Hair
of the Dog
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Dollar
Forced to Abdicate
The GDP numbers
out yesterday, which showed economic growth at 3.5% in the third
quarter, brought a deafening chorus from public and private economists
who all agreed that the recession is officially over. With such
a strong report, they are happy to tell us that not only has the
Fat Lady finished her aria, but she has left the building and is
sipping champagne in the bath. As usual, it falls on me to rain
on the parade.
Even the giddiest
commentators admit that the upside GDP surprise resulted almost
entirely from government interventions. But, by pushing up public
and private debt, expanding government, deepening trade deficits,
and pushing down savings rates, these interventions have succeeded
only in putting our economy back on an unsustainable path of borrowing
and spending. Accordingly, they have prevented the rebalancing necessary
for long-term health. Could there be a simpler illustration of trading
long-term pain for short-term gain?
Rather than
asking these pre-K economists to make such a three dimensional leap,
it may be easier just to give them a brief history lesson.
During the
decade that corresponds to the Great Depression, annual GNP expanded
for six years and contracted for four. After nose-diving in the
early years of the decade, GNP turned positive in 1934 and then
logged three more years of solid growth (the four year average annual
growth rate was 8.5%). But does anyone really believe the Great
Depression ended in 1934, when the economy first stopped contracting?
Unemployment reached 19% in 1938, nearly the peak of the entire
Depression, almost a full decade after the stock market crashed!
Why will we be so much luckier this time around?
The unpopular
truth is that rather than curing the economy, government stimulus
has made it sicker. The Bush Administration and the Greenspan Fed
pursued this policy recipe in the 20022003 recession. The
result was four years of phony growth, greater global imbalances,
and the development of unsupportable asset bubbles. Clearly we have
learned nothing from those mistakes.
Third quarter
'growth' was largely driven by a 23% increase in residential construction
(the largest quarterly increase since 1986) and a 3.1% increase
in consumer spending, which included a 22% jump in durable goods
purchases mostly automobiles and 2.3% gain in government
spending. Since the increase in consumption outpaced the increase
in production, the trade deficit expanded, reversing the positive
trend for most of 2008 and 2009. Because the increase in spending
outpaced the increase in incomes, the savings rate plunged from
4.9% in the prior quarter to 3.3%.
The sizzling
numbers for housing and autos resulted from heady cocktail of policy
stimulants: near-zero interest rates, government-guaranteed mortgages,
Federal Reserve purchases of mortgaged-backed securities, tax credits
for homebuyers, bailouts for auto finance companies and 'cash for
clunkers' for car buyers.
But the last
thing our economy needs is for scarce resources to be wasted through
uneconomical incentives.
If the government
were not 'stimulating the economy,' higher interest rates and falling
home prices would have hamstrung residential construction. That
would have been the right move. Instead, based on the false economic
signals of the 'stimulus,' we continue to build houses for which
no legitimate demand exists.
The same is
true for cars. Because of stimulus money, Americans are buying cars
that they otherwise would not have. In a free market, the money
would have been used for a more constructive purpose. Perhaps it
would have been saved, used to pay off existing debt, or spent on
a less expensive mode of transport, like a used motorcycle.
The economy
ran into a wall in 2008 because consumers bought houses and cars
that they really could not afford. That is why the institutions
that provided the loans, such as banks, Fannie & Freddie, and
GMAC, went bankrupt. It should be obvious that the solution to our
economic problems will not be found by redoubling these efforts.
This is akin to a drunk having a few more drinks in order to get
sober!
A recent article
in the Wall Street Journal detailed the myriad ways in which
Senators and Congressman are now compelling General Motors to make
business decisions that are solely driven by the legislators' own
political considerations, not the best interest of the taxpayers
who now own the company. Such a dynamic is now underway in nearly
every facet of our economy. An efficient allocation of resources
the only path to economic growth is only possible
when market forces, not Beltway bureaucrats, call the shots.
In the end,
this stimulus, just like prior doses, will only worsen the condition
it is meant to cure. When it wears off, the resulting recession
will be even bigger than the one that everyone assumes has just
ended. Until the impulse to fight recessions with government stimulus
is quashed, genuine economic growth will never return. A string
of ever-worsening recessions will eventually lead to what will be
the next Great (Inflationary) Depression. But for now, enjoy the
bubbly.
October
31, 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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