The
Bounce Phase of the Economic Depression
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
Don’t
Put Your Money on a US Recovery
It looks
like things are finally turning around, said a friend at Saturday
nights dinner.
Not at
all
we replied.
Paul Krugman
says the world avoided a second Great Depression. Hes
wrong too.
The stock market
crashed in 29. The market then bounced. After a few months
almost everyone was persuaded that the worst was over.
But the worst was just beginning. It wasnt until 1932 that
the stock market finally hit bottom. By then, it was beginning to
seem like a depression
and only years later did economic historians
tag it as a “great” depression.
This depression
is still wet behind the ears
Were still in the bounce
phase. On Friday, the Dow went 113 points higher. And as the bounce
continues, more and more investors will come to believe that stocks
are in a new bull market and that the economy is back in growth
mode.
Neither will
be true.
The stock market
is in a bear market rally, not a genuine bull market. The economy
is entering a long depression
possibly a “great” one.
How can we
be so sure? Well, were not sure of anything. But all the signs
point in that direction. Household debt as a percentage of disposable
income hit a low of about 2% just at the end of WWII. Its
been going up ever since. By 2005 it nudged against 15% seven
times higher than it had been 60 years earlier. Household debt represents
spending that has been taken from the future. But you cant
take an infinite amount from future earnings. You reach a point
when the future cant handle it. As more and more future earnings
are absorbed by past consumption, pretty soon theres not enough
left to live on. At some point, so much of earnings are devoted
to paying the interest and principle on past borrowings that the
poor householder cannot to pay his expenses. And imagine what happens
if his disposable income goes down.
Guess how many
jobs the US private sector has added over the last 10 years? Almost
none. Private sector employment is back to levels of 1999. There
are more jobs in restaurants and health care
but many fewer
in manufacturing. Net gain: zero.
The only job
gains have been in the parasite sector government. On the
evidence, this trend is going to continue. Now, the feds have a
new post called pay czar. As near as we can tell this
is a busybody who undertakes to control salaries in the industries
that the feds have bailed out. There will be a lot more jobs running
the regulatory/bailout apparatus. Then, too, there are all the make-work
jobs of the shovel ready boondoggles the feds began in an effort
to replace private spending.
Back in the
private sector, 72 banks have failed so far this year. And a record
34 million Americans are getting food stamps.
Naturally,
incomes are falling. Now, imagine the consumer
hes already
paying 15% of his disposable income to debt service
and then
his income is cut in half! This means that 30% of his remaining
income must be used just to service the debt. Impossible to do without
big cuts in spending
The poor consumer
hit the wall in 2007. He was spending all he earned
and paying
more of his income in debt service than at any time in the last
60 years. He couldnt continue to live on future earnings
there just werent enough of them. That is why the finance
industry has topped out. It loaded Americans up with enough debt
already.
And its
why the credit cycle has turned. All of a sudden savings rates are
back up to 7%. Consumers are cutting back
raising chickens
in their back yards
driving less
planting gardens and
squeezing their nickels. The private sector is de-leveraging. And
there wont be any durable economic boom or lasting bull market
on Wall Street until this process is finished.
Harvard professor
Ken Rogoff says it will take 68 years for households to reduce
their debts to a more sustainable level. Lets see. We reported
on Friday that the big upswing in credit over the last 60 years
added about $35 trillion in excess debt to the system. But not all
of that is private debt.
Taking the
period of the bubble years, in 2000 total debt in the United States
came to $26 trillion. Now, its twice that amount $52
trillion, of which $38 trillion is private
or more than two
and-a-half times GDP. At this level, the private debt absorbs roughly
one out of every seven dollars in consumer earnings in interest
and principal payments.
If the private
sector undertook to reduce debt back to 2000 levels, it would mean
eliminating all the debt accumulated during the bubble years
or about $19 trillion. How long will it take to pay down, write
off, inflate away and otherwise shuck $19 trillion? Well, inflation
is running below zero so that is not now a source of debt
reduction. Between write-offs and pay-downs, about $2 trillion has
already been cut over, very roughly, the last 2 years. At
least the math is easy. At that rate, it will take 19 years.
Now, lets
go back and look at the Japanese. How long have they been deleveraging?
Gosh all mighty
19 years. From 1990 to 2009.
Are
we looking at a 20-year period of on-again, off-again deflation
of
bear market rallies followed by real bear markets
of weak employment
and weak or no growth? Thats what we argued, along with Addison
Wiggin, in our first book, Financial
Reckoning Day. Then, the stock market took off
and
the bubble years came. It looked like we were dead wrong. Maybe
we were just early. Or maybe those bubble years were just a feint
a
fake-out that convinced the entire world to invest in stocks and
property, just before the biggest crash in history.
In that book,
we guessed that the crash in the tech sector marked the beginning
of the end. By 2005, it didnt seem at all as though we were
in a down-cycle. But adjusted for inflation, stocks never beat their
January 2000 high. And outside of government, the economy has no
more jobs than it did in 1999. Weve had wars against terror,
bubbles in practically every sector, trillion-dollar boondoggles,
bailouts, bamboozles and Michael Jacksons tragic cooling
but
what is the only durable thing to come out of the last 10 years?
Just Google and debt.
August
12,
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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