The
Great Credit Contraction Cometh
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
The Long
Road to Ruin
In a
fundamental shift, consumers are saving rather than spending,
notes the Los Angeles Times.
This is the
shift weve been talking about for months. The great credit
expansion of 19452007 is over. Now cometh the great credit
contraction.
During the
bubble years, more and more credit produced less and less real prosperity.
It was as if you were borrowing more and more, to invest in your
business or merely to increase your standard of living, but your
income didnt rise fast enough to keep up with the interest
payments.
In 2005, Americans
saved nothing. Not even aluminum foil or string. Now, the savings
rate is approaching 5% of disposable income a big turnaround.
We know from
logic and experience that saving money not spending it is the
key to getting wealthier. Saving money gives you capital. And its
capital accumulation in the form of factories, roads, ships, buildings,
machines
and raw savings that gives people the ability to
produce more. It may take a man with a shovel a whole day to dig
a decent grave. Give him capital in the form of a backhoe and
he can bury everyone in town. Thats why capitalism works.
It rewards the fellow who saves his money.
Yet every yahoo
economist in the year of our Lord 2009 takes news of rising savings
rates like the death of Michael Jackson. If households dont
consume, they reason, how can a consumer economy grow?
The problem
is that you cant really grow an economy by borrowing and spending.
Recent history
proves it. Despite the biggest splurge of borrowing and spending
in history, the US consumer economy barely grew at all.
In the
five years to December 2007, reports Grants Interest
Rate Observer, Americas credit market debt climbed
by nearly 57%, to $18 trillion. However, in the same half-decade,
nominal GDP was up by only $3.3 trillion.
For every five
dollars people borrowed, they only increased their incomes by $1.
Imagine that the borrowing had an average effective interest rate
of 10% (credit card debt can be much more expensive). At that rate
half of the additional income earned between 2002 and 2007 had to
be used just to pay the interest.
This was not
the kind of growth that was likely to last. In fact, it didnt.
The whole thing came crashing down in ’07 and ’08. And now, the
consumer has had a cup of coffee. Hes looked at himself in
the mirror. Hes sorted through his pile of bills. And hes
made up his mind: thats enough of that!
The ratio
of cash held by households as compared with assets has been rising
sharply, says James Saft in the New York Times.
Companies,
households and banks all want to pay down debt and
prefer to
hold cash rather than assets, partly because the outlook for those
assets is poor and partly because after a decade of excess, everyone
now looks a bit over-extended.
This
is exactly what happened in Japan during its lost decade, when a
balance sheet recession, one characterized by the paying down of
debt and liquidations of assets, was self-reinforcing and very difficult
to stem.
And now this
from David Rosenberg:
The ultimate
question is where all this cash is going to be deployed, and we
believe it will ultimately be diverted toward debt repayment.
Lets
see. We can figure this out from the numbers above. American consumers
must have added about $7 trillion in extra debt during the Bubble
Epoque, 20022007. Now, instead of buying things, they use
their money to pay it down. The average household has about $43,000
worth of income. Lets keep the math simple by saying there
are 100 million households in the United States
and that they
save 5% of their income. And lets say they use every penny
of savings to pay down debt. Hey
it will only take about 30
years to pay it off! Get ready for a long, long slump.
Yesterday,
stocks went nowhere. Oil went nowhere. And the dollar went down
as gold went up.
The reason
for the dollars decline and golds rise was given in
the front-page headline of yesterdays Financial Times.
China launched a new dig at the dollar, it says. As
near as we could tell, China merely stated the obvious that
the world is going to have to find a better monetary system. The
US dollar wont be king of the hill forever. And China, which
is up to its neck in dollars, would like to find a solution sooner
rather than later that is, before the dollar goes the way
of all paper.
The dollar
will eventually give way to inflation and devaluation, but probably
not soon.
Im
absolutely worried about inflation, says John B. Taylor.
But it is not
inflation that worries us
its the lack of it. Making
a long story short, as long as the feds see no inflation they will
continue trying to create it. In the end, they will get more than
they wanted.
Though, right
now, instead of inflation, we have deflation. Yesterdays New
York Times tells us that deflation in Ireland has reached 5.4%
the highest since the Great Depression of the 30s.
You know the
reasons for deflation as well as we do. The world suddenly has too
many people who borrowed too much money to buy too many things they
really didnt need and really couldnt afford. This caused
the worlds producers to greatly over-estimate the “real” demand.
Their customers began to disappear in 2007. Their factories are
still standing.
Is it
always so cold in July? asked an American visitor yesterday.
London has been cold, windy and rainy for the last week. It comes
as a shock to American tourists, who inevitably show up in shorts
and t-shirts.
Europe has
a milder climate than North America. Our guest comes from Ottawa,
Canada.
Everybody
thinks it is so cold in Canada. But its much hotter there
than it is here. A lot of houses in Ottawa have air conditioning.
Here, almost no one has it. And I guess they dont need it.
But
in the winter, the streets of North American cities turn bitter
cold and bums freeze up on the sidewalks. That doesnt happen
in Europe. It rarely gets cold enough to freeze a bum here. Maybe
thats why there are so many of them.
Around the
corner from our office is something we had never seen before. A
mother-daughter team of “street persons.” Dressed in black rags,
they sit with their bags and talk. They are there when we get to
the office in the morning. They are there when we leave in the evening.
The daughter
appears to be in her 20s or early 30s. She is a pretty girl, as
near as we can tell. The mother must be in her 50s
maybe 60s.
The two look very similar like the mother/daughter combinations
you see in skin cream advertisements. They dress the same. They
have the same very English faces. They have the same expressions
and same postures
sitting on the sidewalk with the backs to
the wall. Whenever we pass, they are chatting with each other happily, it appears.
July
11,
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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