Too Much Money Too Soon
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
"Don’t
give your children too much money, too soon," say the old timers.
"You may not care about the money itself, but you’d hate to
see it ruin their lives."
Easy money
can be as corrosive as battery acid or television, or as treacherous
as a creeping tide.
At the beginning
of the 16th century, Spain discovered easy money in the New World.
All it had to do was to plunder it from the Aztecs and Incans. The
Spanish crown was soon the richest and most powerful in Europe;
the Spanish army pranced all over Europe. Only a few years later
its fleet was washed up on the rocks of Scotland, and Spain itself
was bankrupt. The Iberian Peninsula remained the poorest part of
Europe for the next four centuries.
"In 1961,
housewife Viv Nicholson won today’s equivalent of 3 million pounds
on the pools [$5 million in the lottery]," writes Jeff Randall
in today’s Daily Telegraph. She then "delighted the
tabloids by telling them that she was going to ‘spend, spend, spend.’
In a matter of months, the woman was ‘skint’ [busted].
The report
does not mention it, but we wouldn’t be surprised to find that she
was also divorced, her children were in jail, and that she voted
for Tony Blair. Easy money ruins people...and ruins whole nations.
Mr. Randall
quotes our book, Empire
of Debt, and then elaborates:
"Our see-it,
want-it, have-it culture is creating a sad class of debt junkies
who are in so deep that the bailiffs will need to hire Captain Nemo
to find them." Randall continues, "Instead of confronting
their problems, these feckless borrowers simply close their eyes
and sign the chit."
"Plastic
fantastic," he says is creating a whole new group of people
who live with far more debt than they can comfortably carry. In
the old days, a man who saved money was a miser; nowadays he's a
wonder.
Mr. Randall
refers to the British. Americans may be in worse shape. In America,
debt has become an art form.
Last year,
a new record was set for personal bankruptcies in the U.S. – more
than two million people went broke. Right there, you might do a
double take. There was no recession in 2005. There was no stock
market crash. Employment was near its highest level ever. Why were
so many people going belly up?
The Economist
notes that, "consumer spending and residential construction
accounted for 90% of GDP growth in recent years." Yet, consumer
incomes did not rise. Real wages actually sank in the last two years.
People are simply spending more. And why not? Money was easier to
come by than ever before. Every time we turn on our computer we
find someone willing to lend us money; people we’ve never even met!
We can walk into almost any shop anywhere in the world and buy practically
anything we want. We just give the merchant a piece of plastic.
He has no way of knowing whether or not we can afford it. For all
he knows, we are millions of dollars in debt, have hocked grandma’s
jewelry, pledged the ancestral home three times over to all our
friends and neighbors, and moonlight at Payless as a shoe clerk.
But he doesn’t care. That’s someone else’s problem. He’s going to
make the sale!
Meanwhile,
we notice that the Feds are trying to make money even easier to
get. In the last two weeks, the money supply has shot up $93.5 billion.
In the last six weeks, $192.96 worth of new money has come into
the system. At the current rate, the U.S. money supply will balloon
by about 20% over the next 12 months.
If this were
the ’70s or ’80s, you’d hear investors howl. Back then, they knew
that all this new money would raise prices. They would have dropped
U.S. bonds and the dollar as if they were fire. But
now, no one cares about consumer price inflation. For reasons never
fully understood at least...not by us the easy money
inflates asset prices, not so much consumer prices. Mainly it is
because America’s empire has globalized labor rates. Anything that
Asians can make and export is going down in price. This keeps prices
low at Wal-Mart, but it also holds down the incomes of the people
who shop there. It also puts pressure on prices for the things that
Asians can’t export – such as houses, energy and healthcare. So,
the working stiff is trapped between rising costs and falling income.
He has to run twice as hard just to stay in the same place and fly
if he wants to get ahead. His real cost of living is rising while
his income is not. He’s had to borrow the easy money to stay even,
but easy money has a way of turning hard. It runs out. Eventually,
he can’t keep up with the interest payments...he goes broke.
If you owe
$12,000 on a credit card, dear reader, and you make minimum payments
of 1% of principal each month, it will take you 30 years to pay
off your debt. And you will have paid more than $17,000 in interest.
No wonder they’re hurting down in the lower depths of our economy.
No wonder they’re filing for Chapter 11. No wonder they’re getting
cross.
The rich, on
the other hand, have been as happy as pigs in mud. They are the
ones who own financial and real assets. And those assets have floated
higher on this high tide of easy money. Spend, spend, spend – they
can’t believe it will ever end.
They, too,
will be ruined by easy money. We sit on the edge of our chair...waiting
to find out how.
• Gasoline
may go back to $3 a gallon, says a Bloomberg feature. Oil is moving
up.
And now Iran
says it will introduce a new oil market, calibrated in euros rather
than dollars. Some people think this marks the beginning of the
end for the dollar. Others think it marks the beginning of the end
of civilization; the United States will use nuclear weapons if necessary,
they say, to prevent Iran from selling oil in euros.
The U.S. invaded
Iraq not to turn the desert tribes into Democrats, the argument
goes, but to stop Saddam Hussein from pricing oil in euros. Oil
is quoted in dollars. Since the entire world is forced to buy oil,
it must exchange local currencies for dollars to do so. This is
the real source of America’s imperial finance: it exchanges dollars
at par, and then gradually devalues them by diluting the world’s
supply with more. "An exorbitant privilege," said Charles
de Gaulle. Saddam Hussein was taken out by U.S. forces because he
threatened the empire’s money.
We
cannot understand it. It may be true that oil is priced in dollars,
but the United States has no way of controlling the rate of exchange.
The Feds can control the quantity of dollars or the quality, but
not both at the same time. The more they create, the less each dollar
is worth. Foreigners could simply demand more dollars per unit of
their own currencies. The market can erase the exorbitant privilege
anytime it wants...by re-pricing the dollar, lower.
•
Oh no...there’s probably been no better business than installing
granite countertops. Everyone seemed to want them. Whole mountains
in New Hampshire must have been flattened to keep up with demand.
But now comes the sad news that the boom in granite may be over.
"Home renovation market simmering down," says a headline
at CNNMoney. In November, 5.6% less was spent on renovation projects
than the previous year.
January
23, 2006
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
© 2006 Bill Bonner
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