A
Consumer Economy at a Standstill
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
Should
You Buy Gold Now?
This recovery
is wonderful in every way, except the important ones. It is like
a shiny new airplane. It has glossy aluminum wings. It has plush
seats in the first class section. Trim stewardesses serve drinks.
Movies are available on demand in all sections.
A majority
of those polled by Bloomberg think things are great; 61% said they
thought they economy had taken off and was flying high. Stocks are
up. Commodities are up. And heres another Bloomberg headline:
Global investors give Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke
top marks
The recovery
has won the approval of economists and the public. It has almost
everything going for it. It just wont fly!
Comes news
this morning that the US economy is still on the runway. This report
from the AP explains why:
Consumers
slashed their borrowing in July by the largest amount on record
as job losses and uncertainty about the economic recovery prompted
Americans to rein in their debt.
Economists
expect consumers will continue to spend less, save more and trim
debt to get household finances decimated by the recession into better
shape. Such behavior, though, is a recipe for a lethargic revival,
because consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of economic activity.
The Federal
Reserve reported Tuesday that consumers in July ratcheted back their
credit by a larger-than-anticipated $21.6 billion from June, the
most on records dating to 1943. Economists had expected credit to
drop by $4 billion.
Hey, not bad
economists
were only off by 430%. Consumers are paying down debt more than
four times faster than they thought. Partly because they want to.
And partly because they have to. They dont want to borrow
and
banks dont want to lend to them anyway. Consumer credit is
falling at a 10% annual rate, based on July figures. Credit card
debt is going down at an 8% rate.
When they pay
down a dollars worth of debt that is one dollar less in the
consumer economy. But its also a dollar that is not borrowed.
Where the consumer spent all his income two years ago
and borrowed
more so that he could increase his consumption even further
now,
he doesnt borrow
and he doesnt spend all his income
either. Now, the money that used to pour into consumer spending
leaks out.
As we reported
yesterday, personal spending is dropping
the figures were down
in four of the last six quarters something that has never
happened before, since they began keeping records in 1947. And the
level of consumer spending is down 33% from a year ago with
discretionary spending now down to a level it hasnt seen in
50 years.
Of course,
thats just what weve been saying. The great credit expansion
began in 1945. It ended in 2007. Credit will contract for many years.
One study, also reported here, suggested that consumers would spend
14% less even after the economy was back on its feet. We
estimate that the total level of debt must go down below 200% of
GDP. If thats correct, we need to pay down about $25 trillion
of debt. That wont be easy and it wont be quick.
And it will
mean high levels of joblessness for a long time. Already, two out
of five working-age Californians are unemployed. The other three
are working the shortest workweeks in history. No wonder; with spending
dropping, sales are falling. So businesses dont need so many
people to make, ship, sell and service their products. Then, of
course, when they lay off workers to cut expenses, the unemployed
workers have to cut spending!
How is it possible
for a consumer economy to grow when consumers are spending less
money? Of course, its not. This is not a genuine recovery
its
an impostor. A fraud. A recovery impersonator.
While the private
sector is paying down debt, the public sector is adding debt at
a ferocious pace about $150 billion per month. Public spending
isnt the same as private spending. It is usually spending
for things that people wouldnt buy if they had a choice.
And it comes
with a whole new risk attached the risk that the feds will
inflate their way out of debt rather than pay it off.
Government
spending does not bring a durable, real prosperity. (If it did
think
how easy it would be to make people rich; governments love to spend
money!) It may look like a recovery. It may have shiny wings and
spiffy-looking stewardesses. But it wont fly.
The World Economic
Forum has taken the United States down from the number one position.
America is no longer the worlds “most competitive” economy.
That title goes to Switzerland.
Meanwhile,
the US banking system is rated #109 in the world just below
Tanzania.
More
than one in four US banks announced an unprofitable quarter,
Strategic Short Reports Dan Amoss tells us.
US banks became
leveraged casinos during the bubble years. Theyve still got
a lot of leverage
and are still trying to relive those glory
days when players lined up to spin the wheel
and free drinks
flowed by Niagara Falls.
Dan will certainly
find the best way to play the downfall of US banks after
all, he did call the collapse of Lehman six months early
leading his readers to as much as a $200,000 profit. Look for regular
updates on the banking industry from Dan in these pages
September
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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