Financial
Crisis Called Off
by
James Howard Kunstler
Whew, what
a relief! Everybody from Ben Bernanke and a Whos Who of banking
poobahs schmoozing it up in the heady vapors of Jackson Hole, Wyoming,
to the dull scribes at The New York Times, toiling in their
MC Escher hall of mirrors, to poor dim James Surowiecki over at
The New Yorker, to wonder of wonders! the Green
Shoots claque at the cable networks, to the assorted quants, grinds,
nerds, pimps, factotums, catamites, and cretins in every office
from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to the International Monetary
Fund every man-Jack and woman-Jill around the levers of power
and opinion weighed in last week with glad tidings that the worlds
capital finance system survived what turned out to be a mere protracted
bout of heartburn and has been reborn as the Miracle Bull economy.
Our worries over. If you believe the claptrap. Which I dont.
All this goes
to show is how completely the people in charge of things in the
United States have lost their minds. They seem to think this mass
exercise in pretend will resurrect the great march to the Wal-Marts,
to the new car showrooms, and the cul-de-sac model houses, reignite
another round of furious sprawl-building, salad-shooter importing,
and no-doc liar-lending, not to mention the pawning off of innovative,
securitized stinking-carp debt paper onto credulous pension funds
in foreign lands where due diligence has never been heard of, renew
the leveraged buying-out of zippy-looking businesses by smoothies
who have no idea how to run them (and no real intention of doing
it, anyway), resuscitate the construction of additional strip malls,
new office park capacity and Big Box power centers,
restart the trade in granite countertops and home theaters, and
pack the turnstiles of Walt Disney world all this while turning
Afghanistan into a neighborhood that Beaver Cleaver would be proud
to call home.
America loves
the word recovery as only a catastrophically sick society
can. In recovery is the new universal mantra of loser
individuals and loser nations. Everybody in the USA is in recovery.
Even Michael Jackson (he may have given up on somatic activity but,
on the plus side, as the Rotarians love to say, hes quit using
drugs for once and for all, and the magazines have stopped publishing
photos of him taken after 1990, when he turned himself into something
out of the Hammer Films catalog).
To
sum it all up, the US economy is in recovery. Paul Krugman says
that well soon realize that Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is
growing. He actually said that on the Sunday TV chat circuit. Not
to put too fine a point on it, but I would really like to know what
you mean by that, Paul? Do you mean that the Atlanta homebuilders
are going to open up a new suburban frontier down in Twiggs County
so that commuters can enjoy driving Chrysler Crossfires a hundred
and sixty miles a day to new jobs as flash traders in the Peachtree
Plaza? Do you mean that the Home Equity Fairy is going to wade into
the sea of foreclosure and save twenty million mortgage holders
currently sojourning in the fathomless depths with the anglerfish?
Do you mean that all the bales of deliquescing, toxic assets
hidden in the vaults of Citibank, JP Morgan, Bank of America, et
al., (not to mention on the books of every pension fund in the USA,
and not a few elsewhere) will magically turn into Little Debbie
Snack Cakes on Labor Day weekend? Do you mean that American Express
and Master Card are about to declare a jubilee on accounts in default
everywhere? Do you mean that General Motors will produce a car that
a.) anyone really wants to buy and b.) that the company can sell
at a profit? Are you saying we get a do-over, going back to, say,
1981? Did we win some cosmic lottery that hasnt been announced
yet? Whats growing in this country besides unemployment, bankruptcy,
repossession, liquidation, gun ownership, and suicidal despair?
In short, are you out of your mind, Paul Krugman?
The key to
the current madness, of course, is this expectation, this wish,
really, that all the rackets, games, dodges, scams, and workarounds
that American banking, business, and government devised over the
past thirty years to cover up the dismal fact that we produce
so little of real value these days will just magically
return to full throttle, like a machine that has spent a few weeks
in the repair shop.
This is not
going to happen, of course. It is permanently and irredeemably broken
this Rube Goldberg contraption of swindles all based on the
idea that its possible to get something for nothing. And more
to the point, were really doing nothing to reconstruct our
economy along lines that are consistent with the realities of energy,
geopolitics, or resource scarcity. So far, our notions about a green
economy amount to little more than blowing green smoke up our collective
behind. We think were going to build green skyscrapers!
Were too dumb to see what a contradiction in terms this is.
The architects are completely uninterested in the one thing that
really is green traditional urban design
and most particularly the walkable neighborhood. Thats just
too conventional, not special enough, lacking in star power, not
enough of a statement, boring, tedious, so not cutting edge! We
blather about high-speed rail, but you cant even get from
Cleveland to Cincinnati on a regular train and whats
more amazing, nobody is really interested in making this happen.
All we really care about is finding some miracle method to keep
all the cars running.
What weve
been seeing is nothing more than a massive pump-and-dump operation
in the stock markets, most of it executed by programmed robot traders,
with the trading nut provided by taxpayers current and future. These
shenanigans add up to new risks and fragilities so extreme that
the next time a grain of sand catches in the exquisite machinery
they will sink the USA as a viable enterprise. We will end up discrediting
not just capitalism, but also the idea of capital per se, that is,
of deployable acquired wealth. As this occurs, of course, events
on the ground will give new meaning to the term reality television.
August
29,
2009
James
Howard Kunstler is perhaps best known for his 2005 book The
Long Emergency, which predicted the financial meltdown and
the implications of the peak oil problem. His 1993 book, The
Geography of Nowhere, about the fiasco of suburbia, is a
campus cult classic among the architecture and urban planning students.
It was followed by a sequel, Home
From Nowhere, and a companion book called The
City in Mind: Notes on the Urban Condition. Mr. Kunstler
is also the author of 10 novels including his latest book, World
Made By Hand, a story set in America’s post-oil future.
His articles have appeared in The New York Times, The
Washington Post, Rolling Stone and The Atlantic Monthly.
Copyright
© 2009 Daily Reckoning
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