Paying
Off Debt Is Like Dying…
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
Is the
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Yesterday,
George Osborne, Britain's Conservative Party finance minister-in-waiting,
did something extraordinary. We can't remember anything like it.
He told the truth.
"We are
sinking in a sea of debt," he admitted. And on the very day
when France's president, Nicolas Sarkozy, said he would not raise
taxes, Osborne said that he would not lower them. In order to lighten
Britain's debt, he'd leave Labor's 50% maximum tax rate right where
it is.
Voters don't
like hearing about debt. Politicians don't like talking about it.
And economists don't want to think about it. And in a kind of collective
suicide pact, they have all agreed not to worry about it. But debt
is at the center of the world's financial troubles.
Paying off
debt is like dying. You try to put it off as long as you can. But
nobody runs an open tab forever.
This week brought
news that Maine-based luxury yacht maker Hinckley, which has been
building boats since 1928, is sinking. The problem is neither technical
nor operational. It is philosophical. No one complains about the
quality of the boats. Or even the prices (if you have to ask, you
can't afford one). The company sailed along nicely until 1997. Then,
the private equity hotshots from Boston took the helm. The old Hinckleys
who ran the shop looked upon debt as though they were looking at
a bottle of whiskey. A drink now and then did no harm. But watch
out. Too much will sink you. In the 70 years they ran the place,
they accumulated only $1 million of debt. But the new owners were
dipsomaniacs; they multiplied Hinckley's debt 20 to 40 times. (Exact
figures are not available.)
For much of
history, failing to repay debt was regarded as not merely a breach
of contract, but a crime. People who failed to repay their debts
in timely fashion were thought to have stolen from their lenders;
they were put in prison. In the Middle Ages even a dead debtor's
children could be sent to prison.
Now, bankruptcy
laws allow individuals and businesses to go to rehab. Then, they
can stiff creditors again. Neither sin nor crime, debt is now just
a cost of doing business.
But few creditors
are as forgiving or perhaps as forgetful as those
who lend to governments. That is the conclusion of a new book by
Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff, This
Time It's Different. The two professors document the history
of eight centuries of "financial folly." What we learn
from it is what we already knew that borrowers are often
perfidious, crises are usually insidious, and bankers are morons.
Just five years
ago, Ben Bernanke looked out on the calm seas of the Bubble Era.
"The Great Moderation," he called it. Bernanke took the
credit. It was due to "improved macro-economic policies,"
he said. In retrospect, he probably should have said it was just
luck and left it at that. His macro-economic policies made things
worse, encouraging all sectors of the economy to borrow. We know
what this did to Hinckley. Riding low in the water, with too much
debt heaped on its deck, the yacht maker struggles to stay afloat.
But what's
new, ask Reinhart and Rogoff? Always and everywhere, debt leads
to trouble. Too much debt caused France to default on its sovereign
debt eight times. Spain defaulted six times before 1800 and then
another seven times later.
Latin America,
as the authors point out, would have been safer for bankers if the
printing press had never made its way across the Atlantic. Between
hyperinflation, defaults and banking debacles over two centuries
the banana republics scammed banks out of billions. In the
'80s, Nicholas Brady tried to rescue New York bankers with his US-
backed "Brady bonds." Readers of these back-page columns
can guess what happened next. Within a few years, seven of the 17
countries that had undertaken a Brady-type restructuring had as
much or more debt than they had before. By 2003, four members of
the Brady bunch had once again defaulted and by 2008 Ecuador had
defaulted twice.
Even non-existent
countries go broke. In 1822, "General Sir" Gregor MacGregor
issued bonds from a fictitious country he called Poyais, whose capital
city, Saint Joseph, was described by the offering prospectus as
having "broad boulevards, colonnaded buildings and a splendid
domed cathedral." The bonds sold at lower yields than those
of Chile. But it didn't matter whether the country was real or imagined,
all of them defaulted.
As for the
present slump, the authors offer no predictions, but some guidelines.
In the run-of-the-mill crisis, real housing prices generally go
down 36% over a six-year period. GDP, in real terms, per capita
typically goes down 9.3% while unemployment rates go up for five
years, with a "normal" increase of about 7 percentage
points. But the closest parallel to the present circumstance, which
they call "the Great Contraction," is the Great Depression
of the 1930s which was much worse. Unemployment in Germany
and Denmark rose over 30%. Building activity fell 82% in the United
States. Chile saw a 90% collapse in its exports.
Tax revenues
fall in an economic slump. Government expenses increase (especially
when the authorities are ready to do "whatever it takes"
to stir a recovery). Typically, say Reinhart and Rogoff, public
debt increases 86% over a three-year period following a financial
calamity. Then come more catastrophes, caused by too much debt in
the public sector. Both Britain and America are now running deficits
of more than 10% of GDP. Neither has a creditable plan for reducing
debt or deficits. So stay tuned. Much more trouble lies ahead.
October
21,
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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