Is
America Overstretched?
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
O! Bama! Whither
takest thou us?
There are two
broad theories concerning the great men of history. One says that
history is made by great men. The other says great men are made
by history. But we think theyre both wrong. In our book, great
men dont really exist. They are merely invented by the historians.
History needs heroes. Sometimes tragic heroes
sometimes comic
the historians take what theyve got to work with and set them
spinning. But if you look at their leading characters closely, they
look little different from the rest of us
just fellow passengers
on the big bus.
Poor Obama.
He seems like such a likable fellow. He would probably make a good
college president. Or a good butcher. Youd enjoy going into
his shop to buy cutlets.
But now the
poor man finds himself in what has to be one of the tightest spots
in history. At least in economic history. The crash of 0809
clipped stock market investors for half their nominal wealth. The
bear market in property has put one out of every four homeowners
underwater. And now the recession/depression threatens to knock
the stuffing out of the rest of the economy.
How can he
get us out of this jam? He hasnt a clue. So, he turns to his
advisors
his hacks
his pollsters and his hangers-on
and what
do they come up with?
U.S.
deficit four times last years record, comes the press
report. Federal government will borrow almost 50 cents of
every dollar it spends this year.
This news would
have taken our breath away. If we had any breath left. But after
so many wonders, each one more breathtaking than the last, our lungs
are all squeezed out. We cant even give an audible sigh. Hold
a mirror up to our nose and you would think we were dead.
Youll
recall that President Obama announced that he had found budget savings
of $17 billion. We were exhaling on that for a moment until we realized
that it represented less than 36 hours worth of federal spending.
Then came news a week later that instead of cutting the budget,
the latest estimates showed it going up by some $89 billion.
Lets
face it, at this point $89 billion is chicken feed. Here at The
Daily Reckoning we carry that much in our wallet. We pass it out
to subway bums and use it to tip cab drivers. So, were not
about to get excited about such a trivial amount.
But coming
on top of a budget deficit already estimated at four times the record
deficit set last year
and we begin to think of straws and camels.
The idea of
spending twice as much as you earn should take even a camels
breath away. An ordinary man
hearing that fact
would feel
like breaking the glass and pulling the alarm. You cant
do that
youll go broke, he would say. Basic arithmetic
reveals the trap. In one year, youve built up debt equal to
all of next years revenue. In two years, youve got debt
of 200% of annual revenues. In 10 years, youve got debts equal
to 1,000% of your annual receipts. Lets see
say you only
pay 5% interest
then, the interest alone takes up HALF your
revenues. What creditor would lend you money?
The feds have
their own projections, of course. According to them, they wont
continue this hell-for-leather spending much longer. Their estimates
show the deficits declining in future years. Ten years out, they
show a fairly modest total of $7.1 trillion in accumulated deficits.
It is a measure
of how breathtaking the financial news has been that $7.1 trillion
can in any way be regarded as modest. It is half Americas
total GDP. It is also a measure of how out-to-lunch the federal
estimators are. Their projections imagine a worst of worlds
that would be a best of worlds to most people. In the
Great Depression, national output went down by some 30%
and
continued for a decade (depending on how you figure it). In Japan,
the on-again, off-again slump has gone on for 19 years. Yet, the
official guess is that this downturn in the US will take output
down by only 1.2% and that it will be over in a few months
with
a return to growth of 3.2% in 2010.
No one knows
how bad it will become. The last report showed GDP declining at
a 6% rate. And our friend Nassim Nicholas Taleb says it will be
vastly worse than the ’30s.
But give a
man enough education and hes ready to believe anything. He
can even convince himself that such reckless spending is a stimulus
effort
that it merely replaces spending that would
have been done by the private sector (if the private sector were
stark raving mad)
and that it will bring about a recovery
in the entire economy.
You could even
glance at the latest financial news and say: Look
its
working!
The Dow lost
155 points yesterday. A minor setback in what has been an agreeable
interlude. Oil, the dollar, and gold stayed about where they were
yesterday.
Our thoughts
return to Mr. Obama. He is surely the man of the hour. He is the
fellow historians will take for the leading man. Will he be a tragic
hero? A comic hero? One of Americas greatest presidents? A
black Lincoln? A Roosevelt with two good legs?
Like Lincoln
and Roosevelt, he is a man with no apparent convictions that will
stand in his way. Perhaps he is just the man the U.S. of A. needs
a man capable of bankrupting the nation with a smile.
Yes, Dear Reader,
the great man” always seems to come along when you need him.
Longtime Daily Reckoning readers will recall our theory:
After the Berlin
Wall came down
America had no enemies worthy of the name.
She had a monopoly franchise on the worlds money the
dollar was the undisputed queen of the planets reserves. And
she had a monopoly on military power too the undisputed king
of the hill, with a Pentagon budget nearly as large as all other
nations military spending put together.
But nature
abhors a vacuum and detests a monopoly. Lacking a suitable challenger,
America had to become her own worst enemy. Lacking a rival who could
destroy her, she had to destroy herself.
And so, when
Americans went to the polls in November of 2000, they elected a
president who was up to the job: George W. Bush. Eight years later,
the Clinton surpluses had turned into the biggest deficits ever
an
immense bubble had impoverished the middle class
and the country
was engaged in two unwinnable, unnecessary, and hugely expensive
wars.
Mission accomplished!
But its
not over. The millstones of history may grind slowly
but they
grind exceedingly fine
The American empire is clearly overstretched
and over-indebted. If it is to save itself, it should scale back
immediately
cutting the Pentagon budget in half, for example,
and eliminating all unnecessary expenses (which is most of them).
Instead of spending $3 trillion, it should spend
say
$1
trillion, and run a surplus.
What about
the depression, you might be wondering. Isnt this the time
to increase government spending, rather than decrease it? Ah
if
you are even asking the question, you are the victim of a dead economist.
Keynes theory was that the state should run contra-cyclical
surpluses and deficits to offset the ups and downs of the
business cycle. But that is too soggy a bog for us to trod in today.
Instead, we will skirt it with another of our dicta:
People come
to believe what they must believe when they must believe it.
When an empire
is new and fresh and growing
people believe in saving, hard
work, and small frugality.
When an empire
is old and decaying
they think the government should spend
whatever it takes to take care of them. This attitude
helps destroy the empire
thus making room for the next one.
But
if America really wanted to protect its wealth, its power, and its
position in the world, it should fight the depression in an entirely
different way. Instead of bailing out failed businesses it should
let them go bust. Instead of coddling the executives who mismanaged
their companies, it should turn them loose. Instead of shoring up
reckless banks, it should help knock them down.
And instead
of spending money on stimulus programs
it should give money
back to the taxpayers so they can stimulate the economy, or not,
as they choose. Taxes should be cut in line with government spending.
This would boost savings, reduce debt, and
gradually
increase
investment and consumer spending too.
But that is
not the road Americans have chosen. Instead, they found a president
willing to go along with history. Instead of scaling down, he is
scaling up. Instead of reducing Americas indebtedness, he
is increasing it. Instead of going for safety, hes going for
broke.
No one knows
how this will turn out, of course. None of us get to read the history
books before they are written. But our guess is Mr. Obama will emerge
from the tomes as another “great man.” Doing historys dirty
work
he is continuing the destruction of Americas monopoly
position on money and power.
May
13,
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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