Indebted Spendthrifts
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Writes
a reader: "My daughter is only 25, but she just bought a house
in Northern Virginia. Of course, she mortgaged most of it. But can
you believe that they lent her $275,000? Is that crazy, or what?
She works as a bartender, part time. She’s very responsible and
is good for the money, I’m sure. But I can’t believe they would
lend her that much money. How do they think she will pay it back?"
Are
Americans really the heavily indebted spendthrifts the world’s press
makes them out to be? On the evidence, yes!
The
Bureau of Labor Statistics figures that the average hourly worker
earned $521.73 per week in 2003, (the 12 months ending in June).
During the same period a year later, he earned an average of $524.37.
Immediately, we notice that there is not a lot of difference between
the two numbers. In fact, BLS tells us that the latter is only 0.5%
greater than the former. Which is too bad for the poor schlep who
works by the hour. Because the cost of living the CPI rose by
more than 3% during the same period; he actually has less spendable
income this year than he did the last.
How
then, is a consumer-led recovery possible? How can he spend more
in 2004 than he did in 2003?
The
answer, dear friend, is blowing in the wispy wind of America’s housing
bubble.
"How
much do places like these go for?"
We
posed the question to our lawyer as we drove through a section of
Baltimore known as Federal Hill near where the British lobbed
cannon balls in the War of 1812... and Francis Scott Key, looking
on, composed the national anthem.
The
houses are hardly fancy. Instead, they are neat, modest places...
which would be more familiar in Britain as ‘mews’ houses. They were
meant for factory workers in the 19th century tiny,
cheap, and simple.
Twenty-five
years ago, so many of these houses had been abandoned that the mayor
started giving them away for $1 each.
But
the area has changed... and so has the nation. Twenty-five years
ago, America was at the bottom of a confidence cycle. Nothing seemed
to go right. Interest rates were high and stocks were low selling
for 6 to 8 times earnings. Gold was twice as high even in nominal
terms as it is today. And Federal Hill was a derelict, abandoned,
forgotten, trashy slum.
Today,
America has never been more sure of herself. Everything seems to
go her way. The Dow is more than 10 times higher than it was at
the end of the ’70s; many sectors sell for 50 times earnings
and more. Interest rates, by contrast, are low the Fed’s
key lending rate is barely a tenth of what it was back then. Gold
sells at a humble $400 per ounce. And Federal Hill is booming. There
are bars, cafés, restaurants, even restaurants good enough to entertain
a group of expensive Washington lawyers.
And
the houses?
"Well,
I just sold one," said our own consignee, "so I know what
the market is doing. You can buy them for about $300,000. Two-fifty
to three-fifty, I’d say."
We
have pointed out on more than one occasion often enough so you
must be getting tired of hearing us say so that rising house prices
do not make people rich. A house can sell for $1 or for $300,000;
it provides exactly the same yield either way: you can live in it.
But
rising house prices are not neutral. A man buys a house for $1 and
then sells it for $300,000. He then buys another house for $500,000 with a $200,000 mortgage. He feels much richer. He is now consuming
a house worth half a million dollars. But while he was previously
debt-free... now he is $200,000 in debt.
And
what about the first-time house buyer, like our colleague’s daughter?
She puts down $25,000... and borrows $275,000 to buy the $300,000
house. The same place she could have gotten for a buck in the year
she was born.
Are
they richer? Not really. Instead, without realizing it, they have
become speculators leveraged ones betting heavily that interest
rates don’t rise and house prices don’t fall. Woe to them if they’re
wrong.
July
22, 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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