The Greatest Debt-Beat President in History
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
We have not
been timid about pleading the old man’s case. He has spent a lifetime
learning how things work, and now, he is ignored. He has committed
the seven deadly sins…the classic ones, and a few more he invented.
He has seen the result, but does any young whippersnapper ask his
advice? No. Every callow sprig wants to make the same errors. Gluttony…avarice…pride.
He feels he has a right to them. He envies those richer than himself,
and covets his neighbor’s wife…as well as his new BMW. "There
is no use telling him anything," says the geezer to himself,
"He won’t listen."
How many times
has the old man burned his fingers? He is not twice shy, but four
or eight times shy. There’s a lesson in there worth knowing, but
the young man next door sticks his fingers into every socket, stove,
and toaster-oven he can find. So has the old farmer reaped as he
sowed; he could tell the young a thing about planting things: "You
gotta be careful about what you put in the ground," he says
to himself. But who asks?
And so, the
old investor did ‘buy high’ on more than one occasion. "No,
that’s not the way to do it!" He is dying for the opportunity
to tell someone. "The way to do it is to buy low, then sell
high." Still, his sons and daughters buy Google at more than
50 times earnings, and are proud of themselves for doing it.
We have made
the point before. The old are ignored. The dead are buried. No stockbrokers
ask for their custom. No pollsters ask their opinions. No politicians
are so desperate for votes that they plead for them in cemeteries.
More’s the pity, but that’s just the way things are. Each generation
has to learn its essential lessons the hard way.
What must bother
the dead more than being ignored is the ingratitude of the living.
The hard lessons were passed along as an heirloom, but instead of
displaying them on the mantle, along with photos of the departed
ancestors, they were shoved into a forgotten drawer. They were not
even admired, let alone honored. What get put on display are the
family silver, the wealth, and the patrimony that one generation
leaves to another. You’d think the living would at least be grateful
for that.
But no, they
hardly notice.
They take six
thousand years of accumulated progress and wealth for granted, as
if they had figured it all out for themselves. Granted, the present
generation invented the Internet, but only because generations in
front of them had figured out how to generate electricity, rig up
phone lines, work copper and plastics - and a million other things.
As Sir Isaac Newton put it, he was able to see things that others
had not, because, "he stood on the shoulders of giants,"
who came before him. And yet, the living act as though they had
not only created the whole thing from scratch, but invented sex,
too!
But we write
today neither to blame the quick, nor to thank the dead. Instead,
we write on behalf of a group that is neither quick nor dead: the
group that has not yet been born yet. Today’s leading generation
not only ignores the stiffs that came before it; it stiffs the larval
generations to follow.
In a letter
to James Madison, Thomas Jefferson asked how, "one generation
of men has a right to bind another." He concluded by saying,
"No generation can contract debts greater than may be paid
during the course of its own existence."
But contracting
debts greater than may be paid during the course of its own existence
is precisely what Americans are doing. In fact, they are contracting
debts that increase over the course of their own lifetimes.
George W. Bush
will go down in history not as a great war president, we recall
predicting earlier this week, but as the greatest debt-beat president
the country has ever had. In his few years in office, the feds have
borrowed more than $1.05 trillion from foreign governments and banks.
This is more than all the rest of the nation’s administrations put
together, from 1776 to 2000.
Last month,
the U.S. national debt passed the $8 trillion mark. This year’s
budget deficit alone added $319 billion to the country’s obligations.
According to the feds themselves, deficits will rise to $873 billion
per year within 10 years. Two years more and they will be at $1
trillion per year, with a national debt edging up to $20 trillion.
By 2017, annual deficits are supposed to reach $2 trillion per year.
These figures
are not just guesses. They’re projections based on boondoggle laws
already on the books.
According to
the Bush-friendly Heritage Foundation, federal deficits are expected
to rise to $1 trillion per year, by the year 2017, with a $16 trillion
national debt, twice today’s level. After that, deficits should
grow to $2 trillion per year,
Public debt
is a remarkable thing. Through generation after generation, over
thousands of years, each one usually left the world a little bit
better off than it found it. More land was placed under cultivation;
more animals were tamed and corralled; more houses were built; more
factories were put up.
Occasionally
empire builders, adventurers, or natural calamities set things into
reverse. After the collapse of the Third Reich, for example, Germans
found themselves with a pile of rubble and armed occupying troops
on every street corner. Still, the little Kraut born in Dusseldorf
in 1945 entered the world almost completely free of debt! He could
rebuild, and enjoy the fruits of his own industry.
Today, the
child born in America practically has an electronic ankle tag put
on him immediately. He’s got his share of about $50 trillion in
obligations to pay; they need to make sure he doesn’t get away.
As far as we can tell, no other generation in history has ever been
burdened to such an extent with the expenses of its parents.
Even in the
private sector the ‘get it while you can’ attitude crushes the next
generation. In the third quarter of 2005 alone, Paul Kasriel of
Northern Trust reports, U.S. households spent $531 billion more
than their after-tax earnings. About half of that money came from
"equity extraction." In other words, the present generation
is selling off its houses one room at a time. By the time the tadpoles
come of age, there will be nothing left.
Consumer
spending has risen to 76% of the economy; before 2000, it was only
two-thirds. The savings rate has fallen to less than 2%. Student
loans outstanding have risen more than 800% since Ronald Reagan
took office. Mortgages are up nearly 900%. Credit card debt is up
more than 500%.
Finding
no better source on the subject, we quote ourselves:
"America’s
debt will not be paid by those currently working, nor even by those
currently breathing. It will be pushed on to the next generation…and
the next. One generation consumes, the other pays. What the first
enjoys as a blessing comes to the next as a curse."
It doesn’t
seem fair.
December
3, 2005
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis.
Copyright
© 2005 Bill Bonner
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