Get
Set for a 15-Year Depression
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Our old friend
Congressman Ron Paul says were headed into a 15-year depression.
Hes probably
right. In the old days, panics and depressions
ended fairly quickly
at least unemployment tended to be short-term.
There were no elaborate social welfare systems then. No unemployment
compensation. No food stamps or independence cards.
People had to make do.
So, when a
depression hit, wages fell quickly and people got back to work.
They earned less, but the whole economy would adjust, with lower
prices for everything.
There were
no bailouts and no stimulus plans, either. Mistakes were corrected
relatively quickly. Businesses went broke. Men were ruined
and had to drink themselves to death.
Now, things
are better. If their businesses go broke, they can go on almost
as if nothing had happened
as long as they owe money to the
right people. Heck, they might even get a bonus.
On Friday,
the Dow dropped 122 points. What happened to the rally? Is it over
already? We wait to find out.
Oil held steady
at the end of the week, having risen over $50 to a high for the
year. Oils rise was entirely explained by the sinking dollar
down to $1.35 per euro on Friday.
Dollar
sell-off gathers momentum, explained one headline. Gold
soars, Bloomberg added.
Gold shot up
nearly $70 an ounce on Thursday. It took a rest on Friday
but
we dont think it will take a break from its epic run for long.
But back to
the story of the 15-year depression
Goldman says
it wouldnt have lost much money if AIG had been allowed to
go broke. So, dont think for a minute that it wanted the government
to save AIG just so Goldman could get its $20 billion back.
The public
and its paid representatives in Washington are up in arms. Reporters
have been following the trail of the hundreds of billions of taxpayers
money handed over to Wall Street firms. They discovered that it
went into various silk-lined pockets notably, those of the
aforementioned Goldman Sachs, foreign banks and the bankrupt firms
own executives. The politicians were shocked. Shocked! The public
was outraged.
Whence cometh
this outrage? Not from any matter of principle that weve been
able to determine. The taxpayers dont mind robbing Peter.
But they dont like it when the ill-gotten gains go into someone
else. Hey, my name is Paul and Ive been out of a job
for six months, they say. Wheres MY bonus?
Congress sprang
into action last week to set things right. But rather than give
every Tom, Dick and Harry a big bonus, the House proposed a 90%
tax on the AIG bonuses
and urged the states to take the other
10%.
The whole thing
is a dangerous distraction, in our opinion. The bonus amounts are
trivial in comparison to the huge amounts of the bailouts. And when
the pols start taking money away from people our sympathy is with
the takee, not the taker. Besides, it encourages a very bad idea:
that politics, rather than a free market, should decide who gets
what.
The next thing
you know, theyre going to be telling us which businesses succeed
and which fail. Wait a minute
theyre already doing that!
Which is why
Ron Paul thinks were going to have a depression that lasts
longer than most marriages. When markets are allowed to work, they
often make mistakes especially when government is fixing
interest rates. Periods of growth are punctuated by crises
including sharp breaks in business activity and bouts of creative
destruction.” Like forest fires, these episodic conflagrations burn
off the dead wood, permitting new growth.
But when government
allocates capital and resources, it is almost always a soggy disaster
from beginning to end. The dead wood never gets cleared away. Instead,
it is protected
propped up
leaving the new shoots to struggle
in the shade. Not much growth, in other words.
We repeat:
there were only two examples of major depressions in the last century.
Both came after a huge run-up in debt. And both were met with programs
that economists should be ashamed of bailouts, stimulus,
loans, props, safety nets and hooks. In both cases the 30s
in the United States and the 90s in Japan the depressions
continued, on and off, for many years. WWII brought an end to the
first one 12 years after it began. The second one continues
nearly 20 years after the crash of the Tokyo stock market.
And now we
have a third one
and this time the feds are determined to beat
it. Whats their strategy? More firepower! Whats their
secret weapon? QE, or quantitative easing, which is actual monetary
inflation caused by buying debt directly from the government.
Will it work?
Will Geithner/Bernanke succeed where others failed? Will economists
finally master depressions
and find a way to get creative
without the destruction?
Ah
we
think we know the answer. But in the meantime, were enjoying
the show
And now we
turn to our friends in Charm City, to see what they have for us
today
Commodities
aint dead yet! declared Chris Mayer, lending the editorial
team at The 5 Min.
Forecast a hand. People ask me if the price spike in 2008
was a bubble. My gut says it wasnt. Overlay the 19661980
commodity bull market on our own and you see an interesting picture:

While
the 2008 sell-off was much steeper than what happened in the 1970s,
its not out of line with historical experience. The biggest
rally in commodity prices could still be ahead of us.
If you
go back even further and look at the 1929 crash and its aftermath,
you get a similar picture. Commodities tanked after the crash. Take
corn, for example, which lost nearly 80% of its value from its peak
in 1929 to its low in 1932. Yet by 37, corn put in a new high.
It was 20% higher than the 1929 peak. Put another way, the price
of corn rose fivefold from the bottom and this during the
Great Depression!
Commodities
still have legs, especially with the Fed playing loose with the
dollar. The action this past week was just a prelude. Expect the
world of useful commodities to hold value better than the dollar.
Not only the headline-grabbing oil price, but also food prices.
The retail price of food rose about 6% last year. Id expect
well see food prices and other commodity prices
rise again this year.
The 5 Min Forecast
is an executive series e-letter that provides a quick and dirty
analysis of daily economic and financial developments in
five minutes or less.
Back to Bill,
reporting from merry old England
What is quantitative
easing? It is hocus-pocus. It is a scam. It is based on the broadest,
most obvious lie: that you can create money “out of thin air.
Why are the
feds in Britain, Switzerland and the United States
doing it? We leave the Swiss to their own peculiar circumstances.
In Britain and America, the feds have pushed central bank lending
rates about as far down as theyll go. And both governments
have begun the usual sort of bailout efforts. What else can they
do but inflate the money supply?
Will it work?
It depends on what you mean. In a sense, it is already working.
The feds have shown the world that they are serious about inflating
their countries money supplies. Investors have bought gold
and sold the dollar and the pound. If they can inflate the currency,
they cause debts denominated in the currency to evaporate. During
the boom phase, Americans and Brits spent money they didnt
have and ran up debts they cant pay. The economy cant
grow until those debts are reckoned with. Inflation will reduce
them. Of course, if it gets out of hand, it will destroy the entire
world financial system.
The pump
doesnt work
Elizabeth might
have been talking about quantitative easing. As it turned out, she
was about to provide another reason why real estate can be such
a bad investment. In Normandy, we have a small farm with about 30
cows. A pump pulls water from a spring and runs it out to the watering
troughs. But the pump overheated and burned up. This happened in
October. So, a plumber was called. He installed a new pump. That
one burned up too.
Elizabeth
tells the rest of the story:
I was
losing confidence in the plumber. But what did I know? Then, he
put in another pump in December, and that one froze. That was not
his fault, he said, because we had not insulated the pump house
so
I had to buy another pump. Well, after about a month that one froze
too, even after he had supposedly insulated around it.
And then,
when they stopped freezing, they began burning up again. That pump
house must be like the moon. It is either way too hot or way too
cold. I told him that I was going to look for another plumber. Weve
got to have water for the cattle. When the pump isnt working,
poor Nicholas has to go around with a big tank of water behind the
tractor and fill all the troughs himself. And he told me that if
we dont get this water problem fixed soon, he was going to
quit. I think hes just about had enough. So, I was going to
switch to another plumber, but this fellow insisted he knew what
he was doing so he came and installed yet another pump last week.
Nicholas looked at it and told me that it wouldnt work. It
was apparently a submersible pump. It was supposed to go down in
the well. So, naturally, without the water around it to keep it
cool, it burned up immediately.
I
asked Nicholas about the plumber. He said he knew Mr. Thierry. Apparently,
he inherited the business from his father. But Nicolas told me his
father was not really a plumber. He sold washing machines. And he
said that he bought a washing machine from the father and it broke
down almost immediately. He thought it was installed badly. He thinks
the son is continuing the family tradition of incompetence.
After
the submersible pump burned up, the plumber told me it was our fault
all along because there was a leak in our water line, so the pump
was sucking air causing it to burn up.
I told
him that I wasnt really buying a pump from him
or paying
him to install the pump. I just wanted water. It was up to him to
make sure he had the right pump and that it was installed correctly.
After
all this, youd think hed give up. I told him to take
his pump out, but he got mad and came back and installed yet another
pump this is unbelievable and brought about a mile
of big plastic pipe, which he ran out to the spring, in order to
be sure there was no leak. And he put the thing together and left
sure
that he had solved the problem.
But Nicholas
just called to tell me that the pump had stopped working.
March
26, 2009
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
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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