These
Firefighters Are Pyromaniacs!
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
DIGG THIS
This week opened
with the wail of fire engines. The Europeans announced a bank rescue,
variously reported to cost 1.3 trillion euros (Le Monde)...1.7
trillion (Liberation) or 1.873 trillion (Financial Times).
They ought to get their story straight. But who cared...investors
had a bid!
As the Great
Fire burned through their capital, investors bowed their heads and
said their prayers: "Please God, spare me...and I will be happy
with what I’ve got." And lo! A host of smoke jumpers came down
from the heavens. Investors turned their faces to the sky and thought
they saw angels. And there was the archangels Gordon Brown and Henry
Paulson leading the flock. Suddenly, the wind died down...and the
fiery furnace calmed. "Hallelujah," they said...and bought
some more stocks!
In the last
100 years there have only been two fires similar to that of today.
The first inferno was in 1929, centered in New York. The second
was in 1989, when Tokyo went up in flames. In both instances, rescuers
took extraordinary measures. And in both cases, they not only failed
to save the economy, they scorched it even more. Obviously, few
economists share this analysis with us. The few who do are probably
either insolvent or insane, or perhaps both. So, the burden of proof
is on us.
We begin by
calling an expert witness; Murray Rothbard, once professor at the
University of Las Vegas, now among the dead. A properly-functioning
economy is balanced, he explains in his classic, America’s
Great Depression. One industry enjoys an expansion, another
suffers a contraction. But sometimes there is a "cluster of
errors" which causes a major boom. Whence cometh these errors?
Who is responsible for them? Rothbard identifies the culprit: "monetary
intervention in the market, specifically bank credit expansion to
business." If Rothbard were still among the quick, he’d probably
be pointing his finger at Alan Greenspan the arsonist who
lowered the key U.S. lending rate to an "emergency" level
of 1% and held it there long after the emergency was over. With
the Fed’s false signal before them, business, investors and consumers
racked up the biggest pile of tinder in history. Then, he’d probably
point at Ben Bernanke, who continues to add kindling...and to Hank
Paulson, who led Goldman Sachs while it created trillions of dollars
worth of asset-backed explosives and sold it to financial institutions
all over the world.
"The
boom...is the time when errors are made..." Rothbard continues.
"The ‘depression’ is actually the process by which the economy
adjusts to the wastes and errors of the boom... Far from being an
evil scourge, [the depression] is the necessary and beneficial return
of the economy to normal... Evidently, the longer the boom goes
on the more wasteful the errors committed, and the longer and more
severe will be the necessary depression readjustment."
But here come
the rescuers with yet more dry wood! After stoking the flames with
easy credit...they bring more. Professor Rothbard, reviewing the
record of the post-29 rescue team came to this conclusion:
The authorities "met the challenge of the Great Depression
by acting quickly and decisively...[using] every tool, every device
of progressive and ‘enlightened’ economics, every facet of government
planning to combat the depression."
Yet, the fire
didn’t go out. It intensified. An expected recovery in 1931 went
up in smoke, says Rothbard, thanks to government meddling:
"The guilt
for the Great Depression must, at long last, be lifted from the
shoulders of the free-market economy and placed where it properly
belongs: at the doors of politicians, bureaucrats and the mass of
‘enlightened’ economists. And in any other depression, past or future,
the story will be the same."
Six
decades and half a world away, the Japanese proved him right. In
January, 1990, a spark touched off the Nikkei Dow. Soon, Japan’s
miracle economy was in trouble. Bankruptcies rose. Profits fell.
Banks teetered. But the Japanese had their economists too. And soon,
they were doing what Hoover and Roosevelt had done before them.
As to monetary stimulus, the Bank of Japan’s key lending rate was
cut from 5% down to "effectively zero." And there were
plenty of fiscal stimuli too. Japan’s government did just what Keynes
recommended it spent money. It went on a spree of what Alan
Booth calls "state sponsored vandalism" in the 1990s,
taking the budget deficit to a remarkable 5% of GDP in 2002. Roads
to nowhere, concrete shorelines, bridges and dams...Japan, per square
mile of available territory, covered 30 times as much surface in
concrete as in America. In 1996, the Shumizu Corporation even announced
plans to build a hotel on the moon using specially developed techniques
for making cement on the lunar surface.
Once again,
these heroic efforts produced nothing more than farcical consequences.
The Japanese economy is still barely on speaking terms with prosperity.
And the Nikkei Dow closed at 8,276 last week... a level last seen
(except briefly in 2003) a quarter of a century ago.
America’s pyromaniacs
still have a ways to go. There are 150 basis points between the
Fed’s current key rate and zero...and the US budget deficit is expected
to quadruple – reaching $2 trillion in 2009. In the resulting roast,
we predict, even the devil will sweat.
October
18, 2008
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 and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2008 Bill Bonner
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