Bad Times Coming
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
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People in
New York and Washington who know a great deal more than I do about
high finance are apparently scared. Like passengers on an airplane,
when the pilot, co-pilot and flight engineer get scared, it's time
for us to do likewise.
The bailout
of the Bear Stearns investment bank was done for one reason: There
was widespread fear that if Bear Stearns went belly up, it would
set off a chain reaction among the investment banks and lead to
a financial meltdown.
In addition
to bailing out Bear Stearns, the Federal Reserve has handed out
$260 billion in short-term loans to American banks since December.
Now there is open talk that some of the regional banks could fail.
It sounds very much like a severe recession at best or another depression
at worst.
Of course,
there is nothing we can do about it. If certain mistakes that were
made by the financiers, the Federal Reserve and the U.S. government
are going to produce this effect, then the debt bomb has already
exploded. The overpressure and heat blast just haven't reached us
yet.
Economic collapses
are not events that practice egalitarianism. If you are very wealthy,
chances are you won't be affected at all. I've often compared the
economy to a stick floating upright. When it starts to sink, those
near the bottom of the stick drown first, while those at the very
top usually stay dry. You remember Daddy Warbucks in "Little
Orphan Annie"? He stayed rich in the midst of the Great Depression.
My own father,
though he was never rich, did manage to keep a job throughout those
bad times. The unemployment was about 20 percent. Banks, businesses
and even local governments closed shop. After all, a government
can't collect taxes if nobody is making any money.
We as a nation
have been living on credit, and I fear the buzzards of debt have
come home to roost. The housing bubble has burst, and there is an
inventory of unsold homes and homes foreclosed on that will be years
getting rid of. That, in turn, affects the construction industry,
as well as the building materials, furniture, appliances and so
forth. It affects local taxes.
Bad mortgages
were bundled and sold as securities, and have, like a virus, spread
throughout the financial system. A lot of banks that hold some of
this paper have no idea what value to put on it. A lot of bad loans
will have to be written off. A lot of collateral is turning out
to be worthless.
The best of
all possible worlds for the individual is to own property, without
a mortgage, and have a stash of cash. I'm country boy enough to
know that as long as you have even a bit of land and a roof that
doesn't leak, it's hard to starve, although the nation's obesity
problem might vanish in the process.
The worst
of all possible worlds is to be working for a salary and not own
anything that isn't mortgaged or otherwise not paid for. Many Americans
unfortunately live off their cash flow from one paycheck to the
next, with every cent obligated for stuff they've bought on credit.
If times get really hard so that people who get laid off can't find
jobs, such people will lose everything.
The Federal
Reserve is pumping so much paper money into the system to avoid
bankruptcies and deflation, I don't see how it's going to avoid
inflation. At the same time, our own beloved federal government
has run its debt up beyond all reason and enacted so many entitlement
programs, they alone will soon be sucking up every penny of tax
revenue.
Pacifists,
at least, will gain a new tool in their struggle for peace. All
they will have to do to stop war is cut off the credit, since the
U.S. government will eventually be too broke to buy bullets or bombs,
much less billion-dollar airplanes.
April
1, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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