Capitalism
Is Doing Its Work
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Paris,
France Were playing it straight today. And, as
usual, optimistic
The world is
NOT going to Hell in a handcart. After a long time spent in the
handcart, it is finally getting out and standing on its two feet.
Americans are beginning to save again. The Chinese are beginning
to look for other places to sell their gadgets and paraphernalia.
Capitalism
is doing its work. Its destroying the mistakes of the Bubble
Epoch. It is burning up the errors of the past so it can rebuild
for the future.
Yesterday,
the Dow rose 152 points. This morning, stocks are soaring in Asia
as the world anticipates further good news. Reports from
the economy are terrible; but not as bad as expected, they say.
Layoffs in
the United States are running at 3 times last years rate.
And the index of manufacturing activity slipped for the 14th month
in a row in March.
Oil is holding
around $49. Gold traded around $927 yesterday. And the dollar didnt
move much either its about $1.32 per euro.
But hey
here
come the firefighters. What is theyve got with them? Well,
darned
theyve got another handcart and a ticket to Hell!
Yes, the G20
group is meeting today in London. Mr. and Mrs. Obama have already
met the queen. And the protestors have already met the police.
There are the
anarchists, the environmentalists, the Tibetan liberationists, the
vegetarians
just about everyone with a gripe is out on the
street. Make Love, Not Leverage, says one poster. Word
from our headquarters in London in the building with the
gold balls, across the river from the City is that protestors
are getting out of hand. Theyve attacked police
and smashed
up a Royal Bank of Scotland branch office.
Built
on Blood, theyve scrawled on the Bank of England. Theyve
burned a banker in effigy
and had fistfights with others. One
demonstrator hops around dressed as the Easter Bunny. Others wear
masks
intent upon doing mischief.
But whats
the point? These dumbbells are just as confused and hopeless as
the G20 big shots they are trying to impress. Both believe the world
would be a better place if people would just listen to them!
Meanwhile,
the cost of their mischief is adding up. The protestors dont
really cost very much. Whats a few broken windows? But the
G20 costs the world trillions.
Already, in
the United States alone, the bill for fighting the correction is
about $14 trillion, by our reckoning. That includes not only the
amounts actually spent
but the Fed guarantees, toxic asset
purchases and so forth. If you will recall, Mr. Paulson argued that
buying the banks stinky assets would actually make the taxpayers
money. When the world came to its senses, he said, it would realize
that these assets were worth MORE than the going price.
Ha
ha
ha
That was about
$6 trillion ago. Every day the losses continue to mount up. Instead
of being shrewd buys, the banks disgusting assets have proved
to be even worse than imagined.
But the fact
that theyve been wrong about everything doesnt seem
to discourage the rescuers. No
they didnt see the blaze
coming. No
their back burns didnt work. No
they
dont know what caused the conflagration nor where it is headed
nor how to put it out. Still give them more money so they
can do something about it!
The U.S. official
national debt has jumped over $11 trillion. Wait a minute
wasnt
it just a few months ago that we announced it had gone over $10
trillion? Yes, dear reader, it was
the national debt is exploding.
The feds say they will borrow an additional $2 trillion this year.
If the bailouts and stimuli continue as planned, the national debt
will grow by almost $10 trillion in the next 10 years. In other
words, the nation will add more debt each year for the next 10 years
than it did in the entire first two centuries of its life.
Hey
now
were rolling!
This is why
we have faith in our public officials. Yes, they may stumble and
bumble
but theyll get it right eventually. Theyll
cause inflation like we aint never seen yet! Give them time
Welcome the
United States into Ponzi Nation, dear reader. It must bring in new
money to pay the interest on the old money it borrowed. And every
day that passes, the amount that cant be paid back grows
More news from
Addison and Ian in dreary Baltimore:
So
this
is how we get the economy back on track, writes
Addison in todays issue of The
5 Min. Forecast.
GMAC,
an auto financer 49% owned by GM, announced today it would start
loaning to subprime borrowers again. The group said it will roll
out a $5 billion line of credit to new car buyers over the next
60 days, now including those with credit scores below 620.
Why?
To meet President Obamas deadline and prop up next quarters
earnings report; a last ditch effort to avoid bankruptcy.

GM sales
crashed 45% in March, compared to 2008. No word on what happens
when this group of fictitious subprime buyers cant pay for
their cars either.
Each weekday,
Addison and Ian bring readers the The 5 Min Forecast, an executive
series e-letter that provides a quick and dirty analysis of daily
economic and financial developments in five minutes or less.
And more thoughts
from our office next to the Communist Party headquarters in Paris:
Poor David
Leonhardt. The man is lost. But hes got plenty of company.
And our guess is hell have even less elbow room as the crisis
intensifies.
Writing in
the New York Times:
Does
stimulus work? Fortunately, this is one economic question thats
been answered pretty clearly in the last century.
Yes,
stimulus works.
When
governments have taken aggressive steps to soften an economic decline,
they have succeeded. The Germans did it in the 1930s. Franklin D.
Roosevelt did so more haltingly, and had more halting results. Even
the limp Japanese recovery plan of the 1990s makes the case. Although
dithering over a bank rescue kept Japan in a slump, government spending
on roads and bridges made things better than they otherwise would
have been.
When
Roosevelt stuck to a stimulus program, unemployment fell markedly,
and the biggest stimulus of all World War II did the
rest. Its true that economic models say the economy shouldnt
work this way. When resources are sitting idle, businesses should
find a way to use them profitably. But they often dont.
People
become irrationally pessimistic during a downturn. They are driven
by what Keynes called animal spirits. Only government can typically
change the dynamic.
Oh, what a
dreary world it would be if it could be manipulated so easily! Got
an economic slowdown? Let the government fix it by putting people
to work! Missing those essential animal spirits? Dont worry
about it; government employees are always beasts. But wait a minute
what
good does it do to put people to work doing things that people dont
really dont want done? Or, to put it another way: if people
are not willing to buy something with their own money
or invest
in it
what makes it a good idea when the government does it?
Sure, you can put people to work digging holes and filling them
back in again. Or making a cannon to blow up buildings. Or, why
not burn down Washington
so people can be put back to work
rebuilding it?
Cmon
we
know its not that simple. Its not that easy
The
two countries that emerged most quickly from the Great Depression
were Japan and Germany. Both did it by massive rearmament
preparing for war. People got jobs in tank factories (though not
in Germany until it threw off the constraints of the Versailles
Treaty) and steel mills. They put together bombs and machine guns.
The factories filled with workers. The shops filled with customers.
The bars filled with soldiers. Problem solved, right? But was the
world a better place as a result? After having created its expensive
military monsters, Japan and Germany had to do something with them.
It was either go to war or go broke.
Thats
the difference between a command economy
and a free economy.
In a command economy, you can get results. Sometimes the results
even look and feel good for a while. But you cant get
genuine improvement; for that, you need an economy in which people
decide for themselves how capital is allocated. Only then to people
get what they really want
what they themselves have freely
chosen.
Our depression
motto: capitalism doesnt always take you where you want to
go
or where you expected to go. But it always takes you where
you ought to be.
The
closer you look, the more you realize that government meddling in
the economy is a fraud. Just look at Geithners new hedge fund,
for example. Its such a scam that a Nobel prize winning economist
Joseph Stiglitz refers to it as robbery of the
American people. The fund is a public/private partnership
that buys toxic assets from the banks. Its goal is to help the banks
and
give investors (and the government) a chance to make some money.
But it doesnt help the banks if the fund buys assets for what
they war worth; the banks merely exchange one asset for another
of equal value.
The banks only
benefit if the fund buys them for MORE than they are worth. On the
other hand, the fund only benefits if it buys them for LESS than
they are worth. In practice, the fund will pay more than it should
otherwise
the banks wont participate. But the fund is structured so
that the losses will not fall on investors and the government equally.
Instead, the public will get the losses
while the investors
get a profit.
April
4, 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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