Poor
Ben Bernanke
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Whither goes
the money? Are bad debts written off balance sheets as easily as
they were once written on them? Does the money just go up to money
heaven, back into the "thin air" from whence the Fed first drew
it out?
We were wondering
yesterday about the debt bubble. Can debt levels continue to rise
forever? And what happens when a debtor cannot pay? No harm done,
right?
Our head aches
and our knees wobble at the thought of it. Even without thinking,
we know it can't be so. Nature has her limits, her penalties and
her dirty tricks. In debt, as in dollars, quality and quantity vary
inversely. The more debt a man takes on, the more he has to struggle
to keep up with it. The quality of his IOU declines. "Will he really
be able to make good on his commitments?" lenders ask themselves.
Logically,
if not consistently, lenders demand higher rates of interest. Higher
rates increase the weight of debt throughout the economy. A man
who must borrow to continue living in the style to which he has
become accustomed must shoulder more debt at higher rates – making
him even less able to pay. At the margin, debtors begin to buckle
at the knees. Credits go bad. Bankruptcy courts and workout companies
start hiring extra hands. That is what we see happening in Britain
and America today.
But, apart
from the overburdened lender, is anyone really worse off? The credit
may have been created "out of thin air" by central banks...doesn't
it vanish just as painlessly? Alas, no.
When a lender
doles out a million pounds to a borrower, both of them now feel
they have money to burn. Imagine next that the borrower takes an
extravagant vacation around the world. The money does not vanish
into thin air. Instead, it goes into travel expenses: jet fuel,
swanky hotel rooms, pricey bar tabs. It goes not up to heaven, but
down to earth, where it is used up, and vanishes forever, like a
lover's last kiss or a smoked cigarette. And it does not vanish
without a trace. You are left with a bitter aftertaste and the burnt-out
stubs.
First, the
borrower goes broke. Then, when the lender goes to collect, he finds
that he is broke, too. And somewhere in Sri Lanka or San Martin
is a hotel proprietor standing in front of a brand new wing of rooms.
He wonders what's happened to his free-spending customers. What
happened to the sound of ice cubes at cocktail hour and the smell
of foie gras at lunch? He worries about how he'll pay the mortgage
he took out to pay for his new addition.
As the credit
cycle continues to turn down, there are fewer people with money
in their pockets, and more capital investments that don't really
make sense anymore. In short, the money doesn't ascend into money
heaven at all. Instead, it becomes a steel ball and chain clamped
to the ankles of investors, businessmen and consumers...one they'll
drag around for years. Not only have the borrower and the lender
no more money to spend, but now the hotel owner has thrown away
his money on that suite of luxury rooms that no one wants. He'll
either have to eat into his own income or capital to keep the thing
going...or go bust, too.
Fraud begets
fraud...swindle begets swindle...error begets error and the whole
cycle soon becomes woebegotten. In America today, the Fed's phony
new money – created out of thin air – feeds phony house price increases
that turns into phony consumer demand that coaxes businessmen in
China to make bad capital investments. When the cycle tops, almost
everyone everywhere will feel the pain, because the funny money
drew out real resources – oil, labor, steel – that might have been
put to better use.
Don't get us
wrong; we love the Fed as much as everyone else. In the Soviet Union,
resources were misallocated by force. In the Fed's empire, they
are misallocated by fraud. This is undoubtedly a big improvement;
for one thing, it is much more entertaining.
• We checked
the chart. Gold looks as though it "should" correct to about $500.
The trouble is, markets don't always do what they "should" do. Often
they do the opposite.
And while long
suffering readers were probably breathing a sigh of relief on Mr.
Greenspan's retirement from the Fed and congratulating themselves
that they wouldn't have to read any more of him, we came across
this remarkable headline on page 45 of the Wednesday Times of London:
"Terror threat responsible for high gold price – Greenspan."
The former
chairman may have left his post behind, but he also left his mark.
And he hasn't yet left the public limelight. In his first private
sector speech since being let off the leash of officialdom, the
ex-maestro, and erstwhile most powerful man in the world, "blamed
the threat of terrorism for the soaring gold price." According to
the article, Mr. Greenspan earned $120,000 for his one-hour speech.
A rush of questions
came over us. Why would he say such a thing? Is the threat of terrorism
twice as high as it was on 9/11? Did the threat of terrorism go
up 25% last year?
Is the man
now managing his own investments (they were in a trust while he
was in office)? Could he be short gold and just trying to drive
the price down to cover his trade? Or is it possible that he is
still on some leash? Or...is the 79-year-old going out of his mind?
We
may never know the answer, but while the price of gold tumbled on
Wednesday, Thursday brought no follow-through. Gold was stable.
Here we watch...and wait.
• We pity poor
Ben Bernanke. We have a feeling he doesn't know quite what he's
gotten himself into. Greenspan was wily, cynical, and opportunistic.
He had been an objectivist, and an acolyte of Ayn Rand. He knew
how the Fed worked and he knew how to look out for Number One.
But
Bernanke, from what we can tell, is a believer. He earnestly believes
he can regulate the economy by jiggling rates. He thinks running
a central bank is a matter of skill and judgment. Greenspan knew
it was just luck and treachery. The former chairman must have blessed
his predecessor every day of his reign for providing him with such
a delightful economic balance sheet to run down. The present chairman
is likely to curse his predecessor every day of his – when he finally
figures out what it is that Mr. Greenspan has really accomplished.
March
29, 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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