Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Americans'
spending is slowing down. At least, that's what the nation's largest
retailers say. Auto sellers, too, report a lack of interest in new
wheels.
Why
would the world's best spenders lose interest?
They
are running out of money, is our guess. Studies show clearly that
consumer spending is tightly correlated with consumer income. Makes
sense. When you don't have any money, it's hard to spend. But the
studies also show that recently, incomes and spending have parted
company. Americans have spent far more than they have earned. In
July, for example, spending exceeded income by an 8-1 margin.
How
can you spend more than you make? You can borrow. Or you can spend
the money you get back in tax refunds. But neither borrowing nor
cutting taxes (without also cutting government spending) provides
much of a foundation for long-term, solid growth in consumer spending.
Eventually, the lines real income and real spending have to
come back together. Why not now?
What
provides consumers with more real spending money are more real jobs.
We
do not like to be the bearer of bad tidings, dear reader, but we
do not expect much wage growth in America for, say, the next 50
years!
A
study by Deloitte Research tells us that even Wall Street's jobs
can be done by foreigners. As many as 2.3 million jobs in banking
and securities could be exported overseas, the study concludes.
Information
technology, taxes, administration, human resources, benefit management
many of the "service" jobs that fill up Dilbert cartoons could
also be done in Calcutta or Bombay.
And,
of course, manufacturing. Even America's homebuilding industry could
be challenged by factory-made modular units produced overseas
and brought here on cargo ships.
Incidentally,
ships are arriving from Asia at Southern California ports in record
numbers. Also in record numbers are they returning whence they came
empty, deadhead. We import; we do not export. We consume; we do
not produce. Gadgets and geegaws are coming in; money is going out.
We sail towards our own destruction, not to glory.
Competition
for jobs by strangers in strange places probably means deflation
in wage rates worldwide. Since the pool of labor in the Far East
is almost infinite...and since the gap between Western compensation
levels and those in Asia is so wide...and since the technological
advances that make globalization pay keep coming...we can expect
the trend in declining labor costs to last for decades.
Deflation,
dear reader. Deflation.
The
golden age of the West is dying. People in Houston can no longer
expect to earn 10 times more than people in Haiphong. Now, they
will have to compete with the rest of the world...and bid for the
world's energy...its gadgets and geegaws...its Monets and Modiglianis...and
even its food...in a market crowded with rich foreigners.
The
old order has to pass away. It can die easy. Or it can die hard.
That is the story we will watch for the next half a century.
September
4, 2004
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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