Stitch
in Time
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
Don’t
Put Your Money on a US Recovery
At least something
good has come out of the economic crisis; it blew off the purple
robes that clothed economists and exposed their naked flanks. Still,
they dont deserve the beating theyre getting in the
press with snide remarks and sarcastic comments; they deserve
better. A beating with sticks!
Even Alan Greenspan
admitted he had found a flaw in his own thinking. We
will have to imagine the giggles from the back of the room
if anyone had been awake. If was as if Stalin had confessed to being
rude to his mother or Bernie Madoff copped a plea for shoplifting.
The mea was fine, but the culpa didnt seem to measure
up to the facts. He, more than any living human being, was responsible
for the biggest financial debacle in history; youd hope hed
be a gentleman about it and hang himself.
Meanwhile,
the queen of England visited the London School of Economics and
had a question: why werent economists on top of this thing?
They replied
to this question last month. In a three-page letter, they avoided
the simple truth that their trade was no more reliable than
fortune telling and marriage counseling. The letter claimed that
a psychology of denial prevented government and financial
eyes from seeing the catastrophe in front of them. It was a
failure of the collective imagination of many bright people,
they said.
In fact, it
was the exact opposite imagination run wild. Economists imagined
a world without yesterday or tomorrow
a world in which you
could run up debts forever and never have to pay them back.
Last week,
Timothy Geithner promised the Chinese that the US economy would
recover thanks to demand from the private sector. That was his way
of reassuring Americas biggest creditor that the public sector
wouldnt continue to run huge deficits practically an
outright lie. But its one thing to stiff the Chinese; its
another to stiff time.
Adjusted for
inflation, the US consumers earnings barely rose from the
70s. By some measures, he had actually less disposable spending
power in 2007 than he had in 1973. And now his income is going down.
The June number reflected the biggest drop in income in 4 years.
Salaries and wages fell 0.4% in June
the 9th drop in the last
10 months. How is it possible for him to spend more?
We pose the
familiar question only to set up an unfamiliar answer. In the past,
the consumer reached into the future. In many cases, he reached
beyond the future, and into Never Never Land. Consumers spent money
they hadnt earned yet
thus bringing forward purchases
that should have been made years later. The accumulated effect of
this was to add $35 trillion in extra spending to the world economy
from America alone over the course of the great credit
expansion, 19452007. Thats why we have a depression
now because consumers already spent what they would normally
be spending now.
Time always
gets even. Now, it is the past that is doing the reaching. The automobile
bought in 2006
the house bought in 2005
the vacation taken
in 1999 the ghosts of yesteryear spending reach for Americans
paychecks. Of course, in some cases, consumers spent more than they
could reasonably expect to pay back ever. They reached so
far the poor ghosts are disappointed. Lenders realized that theyd
never get their money back, which is what led to the credit crunch
and the collapse of Wall Street. Of the big five Bear, Lehman,
Goldman, JPMorgan and Merrill only two survived intact. And
we know now that Goldman only survived because Henry Paulson, former
CEO of Goldman, then Treasury Secretary, arranged a hidden bailout.
He had the government step in to save AIG, which owed Goldman $13
billion.
From one scam
to another
from bailing out Wall Street to bailing out the
entire world economy, the more stimulus programs fail to bring a
recovery, the more economists call for more stimulus.
What are they
thinking? Since neither the private sector nor the public sector
has any savings from the past, additional demand from either sector
must be borrowed from the future. (Setting aside quantitative
easing
or Zimbabwe-style stimulus
an even bigger
fraud.)
The
purest illustration of how this works is in the popular cash
for clunkers programs. Instead, of letting the consumer buy
a new car when he is ready, the feds give them money to buy now.
So, he buys in 2009 and not in 2010. What good is accomplished?
It is as if they didnt expect 2010 to ever arrive
as
if they thought they could stop the sun and the seasons
and
the Chinese
forever. Like moths in amber, their wings will
never tatter
nor will their faith flag. The dollar will always
be strong. US bonds will always be in demand. And the future will
never arrive.
But the more
economists try to stitch up the future; the more it gets away from
them. After the 2010 sales have been moved forward to 2009, they
will have to reach into 2011
and then 2012
all the way
to the end of time.
August
10,
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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