Empire of Debt
by
Doug French
by Doug French
America
has changed. From a nation running a surplus and minding its own
business, America is now the world’s biggest busybody, requiring
the kindness of strangers to fund not only its overseas government
follies, but also, the lifestyles of its over-indebted private citizens.
The
story of when America turned its back on what had made it a rich
nation, and why, is told by two of the world’s best financial writers,
Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin, in their new book, Empire
of Debt.
The
pair teamed up a year ago to pen Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st
Century. LRC readers are well acquainted with Bonner’s Mencken-like
wit mixed with keen market insights and the occasional dash of Dr.
Freud.
The
irreverent Bonner and Wiggin write that the purpose of Empire
"is to show that the U.S. is headed for trouble."
And that, "their burden is only to show that the people making
important policy decisions are morons and frauds."
The
authors have a penchant for old ideas, old rules and old investors
like the soon-to-be 93-year-old Sir John Templeton who shares their
view that stocks and houses are over priced, and contrary to what
Dick Cheney says, that trade and federal deficits do matter.
Most
new ideas fail, and the new economy idea that debt is good, stock
valuations will forever remain high and that you can get something
for nothing is just chimera.
Bonner
and Wiggin explain that typically the imperial power provides the
public good of security and order but expects to earn a profit in
the form of tribute in return. However, America has turned this
equation on its head. America doesn’t take tribute from dependent
territories. It borrows from them. "Living standards rise in
the U.S.," the authors point out. "But they are rising
on borrowed money, not on stolen money."
In
1952, the authors note, foreign sources provided just five percent
of the Federal government’s borrowings, but by 2005 that percentage
had grown nine fold. History shows that central power weakens over
time, while the subordinate states gain strength. Therefore, it’s
just a matter of time before they stop supporting the American empire
with loans.
America’s
empire building began with Woodrow Wilson, a man the authors describe
as "a self-satisfied, sanctimonious delusional bungler who
practically single-handedly transformed the country into a mocking
shell of what it was supposed to be."
Along
with Wilson, "the revolution of 1913" set America on its
destructive course. The federal income tax was instituted in 1913
with the 16th Amendment. The new tax seemed harmless
enough starting at one percent and topping out at seven percent.
But only five years later the top rate was 77 percent and by the
end of WWII the bottom rate had grown to 23 percent.
With
the 17th Amendment enacted in 1913, Senators were elected
to office by a direct vote of the people. Prior to that, each state’s
legislature appointed Senators. "Essentially this amendment
created a more centralized government than the Founding Fathers
intended or envisioned," Bonner and Wiggin contend.
Also
put in place in 1913 was the nation’s central bank, the Federal
Reserve. Presidents were given the right to appoint the Federal
Reserve chairman and the central bank served to cartelize the banking
system, determining interest rates and the supply of money. The
empire could now be paid for directly by the income tax and indirectly
through the tax of central bank inflation.
The
New Deal brought the idea that government should make things better
for people with programs such as Social Security, Aid to Dependent
Children and a litany of others. Roosevelt pushed through this legislation
after being stymied by the "nine old men" on the Supreme
Court that initially ruled that the New Deal legislation was unconstitutional.
Roosevelt proposed to add court seats for any members who were 70
years old that did not retire. The court saw the writing on the
wall and acted accordingly.
Lyndon
Baines Johnson and Richard Nixon continued the empire building with
"guns and butter," "the great society," and
the abandonment of what was left of the gold standard, which "launched
a new era of paper money, a Pax Dollarum that continues to this
day." The U.S. ran a trade deficit for the first time in 1975
and has never looked back. And as Bonner and Wiggin point out, the
U.S. has added trillions to the world’s supply of dollars and credit,
since 1971, while "only about 58,000 metric tons of gold have
been brought from the ground."
The
authors correctly peg Ronald Reagan as "redefining conservatism
as an activist, empire-building creed." Foreign policy was
left to the neo-cons with domestic policy soon to follow. "Reagan
thought he knew what was best for everyone."
The
Reagan era ushered in the "Shareholder Nation." We were
now a country of capitalists funding our own retirements with our
401k plans. Just blindly plunk some money every month in mutual
funds and hang on until retirement. After all, stocks always go
up in the long run. However, these new capitalists "had neither
the time, the money, nor the training to be real capitalists; they
were merely chumps for Wall Street."
By
the mid-1980’s America was a net debtor, after being the world’s
largest creditor when Eisenhower was in the White House. Now the
nation is the largest debtor of all time, with George W. Bush adding
more to the nation’s debt than had built up in the first 200 years
of its existence. As with their government, its citizens now have
a negative savings rate. When Reagan took office, his constituents
saved eight percent of their incomes.
The
authors pick out New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman for
considerable punishment. They describe Friedman as their "favorite
imperial columnist" and then the reader is treated to half
a dozen pages of delicious Friedman bashing. "His work has
negative merit," write Bonner and Wiggin. "Every column
subtracts from the sum of human knowledge in the way a broken pipe
drains the town’s water tower."
Bonner
and Wiggin turn to the investment philosophy that they are famous
for at the end of the book. They make the often-made point that
progress in the financial industry is cyclical not cumulative. And
contrary to what you hear from the talking financial heads on TV,
most investors will lose money. "Not only is investing not
a science, it is not even an art. It is more like holding up liquor
stores. Sometimes you get away with it. Sometimes you don’t. But
you’re generally better off if you don’t; for there’s nothing like
success to set up failure."
The
only way to make money, say the authors is to invest like an insider,
on private information and personal experience, and be patient and
faithful. Essential rules must be followed, such as "the traditions,
the lessons of history, the distilled wisdom of generations of dead
people." And finally: "Be prepared. Say something nice
to your mother. Offer a bum a drink. And buy gold."
It
is hard to know when the empire and its bubbles will collapse. Bill
Bonner and Addison Wiggin don’t pretend to know. But, Empire
of Debt makes the wait more fun.
September
7, 2005
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He is the 2005 recipient of the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the
Center for Libertarian Studies.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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