Lousy
Jobs, In Such Small Portions
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Hair
of the Dog
Two dissatisfied
customers comment about a restaurant. One says, "The food here
is terrible." The other replies, "I know, and such small
portions!" In many ways, they could be describing our current
employment picture. Not only are the portions shrinking, but the
jobs themselves are steadily losing quality.
Today's release
of the October jobs report showed the loss of another 190,000 jobs
had pushed the official unemployment rate to 10.2%, only the second
time since the Great Depression that unemployment was quoted in
double digits (factoring in workers who had given up job hunting
altogether or have settled for part-time work would push that rate
to 17.5%). That didn't stop Wall Street pundits from trying to fashion
a silk purse of this sow's ear. The 'green shoots' crowd focused
on the slowing pace of job losses, the nascent economic 'recovery'
(even if it is jobless), and the projected improvement in 2010.
No mention was even made of the quality of what few jobs were being
created.
The analysts
completely ignored the continued trend of replacing goods-producing
jobs with those jobs that require production from other sources.
For example, we lost 61,000 manufacturing jobs last month, but added
45,000 jobs in education and health services. In particular, the
addition of health workers is nothing to celebrate. Just as a family's
economic position is not improved by higher medical bills, the country
as a whole does not benefit from increased health-care spending.
Until this trend reverses, our unbalanced economy will not regain
its stability, a real recovery will never take hold, and the overall
job outlook will get much bleaker.
By spending
trillions of dollars of borrowed money, President Obama hopes to
engineer a recovery and create jobs. However, he has only succeeded
in digging America into an even deeper hole than the one he inherited
from his predecessor. He believes that if we can simply push up
spending to levels seen during the "good times," then
those favorable economic conditions will return. The reality, of
course, was that those good years came with a heavy price-tag that
we have barely begun to pay.
In a press
conference today, the President claimed that the latest extension
of unemployment benefits will not only help the unemployed, but
the overall economy as recipients spend the money. If spending government-granted
money really were a benefit to the economy, why not simply increase
the amounts endlessly? Why limit the benefits to the unemployed?
Let's make this recovery a real barn burner: send out million-dollar
checks to everyone! Of course, what Obama and his economic advisors
do not understand is that money spent by recipients of unemployment
benefits is money not spent or invested by taxpayers. It's a transfer
of wealth, not a creation on new wealth.
In addition,
policymakers are also struggling with diminishing returns on ultra-low
interest rates. No matter how much monetary alcohol the Fed tries
to pour down consumers' throats, the swill simply will not go down
anymore. Consumers have already had enough and are trying to sober
up by refusing to spend irrationally. The excess liquidity
simply weakens the dollar and spills over into other pools, such
as goods prices, money metals, commodities, and investment assets.
During the
boom, we spent money we did not have to buy things we did not produce
and could not afford. As a result, we are now deeply in debt and
must sharply reduce our spending to replenish our savings. By focusing
solely on consumer spending, the Administration is neglecting the
capital investments necessary to improve our infrastructure and
productive capacity.
To generate
legitimate economic growth and meaningful jobs, we must reverse
the trends that brought us down. Consumers may have led us into
this recession, but they can't lead us out. The road to recovery
is a one-way street, and it's paved with savings, capital investment,
and production. It's not an easy road, but we must follow it to
ensure our future prosperity.
As a first
step, our politicians must stop pushing us backward. Rather than
imposing more market-distorting regulations, we should repeal those
most responsible for inefficient resource allocation. Rather than
creating new moral hazards, we should withdraw guarantees for large
financial institutions and irresponsible consumers. Rather than
continuing the Greenspan policy of keeping interest rates too low,
we should let them rise. Rather than trying to prop up asset prices,
we should let them fall to market levels. Rather than increasing
the burden of bureaucracy on the economy, we should look for ways
to lighten the load. Rather than encouraging people to borrow and
spend, we should reward those who save and produce.
Until we acknowledge
these fundamental errors, more of our citizens will lose their jobs.
As those that stay employed are funneled into unproductive industries
like the federal bureaucracy, the country will sink further into
stagnation. Worse still, everyone taking jobs in these sectors will
be laid off in the next phase of the crisis and will have
lost this opportunity to build practical skills for the new economy.
November
7, 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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