Greenspan’s Whopper
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
"You are
wasting your life and your talents writing about Alan Greenspan
every day," said an old friend.
For years,
we have been working on Greenspan’s obituary. As far as we know,
the man is still in excellent health. But we do not want to be caught
off guard. Maybe we could even rush out a quickie biography, explaining
to the masses the meaning of Mr. Greenspan’s life and work.
Perhaps our
friend is right. But then again, we weren’t doing anything special
before we started keeping up with the Fed chairman. Besides, we
see something in Alan Greenspan’s career…his comportment…his betrayal
of his old ideas…his pact with the Devil in Washington…and his attempt
to hold off nature’s revenge at least until he leaves the Fed…that
is both entertaining and educational. It smacks of Greek tragedy
without the boring monologues or bloody intrigues. Even the language
of it is Greek to most people. Though the Fed chairman speaks English,
of course, his words often need translation and historical annotation.
Rarely does the maestro make a statement that is comprehensible
to the ordinary mortal. So much the better, we guess. If the average
fellow really knew what he was talking about, he would be alarmed.
And we have no illusions. Whoever attempts to explain it to him
will get no thanks; he might as well tell his teenage daughter what
is in her hotdog.
We persevere
anyway, more in mischief than in earnest.
The background:
The U.S. economy faced a major recession in 2001 and had a minor
one. The necessary slump he held off by a dramatic resort to central
planning. The "invisible hand" is fine for lumber and
poultry prices. But at the short end of the market in debt, Alan
Greenspan’s paw presses down, like a butcher’s thumb on the meat
scale. The Fed quickly cut rates to head off the recession. Indeed,
never before had rates been cut so much, so fast. George W. Bush,
meanwhile, boosted spending. The resultant shock of renewed, ersatz
demand not only postponed the recession; it misled consumers, investors
and businessmen to make even more egregious errors. Investors bought
stock with low earnings yields. Consumers went further into debt.
Government liabilities rose. The trade deficit grew larger. Even
on the other side of the globe, foreign businessmen geared up to
meet the phony new demand; China enjoyed a capital spending boom
as excessive as any the world has ever seen.
What the Greenspan
Fed had accomplished was to put off a natural, cyclical correction
and transmogrify an entire economy into a monstrous ECONOMIC bubble.
A bubble in stock prices may do little real economic damage. Eventually,
the bubble pops and the phony money people thought they had disappears
like a puff of marijuana smoke. There are winners and losers. But
in the end, the economy is about where it began – unharmed and unhelped.
The households are still there…and still spending money as they
did before…and the companies still in business. Only those that
leveraged themselves too highly in the bubble years are in any trouble
– and they probably deserve to go out of business.
Even a property
bubble may come and go with little effect on the overall economy.
House prices have been running up in France, for example, at nearly
the same rates as in America. But in France there is very little
mortgage refinancing…or "taking out" of equity. The European
Central Bank was repeatedly urged to lower rates in line with those
in America. It refused to budge. Without falling rates, there was
no "refi boom." Nor were European banks offering "home
equity lines of credit." Property could run up…and run down…and
the only people who cared would be the actual buyers or sellers,
who either cursed themselves or felt like geniuses, depending on
their luck.
But in Greenspan’s
bubble economy something remarkably awful happened. Householders
were lured to "take out" the equity in their homes. They
believed that the bubble in real estate priced created "wealth"
that they could spend. Many did not hesitate. Mortgage debt ballooned
in the early years of the 21st century – from about $6 trillion
in 1999 to nearly $9 trillion at the end of 2004. Three trillion
dollars may not seem like much to you, dear reader. But it increased
the average household’s debt by $30,000. Americans still lived in
more or less the same houses. But they owed far more on them.
We had given
up all hope of ever getting an honest word out of the Fed chairman
on this subject when, in early February, in the year of our Lord
2005, the maestro slipped up. His speech was entitled "Current
Account." Jet lagged, his defenses down, the poor man seems
to have committed truth.
"The growth
of home mortgage debt has been the major contributor to the decline
in the personal saving rate in the United States from almost 6 percent
in 1993 to its current level of 1 percent," he admitted. Thus,
he did bring up the subject. Then, he began a confession: The rapid
growth in home mortgage debt over the past five years has been "driven
largely by equity extraction," said the man most responsible
for it. By this time, listeners were beginning to put Mr. Greenspan
at the scene of the crime. And pretty soon, even the dullest economist
in the room was adding 2 and 2. Mr. Greenspan lowered lending rates
far below where a free market in credit would have put them. With
little to be gained by putting money in savings accounts…and a lot
to be gained by borrowing…households did what you would expect;
they ceased saving and began borrowing. What did they borrow against?
The rising value of their homes – "extracting equity,"
to use Mr. Greenspan’s own jargon. The Fed chairman had misled them
into believing that house prices increases were the same as new,
disposable wealth.
But the world’s
most famous and most revered economist didn’t stop there. He must
have had the audience on the edge of its chairs. He confessed not
only to having done the thing…but also to having his wits about
him when he did it. This was no accident. No negligence. This was
intentional.
"Approximately
half of equity extraction shows up in additional household expenditures,
reducing savings commensurately and thereby presumably contributing
to the current account deficit…. The fall in U.S. interest rates
since the early 1980s has supported home price increases,"
continues America’s answer to Adam Smith.
People take
money out of their homes. With this source of spending power available
to them, they see no reason to save. Instead, they spend – often
on foreign-made goods. With no savings available domestically, America
must look overseas for credit.
"The obvious
and most important point is that rapid growth of U.S. mortgage debt
did not come out of thin air," comments Stephen Roach. "It
was, of course, a direct outgrowth of the Fed’s hyper-accommodation
of the post-bubble era namely, short-term interest rates that
have been negative in real terms for longer than at any point since
the 1970s.".
The crime of
which Mr. Greenspan is guilty is fraud. Putting interest rates at
an artificially low level, the Fed chairman intentionally misled
Americans. Were it not for the Fed’s low rates and easy lending
policies, Americans wouldn’t have thought themselves so rich. Their
houses wouldn’t have gone up so much; they wouldn’t have taken out
so much equity, because they wouldn’t have had any equity to take
out. They would have had to spend less, which would have reduced
the U.S. current account deficit and diminished household indebtedness.
"Lacking
in job creation and real wage growth," explains Roach, "private
sector real wage and salary disbursements have increased a mere
4% over the first 37 months of this recovery fully ten percentage
points short of the average gains of more than 14% that occurred
over the five preceding cyclical upturns. Yet consumers didn’t flinch
in the face of what in the past would have been a major impediment
to spending. Spurred on by home equity extraction and Bush Administration
tax cuts, income-short households pushed the consumption share of
US GDP up to a record 71.1% in early 2003 (and still 70.7% in 4Q04)
an unprecedented breakout from the 67% norm that had prevailed
over the 1975 to 2000 period…. At long last, Chairman Greenspan
owns up to the central role he and his colleagues at the Federal
Reserve have played in fostering these developments."
Our
own Fed chairman, guardian of the nation’s money…custodian of its
economy…night watchman of its wealth…
How could he
do such a thing? And yet he has done it. He turned a financial bubble
into an economic bubble. Not only were the prices of financial assets
ballooned to excess…so were the prices of houses…and so were the
debts of the average household.
Where does
it lead? The force of a correction is equal to the deception that
preceded it. Mr. Greenspan’s whopper must be followed by a whopper
of a slump.
February
12, 2005
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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