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Something
for Nothing – Courtesy of the Federal Reserve
Nevada's been betting on the come
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
Las Vegas
is a city built on the dream of getting something for nothing. But
not only the tourists seek Lady Luck.
Casinos, small
businesses and governments have all planned and expanded, counting
on the dream of easy money namely, more money and expanded
credit for everyone, courtesy of the Federal Reserve.
During the
past decade, "Americans could reap without planting,"
financial author Bill Bonner writes. "They could consume without
earning. They could invest without saving, and spend as much as
they wanted without running out of money. They were the world's
luckiest people they had the world's reserve currency ...
and access to the whole world's credit."
With The Maestro,
Alan Greenspan, at its controls, the Fed, America's central bank,
wildly created money out of thin air. The M-2 money supply (currency,
demand deposits, money market funds, savings accounts and small
time deposits) rose from just under $5 trillion to just over $6.7
trillion from January of 2001 to January 2006. Then Greenspan handed
the reins of the Fed over to Ben Bernanke, who proceeded to create
another $1 trillion more. The amount of money created just since
the beginning of 2001 $2.7 trillion was the total
M-2 money supply just two decades ago, in late 1986!
This furious
monetary pumping labeled "Operation Enduring Bubble"
by investor and financial commentator William Fleckenstein
was a reaction to the tech stock crash of 2000 and the Y2K scare,
and served to produce the housing bubble that is now busting.
With the Fed
providing high-powered monetary punch, Americans were ready to party.
Though they hadn't saved any money, their houses were increasing
in value every day. So it was time to borrow some money and let
the good times roll in Vegas. Gaming wins in Clark County climbed
from $7.6 billion in 2001 to nearly $10.9 billion last year. Total
employment increased by over 200,000 jobs in the same time period,
and annual visitor volume increased from 35 million to over 39 million.
No wonder new
resort projects totaling more than 4.7 million square feet of new
convention space and 38,127 new hotel rooms are scheduled for construction
between now and the end of 2010. Over $30 billion in bets on the
Strip are riding on assumptions that Americans will not only maintain
their pace of partying during the stock and housing bubbles, but
that even more people will join in.
However, it's
not just private business that ramped up during the Greenspan/Bernanke
bubbles. Nevada's state government general fund budget is projected
to be $3.5 billion in 2009, a near-doubling from 2003's $1.8 billion.
Local municipalities have also beefed up, as the city of Las Vegas
budget more than doubled from 2001 to 2008, and Clark County and
the city of Henderson nearly doubled.
Unfortunately,
this explosion in development on the Strip and in local government
was based not on sound economic fundamentals, but on an economic
chimera created by the Fed. "The boom,' then, is actually
a period of wasteful misinvestment," economist Murray Rothbard
wrote in America's
Great Depression. "It is the time when errors are made,
due to bank credit's tampering with the free market."
What Rothbard
was describing, as have other Austrian-school economists, was the
business cycle when "businessmen are misled by bank
credit inflation to invest too much in higher-order capital goods,"
like land, plant and equipment.
What follows
is a bust a recession or depression where these wasteful
investment errors are liquidated. As Rothbard explains that some
investments will be totally abandoned, he mentions something Nevadans
are very familiar with: Western ghost towns.
The cleansing
of these malinvestments is now well underway, starting with the
housing market. David Rosenberg of Merrill Lynch contends that the
five-plus-year consumer spending binge is over, and that a long
consumer de-leveraging process is underway.
Now, instead
of casinos adding the jobs they once projected, Strip properties
are shedding unneeded workers. State tax receipts have fallen nearly
$1 billion short of the budget levels state lawmakers presumed last
year, and rumors circulate that local government employers may soon
be handing out pink slips. And while a lack of financing has stopped
some projected resort properties, on the Strip construction continues
around the clock. The anticipation is that once the new building
is completed, the tourists will still come and will spend
generously.
As
all gamblers know, bucking the house odds is no way, in the long
run, to get rich. It's the same with the printing of money and creation
of easy credit: They won't produce prosperity.
Which means
that the next Vegas boom, almost certainly, is a long way off.
April
28, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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