as Buffett, Soros,
Rogers, Templeton, and Grantham have largely done already. Later,
the mob of lumpeninvestors catches on...and may, in a moment of
sudden panic, realize that its goose has been cooked. Stocks crash.
In effect, this generation of investors rediscovers the risk that
their fathers and grandfathers always knew was there the kind
of risk that 'science' can't measure...the kind of risk the Feds
can't protect you against."
Alan
Greenspan sees no problem. But Americans are not so sure. Consumer
confidence dropped in the latest period.
The
economy is in full "recovery," say the experts. But mortgage
foreclosures, personal bankruptcies, and late payments are at record
levels. White-collar workers are having a hard time finding new
jobs. Blue-collar workers' real earnings per hour have been going
down for the last 30 years.
The
U.S. stock market, we believe, may be approaching Phase II of the
Great Bear Market.
The
national character was well prepared for the arrival of Phase I,
four years ago. It was blasé, insouciant...congenitally relaxed.
The thought occurred to us on the metro last night as we entered
a loud car full of slouching American teenagers on a class trip.
The woman sitting across from us had once been pretty. But she had
not bothered to put on make-up. She wore what looked like an exercise
outfit...ready to absorb the sweat from her pudgy body as she made
her way around Paris. She must have been a teacher or an accompanying
parent. But she carried herself like one of her charges lazily,
stupidly, casually. On another bench was a young man who had not
bothered to tie his shoes or comb his hair.
In
America, no one notices. Everyone is as relaxed as jello. The French
are uptight by comparison; here, there is a residual respect for
culture, class and style. The British, by contrast, tend to vulgarity,
hooliganism or self-conscious anti-culture at least, that is the
impression you get from reading the newspapers, going to an art
show or walking down Oxford Street. Americans used to be known for
their vulgarity. But it was a naïve, energetic, baroque vulgarity...innocent
and almost attractive. Now, Americans are too soft and limp to be
vulgar. They go along with anything...for they can't be bothered
to think about it.
Like...whatever...
On
the train this morning, en route to London, a fat young man in a
T-shirt sat down across the aisle with a skinny woman at his side.
He took off his shoes and put his smelly feet up on the seat. When
he opened his mouth we discovered that he, too, was one of us...an
American...a slob. We studied him at length. Did he have any idea
of how repulsive he seemed, we wondered? Oh no...he began stroking
and kissing the grumpy-looking French woman, who must have been
his wife. Yech...And then, she reached under his T-shirt to rub
his back. Uh oh...they looked deeply into each other's eyes...they
must have been newlyweds, or else they were both blind...they embraced...We
thought we might be getting sick.
These
are our own people. We want to think well of them. Besides, what
possible difference does it make what people look like, or how they
dress? And yet, as Aristotle might have said had he thought of it,
in the breath of our national character we smell, faintly, our decaying
national fate.
Four
years into the 21st century, the Great Bear Market Americans are
so at ease with themselves and life in general...so deeply asleep
to the rigors of life...that they have nearly lost consciousness.
Back in the '70s, the national current account deficit rose to nearly
1% of GDP. Economists were alarmed. The dollar fell. Stocks fell.
The nation was so strapped and the dollar so weak that the Carter
Administration planned to borrow $10 billion in foreign currency
to tide itself over. By the time the period was over, you could
have earned 15% interest yield from a U.S. Treasury bond. A typical
stock which you could have bought at an average of 6 times earnings would have paid dividends of more than 5%.
Today,
the current account deficit is above 5% and economists see no problem.
For the moment, the U.S. government still borrows in a currency
it alone controls. Foreign central banks still seem so happy to
lend that over the last 3 months, their holdings of U.S. government
securities rose at more than 50% annual rate to more than $1 trillion.
And
on the advice of Alan "Bubbles" Greenspan, the poor lumps go further
and further into debt, digging a deeper and deeper grave for their
money. They refinance their houses to buy what they cannot afford
and do not need and count on Alan "Bubbles" Greenspan to pull
the right levers and turn the right knobs so they will never have
to pay for their mistakes.
Day
by day, the entire Lumpen Nation loses its jobs, its skills, its
capital...and risks losing its soul...to E-Z credit. The Feds add
$2 billion to the national debt every day. Five hundred billion
per year is the net cost of America's trade deficit. Ben Bernanke
at the central bank pledges to keep short-term lending rates as
low as necessary, as long as necessary...to make sure the borrowing
binge continues.
The
sooner it is over, the better. So cheer up, dear reader. The end
is coming...we think.
March
20, 2004
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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