A
Hell of a Decade
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Dropping
the Bomb on Health Care
In its recent
look back on the first ten years of the century, Time magazine
proclaimed the period to be "the decade from hell." The
editors made their case based on what they saw as the signature
events of the last ten years, notably the ravages of terrorism,
failed wars, and a global financial crisis. Taken together, these
factors produced an era that Time is convinced will be remembered
as one of the low points in our history.
As the media
hates to dwell on the negative, the commentary was rife with notes
of optimism about pending recovery. It could hardly be accidental
that in the very next issue, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke was named
"Man of the Year" for his supposedly Herculean efforts
to keep the economy afloat as we departed the Naughty Aughties.
Although Time takes pains to point out that the "Person
of the Year" honor reflects impact rather than adulation, its
profile of the chairman was triumphant.
Even if you
believe the "survived the worst/turned the corner" narrative
offered by Time, it still should strike anyone as ironic
that Chairman Bernanke, a chief architect of the economic problems
that surfaced in 2007, should be held in such high esteem.
Apart from
its misplaced reverence for the Fed Chairman, I would take issue
with Time's entire characterization of what has now become
history.
Under no circumstances
could the past ten years be described as "the decade from hell."
In fact, in terms of economic good fortune, the period shares parallels
with the Roaring Twenties. I would describe this as a decade of
sin that paved the way to hell.
Yes, we had
spectacular problems like September 11th and the invasion of Iraq
which were horrific for those who were directly affected
but for most Americans, it was a time of unexpected wealth
and unearned prosperity. Up to the days of the stock market crash,
the economics of the decade will be remembered for cash-out refinancing
for millions of homeowners, no-doc liar loans, no-money-down car
purchases, eight-figure Wall Street bonuses, cheap Chinese imports,
and trample-to-death holiday sales. In other words, the decade now
closing gave us the biggest and most irresponsible spending orgy
in U.S. history. The past decade was the party; the one ahead will
be the hangover.
The fact that
Time completely ignored these issues shows how poorly the
mainstream media understands the forces bearing down on our economy.
Yes, they were able to identify some of the adverse consequences
we experienced this decade. That's the easy part. But as far as
seeing the causes behind the effects, they haven't a clue. As a
result, Time has no ability to see the underlying pattern
and will happily encourage our leaders to repeat the mistakes of
the past on a grander scale.
For now, Congress
and the President remain as clueless as Time. To show its
resolve to "get to the bottom of things," the Obama Administration
has impaneled a commission to investigate the causes of the financial
crisis. Do not expect the proceedings, which are just getting underway,
to come up with anything but the most politically useful explanations.
Blame will
be laid at the feet of "ineffective regulators" who failed
to "get tough" with industry, banks, and corporate leaders
who held the "public good" hostage to their "personal
greed." There is no hope that anyone who actually saw the crisis
coming will actually be asked to testify. If they called me, I would
be happy to give them an earful. Unfortunately, the only way my
views will ever be heard by the powers-that-be is if I am elected
to the Senate which is exactly what I plan to do next fall
in my home state of Connecticut.
My sincere
hope for the coming decade is that I can help our leaders see what
Time cannot: we need to stop committing the economic sins that are
leading us to hell, so that our stay down there will be as brief
as possible. We need everyone to stop spending more than they earn.
That is true not just for individuals, but for our government as
well. Just this week, the Treasury Department removed its internal
caps on bailout funds to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Meanwhile,
another bailout was proffered to ailing GMAC. If we continue the
same bad behavior, it might not just be one decade from hell, but
several.
However, if
we can confess our sins, and vow to reform our ways, perhaps this
will merely be a decade in purgatory. Perhaps we can turn it into
the decade of hope, hard work, individual liberty, savings, production,
investment, sound money, de-regulation, exports, budget surpluses,
capitalism, limited government, and respect for the Constitution.
These traits will harden us to withstand the fallout from our reckless
past.
As of yet,
our troubles continue to snowball and I don't like a snowball's
chances if we have a real decade from hell.
December
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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