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The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS
We
all know to take what politicians have to say with a grain of salt - but
do you really know how trumped up the “official government
statistics” really are? Chris Mayer explores...
“Listen,”
I interrupted, “what nationality are you?”
“I’m English,” she replied. “That is, I was born in Poland, but
my father is Irish.
“That makes you English?”
“Yes,” she said...
- Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer
Ben
Bernanke, Fed chairman, recently delivered an upbeat view of the U.S.
economy. It was cheerful, optimistic...and delusional.
The
official government statistics hide many warts on the face of the U.S
economy. Like makeup dabbed on an aging film star, they are an attempt
to cover the wrinkles and present a veneer of youth. To most people,
this is no revelation. Like plastic surgery and tummy tucks, it is what
stars do to keep up appearances.
However,
few know the extent of the deceit. What if you learned that inflation
were closer to 7% than to the official 3%? What if unemployment were
closer to 12%, rather than the official 5%? What if the economy were
actually contracting, as opposed to growing?
What
follows is a partial peek at the economy - sans makeup. And, more
importantly, what it means for you and your hard-earned dough.
It
was the genius of writer George Orwell that he chose to build his
dystopia on the foundations of language and information - how it is used
to deceive, manipulate and control. His chilling novel 1984 stands out
precisely because it is only a distortion of things that are happening
now and that have always happened. Orwell’s dystopia is a mirror in a
funhouse, as you see enough of your own world in this disturbing
reflection.
Thankfully,
there are still some people doing the important work of getting at the
truth behind the official statistics - piercing the veil of Newspeak,
sweeping away the cobwebs of sham. John Williams is an economist
dedicated to doing just that. His Shadow Government Statistics reveals
the extensive rot under the floorboards of the U.S. economy.
Let’s
take the official inflation rate, tracked using the consumer price
index, or CPI. The idea behind the CPI is to have a fixed basket of
goods and track how the prices of these things change from year to year.
It only gained prominence after World War II, as a way to adjust
autoworkers’ labor contracts, a practice that soon spread.
Over
time, its importance grew and more people looked to it as a gauge of
general price inflation - and, hence, to get a feel for the health of
the economy.
The
thing is, the way the CPI is calculated changed dramatically over the
years. Politicians have figured out that these statistics are useful in
winning elections. Ergo, nearly every administration has altered the
calculation. And always, the changes made the CPI lower. Every effort to
change the CPI, by design, aims to make the economy look “better”
than it looked before the changes.
The
accumulation of these changes creates a huge difference over time.
It’s like making a series of small changes to a ship’s course in the
midst of a long voyage. Soon, you wind up way off course, miles and
miles from where you think you are. The chart below is from William’s
Web page. It shows the extent of the difference, which is just massive.
The rate of inflation using only the pre-Clinton era CPI is closer to
7%!
The
“Experimental C-CPI-U” is another innovation, introduced by the Bush
administration to lower the CPI yet again, once again to paint a kinder
portrait of the old hag known as the U.S. economy.
But
it’s about more than just making the economy look better. For example,
since increases in Social Security payments link to the CPI, a lower CPI
also saves the government money. According to Williams, if you used the
CPI when Jimmy Carter was president, you’d get Social Security checks
70% higher than today’s levels. Yes, 70% higher.
The
government also duped all those people who thought it was such a great
idea to buy TIPS (Treasury inflation-protected securities). Changes in
the CPI determine the interest paid on these bonds. The higher the CPI,
the more interest paid to bondholders. Some people loved the idea,
figuring here was a bond that would keep pace with inflation. Given the
government manipulates the CPI, you can be sure the interest rate paid
will not keep pace with inflation - nor has it ever.
The
manipulation of the CPI explains the great disconnect between what the
man in the street feels when he pays his bills and what the confident,
well-dressed Fed chiefs and politicians try to tell him. The cost of
living is rising a lot more than they want you to believe. At a 7%
annual rate of inflation, the cost of living would double in about 10
years. Looked at differently, the purchasing power of your dollar will
fall in half.
What
about unemployment? The government, since the time of the Kennedy
administration, has been changing the definition of “unemployed.”
Again, many small changes over time lead to dramatic end results.
According to Williams, if you back out the changes, you get an
unemployment number closer to 12%!
Let’s
look at the federal deficit - basically, the amount of money the
government is losing every year. The official deficit for 2005 was $319
billion. However, this excludes unfunded Social Security and Medicare
obligations. Throw them into the mix and calculate the deficit the way a
business does in its financial statements - and you get an annual
deficit around $3.5 trillion.
That’s
more than 10 times the so-called “official” deficit. By Williams’
calculations, you could raise the tax rate to 100% - dump everyone’s
salaries into the U.S. Treasury - and still have a deficit.
Years
of such deficits have created a mountain of obligations for the U.S.
government. As Williams says, “The fiscal 2005 statement shows that
total federal obligations at the end of September were $51 trillion;
over four times the level of GDP.” These debts are unsustainable. The
bills must go unpaid. If the U.S. government were a private corporation,
its bankruptcy would be beyond dispute.
This
is why Social Security and Medicare are not going to exist in the
not-too-distant future. As Williams says, “There is no way the
government can pay the Social Security or Medicare it has committed
to.”
Williams
believes GDP is contracting now. The government reported only a 1.1%
increase in the fourth quarter. Even in an election year, and despite
the government’s best efforts to paint a pretty face, all it could
muster was a measly 1.1%. More likely, the economy actually contracted
2% in the fourth quarter. This means we are in a recession NOW.
This
is not conspiracy-theory stuff. As Williams points out, it’s all
disclosed in the footnotes in the government’s reports. All he is
doing is backing out many of the changes to more realistically compare
these numbers with the numbers of the past.
The
great H.L. Mencken, a scathing attack dog of idiocy in all its forms,
wrote about “damning politicians up hill and down dale for many years
as rogues and vagabonds, frauds and scoundrels.” We need more Menckens.
In the meantime, we’ll have to make do with Williams and his cogent
analysis of government skulduggery.
Oddly
enough, these insights do not change our approach here in the pages of
Capital & Crisis. In fact, Williams’ work reinforces several
things we’ve already covered in past letters. To wit:
Yields
on real estate investment trusts (REITs) and utilities - to say nothing
about the bond market - appear even more pathetic against an inflation
rate of 7%. The yield for risks taken is simply not adequate. If the
slumbering bond market awoke to the reality of a 7% inflation rate,
there would be a sell-off the likes of which this country has never
seen. Interest rates would bolt upward like a frightened cat.
And
the U.S. dollar is a doomed currency over the long haul. Bernanke, the
self-professed student of the Great Depression, accepts the mainstream
view that the Fed’s great mistake then was not to flood the system
with dollars. He won’t make that “mistake” again. Expect the
printing presses to run day and night at full capacity when the trouble
starts.
Trying
to pin down the economy in precise numbers is futile anyway. It’s too
big, too complex. All macro statistics are severely flawed. This is why
I seldom write about them. Investing using macro statistics is like
trying to find the nearest post office with a globe. They are so vague
as to be useless.
The
basic idea I want to leave you with is this: The economy is far weaker
than generally portrayed. Most investors ignore the rat’s nest of
risks and invest indiscriminately in stocks - without proper due
diligence. As investors, we need to stick to our fundamentals more
carefully than ever.
Regards,
Chris
Mayer
for The Daily Reckoning
P.S.
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© 2006 Chris Mayer
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Bill
Bonner is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning. He is
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