Peering
into the Abyss
by Peter Schiff
For a few fleeting,
horrifying moments this past week the fault lines that underlie
the global economic crisis erupted into plain view. With deft and
quick effort leaders in Washington, Europe and Asia papered over
the fissures and fears largely subsided. But the shock of plain
truths which resulted in violent currency movements are the latest
reminder that the 21st century economic order will bear little resemblance
to the world we now know.
The tremors
began in Beijing, where an essay from the governor of the Peoples
Bank of China seemed to favor the creation of an IMF currency to
replace the U.S. dollar as the worlds reserve. In Europe,
the rotating president of the European Union, outgoing Czech Prime
Minister Mirek Topolanek, characterized Americas plan to combat
the widening global recession as the road to hell. At
the same time, British Member of the European Parliament Daniel
Hannan made headlines the world over with his stinging rebuke of
the inflationary and debt-focused policies of the current UK government.
As a result
of these clearly voiced frustrations, the U.S. dollar suffered a
drubbing. However, Treasury secretary Geithner and his ministerial
counterparts in Berlin, Paris and London did their best to convince
everyone that the world is pulling together as one to combat the
economic crisis. The charm offensive was effective in restoring
calm.
Given
the size and scope of the remedies that the Obama Administration
is cajoling the world to adopt, it is likely that the unease will
grow until many countries emerge in open revolt to Americas
plans.
President Obama
and the majority of our leadership on both sides of the aisle are
confident that the right mix of monetary and fiscal policy can restart
the spending party that defined America for a generation. And as
the bleary-eyed revelers wisely reach for a cup of black coffee
or stumble into a rehab center, Obama is pouring grain alcohol into
the punch bowl hoping to lure the walking zombies back onto the
dance floor. Europe and Asia fully understand that Obama will ask
them to lend the booze.
Washington
is telling us that our problems result from a lack of consumer spending.
Therefore, the solution is for government spending to pick up the
slack. However, if Americans are too broke to spend, then how can
our government spend for us? The only money they have is taken from
us through taxation. To postpone immediate tax hikes (adding interest
for good measure), Washington plans to borrow more from abroad.
However, if our foreign creditors refuse to pony up, much of the
money will simply be printed instead.
Printing money
is merely taxation in another form. Rather than robbing citizens
of their money, government robs their money of its purchasing power.
Many people assume that if government provides the funds we can
spend our way back to prosperity. However, its not money we
lack but production. If the government simply prints money and doles
it out, we will not be able to buy more stuff; we will simply pay
higher prices. The only way to buy more is to produce more. It is
production that creates purchasing power, not the printing press!
Our
current predicament resulted in part from our efforts to maintain
consumer spending at unsustainable levels, primarily by the reckless
extension of consumer credit. Pushing up consumer credit to levels
not supported by market realities required government subsidies
and guarantees. In addition, Wall Street pitched in with securitization
and credit default swaps, which created a false sense of confidence
among our creditors that high-risk consumer loans could actually
be repaid. However, now that all those gimmicks have blown up, the
entire farce has been exposed. There is simply no way to sustain
an economy based on consumer credit.
The Administration
argues that more debt will restore growth which will then allow
the repayment of borrowed money. First, our government has never,
and will never, repay anything. Second, the assumption that additional
borrowing and spending will restore growth is flawed. In fact, more
consumer debt and government spending will undermine our economy
and restrain growth.
To solve our
problems we must first come to terms with their source. That is
what the voices from abroad are telling us. We borrowed and spent
ourselves to the brink of bankruptcy, and now we must save and produce
ourselves back to prosperity.
Of course,
this simple solution is rejected by Keynesian economists who insist
that we must keep spending. The paradox of thrift, as
they call it, holds that if we stop spending the recession will
worsen. While this is true, it is hardly a paradox. As they say
in the fitness game, no pain, no gain. No one said this
was going to be easy, but the only way to rebuild a viable economy
is to let the phony one collapse. If we follow the Keynesians, the
fault lines will continue to widen until our wealth, our lifestyle,
our very ability to prosper is swallowed up. The calls from abroad
will only get louder until we face this ugly truth.
March
29, 2009
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.
Copyright
© 2009 Euro Pacific Capital
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