The
Charm Offensive
by
Peter Schiff
This week,
Team Obama took their dog and pony show on the road. Treasury Secretary
Geithner went to China, Fed Chairman Bernanke to Capitol Hill, and
the President himself began a Mideast tour in Saudi Arabia. This
full-court press is not coincidental, and comes just as the federal
government has begun unloading trillions of dollars in new Treasury
obligations. The coordinated charm offensive is meant to assure
the world-at-large that the United States can repay these obligations
without destroying the dollar.
Given the renewed
weakness in the dollar and the recent expressions of concern from
China, our largest creditor, about the safety of its current holdings,
this is no easy sell. Not only must our leaders convince holders
of our debt not to sell what they already own, but to back up the
truck and buy a whole lot more. The hope is that a dream team consisting
of a charismatic politician, a skilled Wall Street banker with longstanding
ties to China, and a respected Fed Chairman, can close the deal.
However, no matter how slick the sales pitch, no amount of lipstick
can dress up this pig.
The most obvious
fear the trio must address is that oversized deficits will persist
indefinitely. Reading from a carefully scripted rebuttal book, all
three proclaim that as soon as the stimulus revives our economy,
the government will take all necessary steps to rein in the deficits
that result. Bernanke's testimony showcases this rhetorical shift.
The Fed Chairman claimed that catastrophe has been averted and that
the recession is nearly over. As a result, he advised Congress to
now focus on debt management. How he expects them to do that was
left unexamined.
Setting aside
the fact that the recession is far from over and that the stimulus
will actually weaken the economy in the long run, Bernanke's words
were less a practical guide to Congress than a bromide for our foreign
creditors. Meanwhile, Obama carefully peppers his speeches with
calls for Americans to live within their means, to save more and
spend less, to produce more and consume less. But nothing in the
government's current fiscal or monetary policy will encourage such
behavior. In fact, the objective of economic stimulus is to prevent
such changes from taking place!
The laughter
of Chinese students that greeted Secretary Geithner at Peking University
shows how ridiculous this spiel sounds overseas. Actions speak louder
than words, and the actions of the current Administration are deafening.
Multi-trillion dollar deficits, bailouts, nationalizations, quantitative
easing, and grandiose plans for government-provided healthcare,
education, and alternative energy, render all their claims of future
prudence meaningless. If our leaders will not make tough choices
now, why should anyone believe they will do so later when those
choices will be even harder to make?
Of course,
it's not just major holders, like China and Saudi Arabia, that need
to be convinced. Since the largest holders are already in so deep,
they have the greatest short-term incentive to play ball. While
throwing good money after bad is certainly a lousy investment strategy,
it is politically expedient as it delays the need to officially
acknowledge losses. The spin is designed to keep all the smaller,
more nimble holders from dumping their Treasuries. The major holders
can publicly pledge their commitment to Treasuries, while they privately
planning their exit strategies, as long as they feel that the smaller
holders won't spook the market by front-running their trades.
However, once
the psychology turns, there is no way to stop the rush for the exits.
Remember how quickly the secondary market for subprime mortgages
collapsed? One day, investors were lining up to buy; the next day,
the stuff couldn't be given away. Make no mistake about it, we are
issuing subprime paper and no amount of political spin can alter
that reality. Bogus credit ratings aside, I think the world already
knows this and it's just a matter of time before someone admits
it.
In the meantime,
by continuing to lend, our creditors merely supply us the shovels
to dig ourselves into an even deeper economic hole. Their credit
enables our government to grow when it needs to shrink, finances
bailouts of companies that should be allowed to fail, and enables
a nation that should be saving and producing to continue borrowing
and spending. As a result, the more money the world loans us, the
less capable we are of paying it back. I really wish the world would
stop doing us favors, as neither party can afford the consequences.
For an timely
example, just look at California. With an unmanageable $20 billion
deficit, California recently asked Washington for a bailout. With
none immediately forthcoming, California was forced to make real
and needed budget cuts. The hard choices, which will benefit California
in the long run, would not have been made if federal funds had been
committed. We all should be so lucky.
June
6, 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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