The
Price of Pretense in Pittsburgh
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Lehman
Brothers Revisited
As another
G20 meeting rolls around, this time on home soil, the time comes
once again for the economically curious but politically unconnected
to wonder what is really happening behind closed doors. But while
admiring the pageantry, chuckling at the awkward group photos, and
parsing the joint communiqués like newly found Dead Sea scrolls,
the overwhelming majority of observers will miss the meetings
dominant theme: hypocrisy.
Everyone agrees
that the principal agenda item in Pittsburgh will be the need to
rein in the “global imbalances” that created the late economic crisis.
Everyone also agrees that these imbalances involve too much spending
and borrowing by Americans and too little of both by the Chinese
and other developing nations. In his remarks this week at the United
Nations, President Obama used his peerless rhetorical skill to frame
the issues clearly and plainly. Noting that a return to pre-crisis
economics is impossible, the president assured the world that his
administration will pursue policies to increase savings and decrease
spending at home and challenged his Chinese counterparts to enact
measures with the opposite effect in their own country.
While this
is roughly what needs to happen, President Obama is actually doing
everything in his power to prevent it. In point of fact, every policy
move undertaken by his administration has exacerbated the very imbalances
he supposedly wants to curtail. To so seamlessly profess one goal
while simultaneously undermining it is an impressive piece of political
theater. Unfortunately, this particular drama is likely to have
an unhappy ending and the ticket price will be staggering.
What exactly
are the federal fiscal stimuli other than deliberate, but clumsy,
efforts to get people, companies, and governments to spend money
they don't have? Programs like tax credits for new homebuyers or
“cash for clunkers” are intended to encourage consumers to spend
money that they otherwise might have saved. Grants to municipalities
allow them to hire workers and spend money locally that they otherwise
would have forgone.
Federal intervention
in the mortgage and credit card debt markets, where they are now
nearly the sole buyer, has been specifically undertaken to keep
interest rates low and financial firms solvent so that Americans
can keep buying homes and using their credit cards. While the Fed
will continue to hand out free money to any and all borrowers for
an extended period, the abysmally low interest on deposits
that such a policy creates disincentivizes personal savings even
further.
In 2009, despite
the tilted playing field, the American people have heroically managed
to increase their savings (although clearly not as much as they
would have in a free market). But President Obamas runaway
deficit spending is undermining their efforts. The simple truth
is that government debt is our debt. So if a family manages, at
some cost to their lifestyle, to squirrel away an extra $1,000 in
saving this year, but the government adds $20,000 in new debt per
household (each familys approximate share of the $1.8 trillion
fiscal 2009 deficit), that family ends up owing $19,000 more than
they did at the beginning of the year!
So much for
our end of the bargain. How about on the other side of the Pacific?
Will the Chinese restore balance by increasing their spending? How
can they while they are lending us all their money? Remember, any
money the Chinese spend is money they cannot loan to us. So, if
China really wanted to spur domestic consumption, the best way to
do so would be to stop buying our debt. Even better, they could
sell Treasuries they already own and distribute the proceeds to
their citizens to spend.
However, the
Obama administration is heavily lobbying the Chinese to get them
to step up to the plate and buy record amounts of new Treasury debt.
Obama cannot have it both ways. He cannot claim he wants the Chinese
to spend more, but then beg the Chinese government to take money
away from Chinese consumers and loan it to the United States Treasury.
In the end,
Obama will get precisely what he publicly claims to desire but privately
dreads. The Chinese government will come to its senses and stop
buying Treasuries. This will cause the U.S. dollar to collapse,
but it will also allow Chinese citizens to fully enjoy the fruits
of their labor.
Once the Chinese
begin consuming more of their own products, those products will
no longer be available to Americans. Once they start spending more
of their incomes on themselves, those funds will no longer be available
for us to borrow. Unfortunately, that is when our real economic
crisis will begin. The worst part is that the longer these imbalances
are allowed to continue, the larger they grow and the more painful
the ultimate adjustment process becomes.
But for now,
its all pomp, circumstance and hypocrisy in Pittsburgh. Why
yes, Madam Finance Minister, I'd love another of those crab cakes!
September
26, 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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