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AN ECONOMIC HEART ATTACK
BROUGHT ON BY SUGAR AND FAT
by
Richard Benson
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
January 22,
2008
The
other day I was frankly stunned to see President Bush in a panic. He was
flanked by the Secretary of the Treasury and the head of the Federal
Reserve as they rolled our sick economy onto a gurney to the OR.
Congress witnessed this as defibrillator paddles were thrust into the
country’s open chest and screams of “clear” were heard as far as
Washington, as a jolt of $150 billion dollars in tax cuts was
administered. It’s a rare sight, indeed, to see not only the President
of the United States but the Secretary of the Treasury, Chairman of the
Fed, and both parties in
Congress, in panic mode pushing for greatly increased government
spending. Obviously, government does not see itself as the problem!
Financial
markets around the globe sensed the panic and responded dramatically,
creating volatile and sinking markets overnight. Our economy’s heart
attack sent the financial markets swooning and even with the infusion of
cash mentioned above, flu-like symptoms still exist. But what can one
expect given the economy’s diet over the last five years which
consisted of mainlining “easy money” sugar, and the consumption of
mountains of fat (in the form of trillions of dollars of new consumer
and corporate borrowing). This risky diet has finally taken its toll on
the economy’s waistline.
Today,
in a surprise move, the Fed swiftly responded as attending physicians,
led by the Paulson and Bernanke, imposed an interest rate cut of 3/4
percent. This move was intended to offset a potentially huge sell-off in
the stock market, but it indicates the Fed will continue to feast on
sugar, and the government will continue to offer a high-fat diet to the
feeding-frenzy American consumer in the form of lower interest rates and
easy money. Forget about savers; they’re not only forgotten but mugged
in broad daylight by the Fed and US Treasury as interest rates drop well
below the rate of inflation, and the rate of inflation is forced
up.
Inflation
is raging now and even with hedonic adjustments and chain weighting
tricks, the CPI is up 4.1 percent year-over-year. (Without the tricks
used to distort the CPI down, the actual inflation rate is probably more
like 6 percent). The American worker is also on life support because
the cost of food and fuel is eating them alive and stagnant wages
aren’t helping to pay the bills, now that home equity extraction is no
longer an option.
So
where do we go from here? Today’s prescribed cure (more like a band
aid solution over a sword wound) will fuel even fatter federal deficits
funded by new money printed up by the Federal Reserve. So the prognosis
for the economy may not be death by heart attack, but it will remain in
intensive care or in a comma for years. The citizens of our great
country experienced an intense sugar rush over the last decade as their
waistlines expanded and they ran up very fat personal deficits amounting
to over $14 trillion dollars. (It is estimated that $500 billion
dollars of that easy money created debt could be in default very soon).
Too much sugar, too much fat, a collapsing dollar, and higher inflation
can cause an economic heart attack. It happened this week, and you
should watch for it to happen again and again.

© 2008 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial Archive l www.sfgroup.org
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