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Orthodox economic training in the United States in the post-World War II
world, centered on the observations of John M. Keynes who claimed that
to keep an economy rolling, spending (aggregate demand) needed to be
kept alive at all costs. The biggest post-depression fear was that
saving too much could cause spending to fall short and recession, or
worse, could befall the economy (from 1929 to World War II, the worse did happen). The Keynesian
trick used for our central bank was to cut interest rates to a level low
enough to encourage businesses to spend excess savings. Low interest
rates encourage low financing costs and urge businesses to recycle
savings into productive investment, which keeps the economy humming
especially if consumer spending is weak.
In
the hallowed Ivy League halls of academia (where
this author spent too many happy years before having to work for a
living), they preach that it is the government’s duty, and the
central bank’s mandate, to spend and print money to keep the economy
afloat. The Keynesian trick is certainly easier to pull off when there
is some inflation and the Fed can drop interest rates. Interest rates
that are below the rate of inflation clearly subsidize old and new
borrowers alike, and give an extra boost to the economy. Subsidized
borrowers borrow and always find ways to spend money. Even though this
economic stimulus trick consisted of a little extra government spending,
recycled savings, and credit creation, recycled savings gave the economy
the biggest boost, with credit creation adding some inflation to the
spending mix. Then, everything
began to change.
In
the late 1990s, this economic model was scrapped. After Alan Greenspan
gave his famous “irrational exuberance” speech about the stock
market, he stopped being rational and prudent, and became rational and
profligate. He discovered that the stock market bubble – fostered by
too much easy credit – made consumers feel really
wealthy. By letting money and credit run wild the economy roared, and
rising stock market prices created such a false sense of wealth that
consumers stopped saving. By 2000, Americans had hardly saved anything
and domestic savings to recycle didn’t exist. Around this time, Mr.
Greenspan declared that “bubbles should not be popped” but the
Federal Reserve’s job would be to clean up the mess if the bubbles
collapsed on their own. So, how does a popped bubble get cleaned up? With easy money, of course!
Cleaning
up the first bubble required dropping interest rates to virtually
nothing and creating an even bigger bubble in housing. The real estate
bubble was far more powerful for spending because of the asset-backed
and mortgaged-backed debt markets, which allowed for the virtual
unlimited creation of new mortgage credit and money. Moreover, it was
seductive telling a potential homeowner to feel comfortable about
spending a lot of money to buy a home because property values were always going up. By 2004, it was time
to help another sitting President to get re-elected. The housing market
was booming and home equity extraction added about $800 billion (a year)
to spending, even though this spending left a massive trail of debt.
In
looking back now, you can’t help but notice how the economic model has
changed. For decades, America had an economic model built around
recycling savings into investment. In a few short years, those savings
have simply vanished and our society has become comfortably cavalier
about borrowing far more than they earn.
The
first bubble in stocks taught Americans how not to save. The second
bubble in housing taught them how to live off their house and spend even
more than they make. From a macro-economic perspective, our country no
longer has savings to recycle as part of a stimulus package. Instead, we
are left with a massive debt to foreigners and it’s growing at the
rate of $700 billion a year. America’s
net debt to the rest of the world is approaching $3 trillion, with no
end in sight.
It
is important to note that the incoming Fed Chairman, Ben Bernanke, is
the top academic student of the previous depression and a true believer
in the power of the press; the
Federal Reserve’s printing press, that is. Mr. Bernanke believes
we will always need some inflation, and the inflation and growth of
money and credit must be kept alive. Despite the fact that total debt to
GDP is now 310 percent (well in excess of the 290 percent it was before
the 1929 crash), he is determined to keep debt and inflation growing. (For
a balanced economy, total debt to GDP is about 150 percent). Today,
it takes $4 of new debt to create just one new $1 of real GDP. Under
Bernanke’s watch, the Federal Reserve will have a lot of printing to
do.
From
an historical economic perspective, we are clearly in the middle of a
very interesting time. Our post-World War II economic model is totally
broken. If our economic model is built on spending, where will the new
spending come from? The Achilles’ heel for our economy is the fact
that wages have not kept up with inflation and the average American
worker has little or no savings, nor can they afford to service their
debt and pay for the rising cost of living.
Without constant
monetary stimulus, the credit-based U.S. economy would die. Our current
economic model is similar to the one used by banana republic countries
that are running hyperinflation* and end up in hock to the IMF:
*Hyperinflations
are caused by extremely rapid growth in the supply of “paper” money.
They occur when the monetary and fiscal authorities of a nation
regularly issue large quantities of money to pay for a large stream of
government expenditures. In effect, inflation is a form of taxation
where the government gains at the expense of those who hold money whose
value is declining. Hyperinflations are, therefore, very large taxation
schemes.
America
is now extraordinarily vulnerable to the whims of foreign governments.
What if our creditors demanded a higher rate of interest? Perhaps they
already have, and the Federal Reserve will have to raise interest rates
higher than the capital markets currently expect.
What
about the housing bubble? Mr. Bernanke may be left with only one course
of action: Given housing price inflation of 50 to 100 percent in some
areas over the past few years, the Fed’s goal for the next several
years will be how to get inflation up without crushing housing prices
because of rising interest rates. A housing price crash could severely
affect the financial markets in our country and take the economic system
down with it. Mr. Bernanke has spent his entire adult life studying to
prevent this from happening and I suspect he will do everything in his
power to keep inflation going. When everything else is inflated, housing
prices (at their current levels) won’t appear to be so over-valued.
Getting money into the hands of consumers who can’t tap their savings (because
most Americans don’t have any), or use their credit cards (because
they’re over-extended - welcome to the new bankruptcy law), or
draw cash from the home equity loan ATM installed on the side of their
house (housing prices are stagnant
or falling), will be a real challenge. To get money into the
consumer’s hands, the Fed will have to print more money and encourage
the creation of more debt. Mr. Bernanke’s illusion about dropping “money
from helicopters” may actually come to pass as a direct way to
distribute money to the consumer to service old debts and keep spending
alive. The new economic model should be “inflate, or face deflationary
collapse”.
In
reviewing my own personal financial returns last year, I realized the
following: Even though cash performed much better than stocks –
without the risk or excitement – it did not keep up with inflation.
Also, the stock market was flat but actually down after inflation.
(The CPI underestimates actual inflation by 1.5 to 2 percent by
excluding housing prices and using “hedonic price adjustment”.)
My family’s portfolio of I-Bonds (inflation adjusted savings bonds)
did better than cash and kept close to inflation, while our investments
in gold and silver gave a strong real return after inflation.
For
2006 and beyond, I expect the inflationary war on savers will continue,
and I just don’t see how financial assets – stocks and bonds –
will keep up. The preservation of real wealth at a time when the Federal
Reserve will be dedicated to building debt, money and inflation, is not
going to be an easy task; Good
luck investing in the New Year!

© 2006 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial
Archive l www.sfgroup.org
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