When Peter Schiff was making the rounds on U.S. cable news shows in 2007, warning about the collapse of the housing market, anchors and fellow guests literally laughed in his face when he launched into his gloomy predictions. That kind of meltdown could never happen, they said. The economy was on rock-solid ground. In those rosier economic days, Schiff, the president of Darien, Conn.s Euro Pacific Capital, was repeatedly cast as a successful broker whod gone off the deep end. These days, a vindicated Schiff is back on the talk show circuit with an even darker message. The current recession, he argues, is only the beginning of a larger economic restructuring. The American economy has been destroyed by years of reckless spending and borrowing. And now, the U.S. government is so deeply in debt that at some point in the very near future, he says, its lenders namely China are going to come to their senses and cut America off. We cant have one country that just borrows and one country that just consumes thats supported by the rest of the world. It doesnt work. When this system collapses and it inevitably must, he insists inflation will run wild as the U.S. prints money to support its spending habit. Interest rates will jump and everyone will suffer. The real day of reckoning is still to come. This time around, nobody is laughing at Schiff. Anyone who has taken so much as a cursory glance at Americas financial books and seen the masses of red ink has come to a grim conclusion: not only is the situation no longer sustainable, its rapidly getting worse. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that the U.S. deficit this year will amount to $1.8 trillion (all figures in US$) and it sees the government spending about $1.2 trillion more than it brings in for each of the next several years. Thats one of the more optimistic forecasts. Others say that over the next few decades, revenues will remain relatively flat while spending soars as demand grows for benefits such as health care for an aging population. The U.S. debt now stands at over $10 trillion and will hit $17 trillion within the decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office a number so large that it will nearly match the entire yearly output of the worlds most powerful country. In short, America is about to go broke and every Western country, including Canada, will pay the price. Whats alarming about the situation in the U.S. is just how quickly and easily the country found itself buried under a mountain of debt. Back in 2001, the Congressional Budget Office was estimating that by now, the U.S. should be running a healthy annual surplus in fact it figured that when added together, the surpluses between 2001 and 2011 would total $5.6 trillion. At the time, it seemed like a reasonable projection. After all, in 2001 the government recorded a surplus amounting to $128 billion. But two important things happened since then that launched the U.S. into a very different future: the dot-com bust and George W. Bush. The recession that followed in 2001 caused tax revenues to fall and spending on social services to rise, taking a good bite out of those estimated budget surpluses. At the same time, newly elected president George W. Bush emboldened by the surplus hed inherited when he came to office proceeded to dole out steep and widespread tax cuts, which cut revenue by about five per cent. That was followed by a new $530-billion drug benefit program in 2003. To top it all off, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan caused defence spending to explode. (The bill for those wars so far: $830 billion.) In just four years, Americas massive budget surplus was decimated and turned into a $400-billion annual deficit. Since then, it briefly showed signs of recovery, but when the recession hit in 2008, the deficit quickly plummeted back down to around $400 billion. President Barack Obama hasnt helped matters. Faced with a severe recession he has had little choice but to push policies that have piled debt on top of debt. Nearly $3 trillion has been spent rescuing banks and the automakers (thats about as much as the entire government spent in all of 2008), and stimulus programs have added another $800 billion to the governments tab. Its hard to overestimate the massive spending spree weve had in the United States over the past few years, says Brian Riedl, a budget analyst at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington-based research organization. Under Obamas budget, the debt-to-GDP ratio will double to 82 per cent by the end of the decade a level not seen since the 1950s, when the U.S. was recovering from the Second World War. But thats not the worst of it. The biggest spending is still to come. With 75 million baby boomers retiring, there will be massive new strains on social services in the coming years. Three programs alone Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security will create a $43-trillion liability over the next 75 years, says Riedl. That kind of spending would push Americas debt-to-GDP ratio to levels that have only been touched by bankrupt Latin American nations. To cover these costs, the government would have to more than double income tax rates to more than 60 per cent an option no lawmaker would dare consider. These trends mean that even if Obamas stimulus spending packages wind down as planned and the economy recovers this year and next, there is still no hope whatsoever that deficits can be eliminated in the short term. This is an unprecedented position. After the Second World War, when the U.S. had a debt-to-GDP ratio of more than 100 per cent, nobody expected deficit spending to continue, and it didnt, says Alan Auerbach, an economist at the University of California, Berkeley, who has studied the debt problem. The deficits of the 1980s were also quickly erased. The difference here is that things will continue to unravel because were going to have rapidly growing entitlement spending and no comparable growth in taxes under current policy. June 23, 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 MacLeans
|
|||