Rich
People Dont Use ARMs
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
What we think
is happening is what we expected to happen, and what should be happening:
consumers are running out of money as fast as we are running out
of similes and metaphors.
How do we know?
Well, we don't, but we can take a guess from the evidence before
us. The Dow seems to have topped out. So have transports. Housing
prices. And the economy itself. Retailers and homebuilders are clearly
on their way down.
Of course,
the rich are still getting richer. But that is little consolation
to diaper salesmen, automobile merchants, or the vendors of any
of the countless other things that keep a consumer economy in business.
So, when you read that average incomes are up or that the average
consumer has more money on hand, remember that these averages include
Bill Gates and Warren Buffett. As the rich get richer, the average
amount of money people have goes up. But the typical person is not
rich and is not getting richer. He's actually losing income. And
now, with declining house prices, he may be losing "wealth," too.
He is also paying much more for gas and heating than he was a couple
of years ago. And, he is also facing a higher mortgage payment now.
Generally,
it is not rich people who buy houses with ARMs (adjustable rate
mortgages). They're not concerned with keeping their monthly payments
low. They don't think that way. What they're interested in is the
net cost. So, they're likely to buy for cash or use simpler, cheaper
financing.
A rich person
might bid up the price of a fancy vacation, top-quality wine, or
a luxury house in Greenwich or Malibu. But he buys about the same
quantity of diapers, laundry detergent and gasoline as anyone else.
And when he gets more money in his hands, he doesn't spend it at
Wal-Mart on jumbo boxes of breakfast cereal.
No, dear reader,
the consumer economy does not rest on the spending of the rich,
but on the spending of the average, the ordinary consumer. It is
the average man who has given an ARM (and a leg) for his life-style.
For, unlike the rich, lower- and middle-class consumers are very
sensitive to marginal changes in income. They live without much
in savings, and even a slight fall-off in earning must be made up,
either with debt or reduced consumption.
Of course,
people used to save money "for a rainy day." But after Alan Greenspan
took control of the weather, no one saw the need. Savings rates
plummeted to zero. The lumpen householder spent all he earned...and
then some. His standard of living increased, even while his income
stagnated, or actually fell.
How was this
possible? Very simple. His wife went to work and he borrowed. On
the first point, we would merely like to point out that a non-working
spouse represents a kind of savings. And an investment. The stay-at-home
spouse, presumably, helps the children with homework, keeps them
out of trouble, and shapes their minds and attitudes for success.
We have no proof, but we're prepared to believe that the children
of an attentive, at-home parent do better than those of two working
parents (To say nothing of single-parent households).
The non-working
spouse provided a reserve for the family. If the breadwinner broke
his leg, his wife could take a part-time job while he was on the
mend. If the family suffered unanticipated expenses, likewise, the
stay-at-home spouse could re-enter the workforce to make up the
loss.
But now, both
parents work. And expenses have been brought up to match the couples'
joint income. What will happen if one of them loses his or her job?
Well, that's what credit cards are for! Or mortgage refinancing!
At least, while
the housing boom lasted, the consumer could feel wealthy even without
making more money. He had something to borrow against. And he could
tell himself that he was really just "taking out" equity that was
really his.
But now that
the housing boom is over or making sounds like it is debt looms
not just for marginal consumers, but for the whole country as well.
The United
States used a record amount of power during the hot spell. Another
way to look at it Americans paid a record amount for gas and air
conditioning.
We're still
intrigued by the point we made last week: The major wars of the
20th century were not necessarily won either by the good guys or
the smart guys. (In World War I, all the combatants were about equally
wicked and equally stupid. In World War II, the Soviet Union was
the big victor, but it could hardly be described as good. The Bolsheviks
made their country more miserable, in many ways, than even the Nazis
managed to make Germany.) Instead, the victories went to those who
had oil. Especially, in WWII, strategies were determined by the
absence or abundance of fuel. Germany and Japan had limited access
to energy; so they had to turn their military forces away from purely
military objectives in order to secure fuel supply lines.
Now, America
is the world's biggest importer of oil. It is she who worries about
her fuel supplies, and she who bends her foreign policy toward oil
fields. She puts her soldiers to work guarding gas stations.
Another Internet
bubble? We hope so. The first one was so much fun.
Once again,
the Internet money is flowing like cold beer on a warm day $5.6
billion was put into new deals in the first quarter alone. Spectacular
prices are being paid for Web sites with little revenue and no clear
way to bring in more.
You'd think
investors would have learned better. But investors are like voters.
They can never remember more than four years back.
"Errors hurt
1.5 million," says an AP headline.
Our theory
is that all things age including empires. And as they age, parasites
lodge in their nooks and crannies, taking away more and more of
the organism's energy and diminishing its effectiveness. As time
goes by, more and more money is spent on, say, defense, while people
get less and less real defense from it. The same could be said for
many other institutional activities corporate management, money
management, health care, education, and government generally.
The AP continues:
"More
than 1.5 million Americans are injured every year by drug errors
in hospitals, nursing homes and doctor's offices, a count that doesn't
even estimate patients' own medication mix-ups....
"Perhaps
the most stunning finding of the report was that, on average, a
hospitalized patient is subject to at least one medication error
per day, despite intense efforts to improve hospital care in the
six years since the institute began focusing attention on medical
mistakes of all kinds.
"The new probe
couldn't say how many victims of drug errors die. A 1999 estimate
put the number of deaths, conservatively, at 7,000 a year. Also
unknown is how many of the injuries are serious."
July
25, 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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