| Editor's
Note: This update is a summary page from Grandfather
Economic Report. This
is a mini-report about America's increasing dependence on international
trade, its poor performance and reliance on savings from other nations
instead of its own, causing accelerating debt and asset transfer in
favor of foreign interests. Presented in an easy-to-understand format
with data pictures, this report is a chapter of the Grandfather
Economic Reports series showing various negative challenges facing
families and their children, compared to prior generations.
QUESTION: Do our children & grandchildren
deserve to be placed in a reduced international position with
less independence from foreign interests than we inherited from our
parents and grandparents? Would that make us proud? Are their future
living standards and national security threatened by an economy that is
more dependent on domestic and foreign debt, consuming more than we
produce and with fewer foreign reserves backing up each citizen than
others?
- Since 1952
the international reserve position of the U.S.
has fallen from 50% of the world's total to a 2.4% ratio - -
a 95% drop. The decline
continues.
- Many other
productive nations now have up to
23 times more foreign reserves backing up each of
their children than we have backing ours, and their lead is
increasing as the U.S. continues with massive trade deficits
and record high internal private sector debt ratios, with
nil savings. With 5% of the world's population, America
consumes over 20% of world imports.
- The U.S. is
the world's largest debtor, a long fall from being
the world's largest creditor when I was a young worker.
- For the past
30 years the U.S. increasingly has been unable to adequately
compete internationally to balance its trade with the rest
of the world to export sufficient goods to balance and pay
for its imports. Massive deficits soared.
Even the information technology sector is in deficit, and
for the first time food imports exceeded exports.
- The U.S.
economy is less independent than prior generations yet one
quarter of the economy depends on international trade
in goods, 3 times more than before - and foreign entities
own more and more of our assets than we do theirs - while
our education
quality suffers relative to others.
- The
merchandise import ratio has soared five times, from 3% of
national income in the mid-1960s to today's 16% ratio - -
while the export ratio has failed to improve despite
numerous devaluations
of the dollar.
- As the U.S. manufacturing
base declined 60% the economy realized
significantly less capacity to produce goods needed
domestically or desired internationally - - assisting import
ratios to national income soaring 5 times.
- While the
U.S. energy production base declined, energy consumption
zoomed and the U.S. has become more dependent on imported
foreign oil and natural gas than ever before, as graphically
shown in the Energy
Report. The oil consumption-production gap is a
whopping 71%, as consumption soars and production and
reserves continually decline. At the time of World War II
the US produced all the oil it needed, even exporting to
others. No longer.
- For most of
the 20th century the U.S. 'wrote' most of the rules for
world trade. No longer.
- For a long
time the U.S. dollar was unchallenged as the world's
reserve currency. No Longer!

- Year 2005
trade performance produced a $782 billion merchandise trade
deficit, the largest negative trade balance in history.
- Cumulative
trade deficits since 1985 total $5.7 Trillion - -
producing a negative international net worth of $5
Trillion.
- And, these
trade deficits are owed to non-Americans -
- not to ourselves.
- Our annual
international trade deficit is 35% larger than Social
Security spending, 50% larger than all defense spending, and
2.5 times larger than Medicare. This International Trade
Report, together with the chapter called America's
Total Debt Report, proves we are living way beyond our
means.

For decades Americans
enjoyed the game of consuming more than we produce, borrowing from the
future to make-up the shortfall with unprecedented ratios of domestic
and foreign debt increasing much faster than national income. These are
dramatic facts, with significant long-term implications for the
currency, international economic power, relative standard of living, and
possible national security of our
nation's children into the future.
This
lack of savings and over-borrowing from foreign interests cannot
continue forever.
The signal to free-up our economy from debt addiction is clear.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE - NEGATIVE TRENDS EXPLODING !!
This
chart measures the U.S. merchandise (goods, excluding military)
trade balance each year since 1959. It shows previously the USA
ran a balance of trade, meaning we were able to sell enough
goods to other nations to pay for what we purchased from them.
America now
runs massive deficits. If a country runs a trade deficit it
is borrowing from the rest of the world so that it can spend
in excess of its own production. This means the USA is less
competitive than before. NOTE: The U.S. is setting record
negative trade balances each year. Since 1992, deficits have
exploded. Look at that trend!!
This chart
shows 2005 trade performance in goods was a $782.1 billion
trade deficit - - the largest negative trade balance in history,
18% worse than prior year and 43% worse than 2003. Look at this
chart again. Dangerous trend!!!
How can this
record deficit continue in light of a falling exchange rate? The
answer is an easy one > America's private and government
sectors are increasing debts at a faster rate, much faster than
incomes, causing more consumption and imports than could be
supported by incomes and negligible savings. In a nut-shell >
America is living beyond its means - - way, way beyond!!
The manufacturing
base shrinkage is a major negative regarding trade
balance, and a major negative impact on U.S. economic
independence and future living standards.
In the
12-months to February 2006 the U.S.
had a total merchandise trade deficit of $789 billion,
while Japan & Germany produced a cumulative
trade surplus of $283 billion ($86+$196). That's
a whopping $1.07 trillion worse relative trade performance for
the U.S., in JUST ONE YEAR. In 2001, for the
first time, China surpassed Japan as the country with the
largest trade gap with the United States. America's deficit with
China surged 95% in the next 3 years, reaching $202 billion and
27% of total US trade deficits in 2005.
This vividly
shows how America is living beyond its means - - by consuming
more goods made by others than it produces to meet the needs of
foreigners - - resulting in exploding debts in favor of
foreigners, in addition to record high domestic debt ratios
of household, business and the domestic financial sectors.
It can be seen
that the pattern since the mid 1970's brings into focus the
basic question above - - America's lack
of competitiveness world-wide - - increasingly so
each year. This indicates the U.S. has become less
competitive, despite claims of recent improved productivity
(mostly realized only by a narrow part of the economy and
primarily by revising how they measure productivity and
inflation).
USA CUMULATIVE TRADE DEFICITS—past 19 years
The
chart above showed the USA merchandise trade deficit for each
year - - reaching an all-time record deficit in 2005 of
$782 billion.
The left chart
shows the USA cumulative merchandise trade deficit - -
with all nations since 1985. (cumulative means adding all
deficits)
The cumulative
merchandise goods trade deficit was $5.75 Trillion during the
last 20 years (since 1985). That means each American man,
woman and child effectively borrowed $19,827 from producers in
other nations, because we Americans consumed more goods from
other nations than we produced and sold abroad. As a result,
foreigners now own nearly $6 trillion more in US assets than in
1985.
Not shown on
the chart is the cumulative goods trade deficit since 1976 -
- totaling $6.12 trillion. Prior to that period America
produced near continuing surpluses with the rest of the world
allowing America to own more assets in foreign nations than they
in ours. However, that net has eroded over recent years to an accelerating
negative net worth.
Taking into
account goods and services, and investment flows, which is
called the current account - - "foreign-owned assets in the
US totaled US$9.4 trillion in 2001 while US claims on the rest
of the world amounted to US$7.2 trillion," according to the
White House Council of Economic Advisers - - meaning a net $2.2
trillion deficit with other nations as of 2001. Adding to this
negative the combined current account deficits of $1.64 trillion
for 2002, 2003 and 2004 sums to nearly negative $4
trillion against the U.S. in favor of non-U.S. entities.
Not only is the technology product sector in deficit, but the
U.S. Department of Agriculture Economic Research Service
estimates 2005 will be the first year in nearly 50 that America
will not turn an agricultural trade surplus.
How can
competitiveness be said to rise as the result of higher
so-called "productivity" if at the same time the trade
deficit explodes? What competitiveness?" It is clear
that the so-called 'economic boom' of the 1990s was a false
boom, because the economy was fueled primarily by increasing
internal and foreign debt - - instead of by internal production,
savings and competitiveness.
The above chart shows our growing lack of competitiveness as
we increase foreign debt at a faster pace. The long-term
performance of our currency is our fault > negative
trade balances fueled by massive domestic and international
debts.
MANUFACTURING BASE
DECLINE
How
can America ever export enough goods to other nations to balance
its negative balance of trade of soaring imports if it has a
declining manufacturing base?
The left chart,
from the Family
Income Report chapter about stagnant income growth,
shows the trend of the number of manufacturing
workers as a percentage of all U.S. employees
(non-agriculture) - - from 26% in 1960 to 10% in 2004, a 60%
drop in the manufacturing ratio.
On a GDP
basis the trend is the same negative > the U.S. manufacturing
base declined from 30.4% of GDP in 1953 (when we had a
trade surplus) to 12.7% in 2003 - a 58% drop in
the manufacturing share of GDP - and more of the
remaining manufacturing base is foreign-owned than before.
(Bureau Economic Analysis table b-12, Economic Report of
President, appendix table)
The number of
manufacturing employees declined 17% from 2000 to 2004.
As America's
manufacture of goods has become a much smaller share of the
economy and of its work-force, the U.S. became 5 times more
dependent on foreign imports - - consuming 16% of national
income, up from but 3% in 1960s. The export ratio has not
improved in 30 years, despite many devaluations
of the dollar.
Note the down-sloping
trend of this chart far pre-dates the opening of China as a
major world manufacturer.
According to
economist Steve Roach of Morgan Stanley (4/05), "the
average Chinese manufacturing worker made
12,496 yuan in 2003, which translates into about US$29 per week.
By contrast, average weekly earnings of US manufacturing
workers amounted to $636 per week in 2003.
With Chinese manufacturing wage levels only 4.5% of their
US counterpart, it would take about 20 years of sustained 15%
annualized Chinese wage inflation to close half the wage gap
with the US. Don’t kid
yourself. Even with
Chinese wage inflation, the economics of the labor arbitrage
between the US and China remain compelling for as far as the eye
can see." Of course Mr. Roach's statement assumes no
inflation in the USA during the next 20 years, most unlikely
considering U.S.
inflation history.
Bottom-line
> manufacturing base shrinkage is a major negative regarding
America's trade balance, economic independence and future living
standards, including national security.
DEBT-DRIVEN IMBALANCES
The
chart at the top of this page showed America's trade deficits
started soaring in the late 1970s to early 1980s. Today's
deficits are increasing even faster.
Now look at the
left chart, from the powerful chapter 'America's
Total Debt Report.' It shows America's total debt
(sum of all government debt and all private debt of households,
business, and financial sectors) started to grow faster than
growth of the economy's national income - - at about the same
time (late 1970s to early 1980s) - - increasing even faster
today.
What this says
is that debt drives over-spending, over-consumption - - beyond
incomes and savings. Therefore, excessive debt also drives
imports - - faster and faster, driving soaring trade deficits.
This chart is a
ratio chart - - a ratio of total debt in America to national
income. If America's debt dependence were not growing faster
than the economy during this period the chart's trend line would
have remained horizontal. However, the debt ratio's trend line
is straight up in the past 25 years, which means debt increased
each and every year faster than growth of the economy. Much of
that debt was promoted by Federal Reserve interest rate and
government tax policies - - including more rapid debt growth
lately fueled by record low interest rates.
This 25+ year
period of rapid debt growth (and rapid growth of trade deficits)
was also a period of relatively stagnant inflation-adjusted
median family income growth according to the Family
Income Report chapter. That chapter also reports very strong
income growth in the earlier period of this chart when debt
ratios were not growing and when trade imports vs. exports were
in balance.
To say
soaring trade deficits were greatly influenced by soaring
internal debt generation, which drove consumption beyond incomes
and personal savings, would be an under-statement, for sure.
What are
foreigners doing with that which we borrowed from them? Answer:
they own increasing percentage of our businesses, stocks, bonds,
real estate and government
treasury bonds. Meaning > > Americans own less and
less of their nation.

Devaluing
the U.S. dollar's foreign exchange rate will not solve the
problem > The Foreign
Exchange Report chapter shows the U.S. dollar's exchange
rate mostly declined during the above period of trade deficits
and manufacturing base decline. Which, of course, tends to prove
that forcing down the dollar's exchange rate is not an assured
recipe to produce long-term trade surpluses or a rising
manufacturing base.
And, it
is wrong to blame China's wage rates and currency
exchange for U.S. trade deficits and manufacturing decline,
since Japan and Germany each have higher wage rates and a
stronger currency yet realize a much larger trade surplus than
does China. One thing for certain is that citizens of China,
Germany and Japan have high rates of personal saving, whereas U.S.
savings are nil. They produce and save while Americans
consume and increase debt instead of save.

The above
charts clearly show America's soaring negative trade
balances are certainly impacted by an economy structured more
debt-dependent and less manufacturing-dependent and less
savings-dependent than ever before. While America can
do nothing about Chinese labor rates or Germany's manufacturing
expertise its leaders certainly can do a great deal to cease
promoting debt-driven consumption subsidized and fueled by tax
and low interest rate policy.

DOES IT MATTER—THESE DEFICITS??
-
June
2005,
Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker said "he doesn't see how
the U.S. can keep borrowing and consuming while letting
foreign countries do all the producing. It's a recipe for
American economic disaster - - a crisis is
likely."
-
Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said, "We cannot
depend on imported capital, that is, a current account
deficit, to offset low domestic savings indefinitely."
-
In
its August 2001 annual assessment of the world's largest
economy, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said "the
yawning current account deficit raised the risk of a sharp
depreciation in the U.S. currency."
-
On
July 2001 former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker
told the Senate Banking Committee hearing on risks of growing
balance of payment deficit, "We are a debtor nation with
nil personal savings and are absorbing a significant portion
of other countries savings. These huge and growing external
deficits are symptoms of imbalances in the national economy
and the world economy that cannot be sustained."
-
On
30 April 2001 White House Economic Advisor Dr. Lawrence
Lindsey said, "We are in uncharted territory - - it's
unprecedented - - it cannot go on - - something has to
give."
-
MIT
professor Dr. Lester Thurow said, "No country can
run a large trade deficit forever."
-
The
U.S. Trade Deficit Commission, December 2000, said, "Not
only is the trade deficit not sustainable but it carries a
great deal of danger to the nation and living standards.
-
WASHINGTON,
April 16, 2005 (Reuters) - Global economic risks from
large U.S. deficits and uneven growth and saving
rates are clearly increasing and require urgent action,
International Monetary Fund chief Rodrigo Rato said.
-
"Growing
domestic and international debt has created the conditions for
global economic and financial crises.”
Bank for International Settlements, June 2005.
-
Foreigners
now own more and more of America - - about $9 trillion of U.S.
financial assets, including 13% of all stocks, 13% of
agencies, and 27% of corporate bonds, according to Gillespie
Research. According to the Federal
Government Debt Report they also own 46% of Treasury bonds
& bills. Additionally, they own real estate and factories.
-
There
are zillions of items upon which America depends on foreigners
to supply. Most know America is dependent on foreigners for
60% of its oil, much medical equipment, an increasing portion
of automobiles, and most of the stuff sold by Wal-Mart.
However, few know America is even 100% dependent on
foreigners (British and French) for flu vaccines needed by
senior citizens. A nation that will not even produce
its own flu vaccines is not a very smart nation.
-
Americans
should not be mad at foreign interests, hoping
somehow they will change to accommodate our debt-driven
consumption over production and nil savings. Americans are the
ones consuming beyond our own production, creating
unprecedented debts and trade deficits PLUS excessive
regulations and government spending at all levels - - with nil
savings.
WHAT
TO DO?
It has
been said that there are only three ways in which negative trade
balances can be restored: (1) the deficit-incurring country
(USA) must cease excessive credit (debt) expansion which sucks in
imports faster than incomes warrant and allow interest rates to climb to
reverse debt ratios, (2) other countries must inflate their economies to
over-price their own production so as to suck up more U.S. exports, (3)
the deficit country (USA) must allow its currency to depreciate to drive
up prices.
What's
happening? Answer (1) USA increases debt even faster (see
America's
Total Debt Report), while (2) crying for other countries to
inflate away their currency and grow their imports from America,
and (3) allowing depreciation of the US dollar (see Foreign
Exchange Report), causing a loss of international buying power
of every US wage earner and holder of dollars - to the tune of
negative 40% against the Euro in recent years.
One should
not accept leaders hiding-out by calling for a 'level playing
field', demanding (as if they have a right to demand) that all
non-Americans change their nations to also have huge,
soaring debt ratios, near zero savings rates and a declining
manufacturing base like America's, with U.S. regulatory
compliance cost burden ratios, or even the number of U.S. lawyers
per capita. The US must clean its own house. These are covered
in the full Trade Report - - link below.
What
should happen to those powers-to-be who promote and allow
degradation of our currency, our international net worth, and
foreign reserves per capita (the international buying power of its
citizens) - - and what should happen to those who promote tax and
interest rate policies which drive debt and consumption instead of
production and savings - - or about those who make America's
future living standards and national security more and more
dependent and beholden to non-Americans?????
Is
that the proper legacy to pass along to our
children and grandchildren? This author thinks NOT
!!
The
trends shown in the above charts (and those in the full report below)
are most dramatic
- - a threat to our economy, and potentially to national
security - -
and - - a threat to our increasing dependence
on foreign-produced energy

© 2006 Michael W. Hodges
Editorial Archive
Web
note:
This article was created from the summary page of the Grandfather
International Trade Report chapter. In addition to this summary
page with several graphics, it is recommended that the reader also visit
the Full
Trade Report, which contains many more data graphics, fully
telling the story of this important subject.
Michael
W. Hodges
Grandfather
Economic Report
Email Mr. Hodges
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