Our
High-Wire Act
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Like high-wire
artists, Americans are teetering on a thin line. They dare not make
a false move, or they'll topple over. But unlike high-wire artists,
Americans have no net under them. When they tumble, they'll smack
into the ground...hard.
If consumers
stop consuming, the air goes out of the bubble and the economy falls
into a sharp slump. Consumption makes up 70% of the economy. Without
rising consumption, there can be no more growth and without growth,
there are no new jobs, and no new consumer income. There is nothing
for consumers to spend, and no way to boost consumer spending.
But, too much
consumption can be fatal, too. If they spend too much, too fast...they
set in motion another dreadful scenario. Prices will rise, forcing
them to desperately spend even faster to get rid of the depreciating
money. Inflation will force the Bernanke Fed to clamp down on interest
rates bam! pop goes the bubble economy.
As the debt
on their shoulders becomes heavier, walking the line steadily becomes
harder and harder. Consumers stagger; they threaten to fall face
down any moment.
That's why
we keep a close watch on this bubble heart of ours. We keep our
eyes wide open all the time.
In yesterday's
news came word that consumer incomes were up more than expected
in January: plus 0.7%. This good news was followed by a headline:
"Inflation eats up most income gains." And then, we read an article
explaining that consumer spending rose 0.9%.
What keeps
consumers going is not more income, but more debt. Even when incomes
go up "more than expected," they don't go up fast enough to keep
up with how much consumers want to spend.
What has kept
money flowing for the last five years has been the real estate market
the real black heart of the bubble economy. Without all the concrete,
plastic, granite counter-tops, sales agents, home equity lines and
mortgage brokers, the imperial economy would already have keeled
over exhausted. And the longer it goes on, the further in debt people
get, the more expensive houses become and the more uncertain the
poor householders' steps become.
So, we keep
a close eye on the real estate market, which is hardly necessary
because everyone else seems to be watching, too. We only have to
listen to what they're saying to figure out the way the story is
going.
From California
comes news, courtesy of CNN, that house sales went down 24% in January,
and on the other coast, the Boston Globe tells us that "Mass
Home Sales Plummet 21%."
Meanwhile,
USA Today adds its bit: "Real estate continues to cool."
Patrick Newport,
the U.S. economist for Global Insight, even has a diagnosis:
"January's weak existing- and new-home sales numbers are the strongest
evidence yet that after five remarkable, record-setting years, the
housing market is in decline."
Adds USA
Today: "The drop in home sales defied unseasonably warm weather
and cash and give-away incentives from builders that had raised
hopes for a brighter showing."
"Imagine if
the weather had been terrible," said Phillip Neuhart, economic analyst
for Wachovia.
Sales of existing
houses fell in January, for the fifth month in a row. The number
of late mortgage payments is rising. Borrowers in the "subprime"
category, usually people without much money, which is to say, those
most affected so far by the exodus of wealth and power from West
to East, are having trouble paying. Delinquent subprime loans are
up 10%. Housing loan applications are down, despite lower mortgage
rates.
"We've got
a ton of inventory," said one real estate agent in Wisconsin, perhaps
speaking for the entire brethren of house mongers nationwide.
So, we're waiting,
watching, and wondering. How long can American consumers keep doing
their balancing act? And what happens when they can't anymore?
The ripples
will be felt through the entire economy and it's not going to
be pretty:
Recent
government data shows that crude oil inventories have risen 9.1
% above the year-ago level. However, crude futures rose today, up
to $62.70 a barrel, supported by quite a few geopolitical factors.
"With Nigerian
problems, uncertainty about the Iran nuclear program before the
IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) meeting next week, and
the overhang of the Saudi attack and an OPEC meeting on the 8th,
we are in for a lot of volatility in prices," said James Williams,
an economist at WTRG Economics.
Although six
of the nine foreign oil workers that had been taken hostage were
released yesterday, the Nigerian militants threatened new attacks
that aim to cut off all oil production in Nigeria.
"The inventory
numbers continue to point to lower prices, but the lack of spare
capacity and increased risk of supply interruptions continue to
support the price of crude," continued Williams.
We were
in Germany, yesterday, wondering how smart, industrious, educated,
civilized people ever allow themselves to get into a jam. There
was no country more dynamic, or more advanced, than Germany in the
early 20th century. Who were the world's top philosophers? Germans!
Who were the world's top mathematicians? Germans. Who were the world's
top physicists, doctors, technicians, and strategists? They were
Germans, too. Even the top economists were Germans (or Austrian).
In the arts, the sciences and in commerce, Germany led the world.
And where it was not clearly in the lead, it was giving the leader
a good race.
But little
by little, the Germans began to toy with their own good fortune.
They began to forge their own chains. At first, they were so comfortable,
so light and so reassuring, that they could not be felt. They could
almost be trinkets or jewelry. Many thought they were. Later, after
more and more links had been added, the trinkets became so strong
they could not be broken.
Even toward
the end, when Hitler was foaming at the mouth like a madman and
his top officers met with him with guns at their hips, not one of
them unpacked his heat and let der Führer have it. Who would have
deserved it more than Hitler? How could a man have done the world
or Germany a bigger favor? And yet, by then, the chains
had become so heavy, even the toughest, battle-hardened officer
could not raise his hand.
We're thinking now of our own knuckle-headed Homeland. There too,
consumers are hammering out their tinkling little chains of debt.
So far, the chains are light and so smooth, they almost feel like
a soft, gauzy net protecting them from that unreal world outside.
But the world outside will not disappear; instead, it gets more
ugly and more real. As debt builds up, the slim little chains get
fatter every day chains that this generation and its children
and their grandchildren will have to drag around for a long time...chains
that will only grow heavier with every year.
A
Polish friend told us the national debt in Poland was 40% of GDP.
"Shameful," she said.
But the official
national debt in America is nearly 60% of GDP and rising faster
under the Bush administration than under any administration America
has ever seen.
Clang. Clang.
The hammers come down on the anvils, day after day, beating out
more chain links. These are not just chains of debt, but iron manacles
of servitude and blinded obedience.
March
4, 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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