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Washington’s
Enron-style accounting is now so widespread and so deeply ingrained, the
nation could be bankrupt and not even know it.
You go to work. You
save and invest. You vote in the November election. And you assume that
everything is business as usual. Then, one day, you wake up to the
shocking discovery that it’s not.
Inflation is at least
three percentage points worse than what they’re telling you.
Unemployment and the budget deficit is over double. The national debt is
at least five times bigger than official tallies.
Almost every number
coming out of Washington has been thoroughly massaged and greatly
distorted, almost always with a bias toward sweeping the dirt under the
carpet and sugarcoating the truth.
This is not a
conspiracy. It just happens naturally. But that doesn’t diminish the
potential impact on your money. It’s easily the greatest scam of all
time.
Every single
administration — from John F. Kennedy to George W. Bush — has
succumbed to the same temptation to “reform” the data collection
process ... “streamline” the reporting procedures ... and
continually implement minor, incremental changes — all to make things
look a bit better.
Each new change has
been grandfathered in by the next administration.
And the cumulative
effect of all these small changes over time adds up to a gross
distortion of reality that could directly threaten your financial
future.
Look Back to
Recent History,
And You’ll See What I Mean.
At Enron, 21,000
employees — and many more investors — assumed that the company’s
books were real. Then, one day they discovered it was all a hoax.
And it was over.
We saw the same thing
happen at Adelphia Business Solutions, Global Crossing, Kaiser Aluminum,
Kmart, McLeodUSA, National Steel, WorldCom, and scores of other major,
household-name companies. Every one had distorted its numbers. Every one
went bankrupt. Each left a trail of ruined lives in its wake.
The distortions were
so bad even many of Wall Street’s least biased analysts missed the
boat. Indeed, in a special
report I presented to the National Press Club, I demonstrated that
...
Among
50 major Wall Street firms we reviewed, 94% continued to publish
“buy” or “hold” ratings on these failing companies right up to
the day the companies filed for bankruptcy.
Worse, America’s
largest auditing firms looked the other way, or even directly assisted
in the accounting distortions. In a report
I submitted to Congress, I showed that ...
Arthur
Andersen, America’s most prestigious auditors, gave a clean bill of
health to 11 companies involved in accounting irregularities. Deloitte
& Touche and KPMG each gave a clean bill of health to five companies
involved in accounting problems. And overall, the nation’s major
auditing firms gave a clean bill of health to 42.1% of the public
companies that filed for bankruptcy soon after their audits. Overall,
the auditors failed to warn the public about companies that were worth a
total of $225 billion at their peak. Investors lost nearly every dime.
Today, Fannie Mae,
the company that controls most of America’s secondary mortgage market
— a company without which the entire housing industry would crumble
— is also knee-deep in accounting distortions.
Ford, General Motors
and Chrysler, which can make or break America’s industrial economy,
may or may not have major accounting issues. But their assurances to
shareholders and employees, made just a few months ago, are crumbling
just the same.
And this is in
“good times,” when the economy is apparently strong, when inflation
and unemployment are supposedly moderate.
Something doesn’t
fit. Something’s terribly wrong with this picture, and it’s this:
The government’s distorting the real truth about the U.S. economy and
its own books.
How
Washington’s Enron-Style Accounting Makes
The Great Corporate Scandals of This Decade
Look Like Little White Lies by Comparison
Much like major
auditing firms review the books of a GM or IBM, the U.S. Government
Accountability Office (GAO) audits the books of Uncle Sam, including its
departments and agencies.
But in its latest year-end
media advisory, the GAO plainly states that
“For
the ninth straight year, the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO)
is unable to provide an opinion as to whether the consolidated financial
statements of the U.S. government are presented fairly, in all material
respects, in conformity with generally accepted accounting
principles.”
In other words, the
same government that is aggressively pursuing corporations for bad
accounting is the most guilty of similar practices.
In an earlier report
to Congress, GAO Director and U.S. Comptroller General David M.
Walker bluntly explained it this way:
“The
current system of federal financial reporting provides an unrealistic
and even misleading picture of the government’s overall performance
and financial condition ... A key lesson from Enron, WorldCom and other
business failures is that our free-market system depends on public
confidence in the accuracy of ... financial information.”
But, unfortunately,
Washington has so far failed to learn that lesson.In several departments
of the executive branch, especially Defense, balance sheets don’t
balance and taxpayer money disappears. So beyond the deficit
manipulations that we know about, there could be many others
that are unknown, even to the federal auditors.
This is easily one of
the greatest scandals of our time, and yet it’s rarely discussed and
often forgotten.
Investors and
Taxpayers
Hoodwinked!
One veteran
economist, John Williams, is so thoroughly convinced that government
manipulations are hoodwinking taxpayers and investors, he has devoted
his current career to painstakingly documenting the shenanigans at Shadow
Government Statistics (www.ShadowStats.com).
Technically speaking,
these issues are not hidden. The government does tell you nearly
everything it’s doing — in a long series of cryptic footnotes. But
after 40 years of footnotes, most are long forgotten, even by many of
the government’s own economists. Here’s a brief rundown of just the
most obvious distortions ...
Distortion
#1
The True Unemployment Rate Is Over 12%
One of the first new
wrinkles in the unemployment stats was added during the Kennedy
Administration. And it persists to this very day.
Instead of measuring
how many people are actually out of work, they figured it would be
easier to simply keep track of how many people are applying for jobless
benefits.
Never mind the fact
that the benefits run out after 26 weeks! Never mind the hundreds of
thousands of “discouraged” workers who have stopped collecting
benefits months ago!
The government’s
unemployment number also excludes millions of part-time workers who are
seeking a full-time job but can’t find one ... millions more who are
disabled ... and even the 2.2 million that are in prison.
Make sense? Not
quite. If Mr. A loses his job because he’s fired, he’s
“unemployed.” But if Mr. B loses his job because he’s thrown in
jail, he’s not unemployed!? Give me a break.
So what is the true
unemployment rate in the United States including all those who
really want a job but don’t have one?
I can assure you
it’s not the 4.7% that the Bureau of Labor Statistics
reported for August. It’s probably closer to 12%, or over two and
a half times more than the official rate.
Distortion
#2
The True Inflation Rate Is Over 7%
Probably more so than
any other number, the government has a direct, vested interest in
keeping its official inflation numbers low.
Reason: The higher
the rate of inflation, the more it has to pay in Cost of Living
Adjustments to Social Security beneficiaries.
The first major push
for inflation-distorting reform began with the Clinton Administration.
Until then, the inflation measure was based on an essentially fixed basket
of goods.
Example: The basket
included an 8-ounce steak. And no matter what, they tracked the same
steak through time.
The Clinton
Administration, however, argued for a variable basket of goods.
If the 8-ounce steak got to too expensive, they argued, the typical
consumer would simply substitute hamburger. So the government should do
the same.
That wouldn’t be a
measure of the cost of living. It would be a measure of the
cost of survival. Yet, according to Williams, a series of
complex mathematical changes in how the Consumer Price Index is
calculated — giving less weight to higher priced items — essentially
achieves the same goal as the variable basket of goods.
Add that to a series
of other distortions in the Consumer Price Index ... and you’ve got a
measure that’s so far removed from reality, it’s a joke. Instead of
the 3.8% announced last week, the true inflation rate could be well over
7%.
The biggest victims
of this hoax: Anyone collecting Social Security benefits. According to
Williams, if the Consumer Price Index were calculated today the same way
it was during the Carter Administration, the payments would be 70%
larger!
Distortion
#3
Gross Domestic Product
Greatly Overstated
Back in 1991, the
U.S. government stopped focusing on the Gross National Product
(GNP) and started headlining the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
A key difference: The payments the government must make to service the
national debt are missed in the GDP numbers.
Separately, the
government always reports the growth in GDP after subtracting
inflation.
Example: If the GDP
growth is 8% and inflation is calculated at 4%, the government reports
that GDP growth is 4%.
But if the true inflation
rate is 7%, then guess what: Instead of moving along at a reasonably
healthy clip of 4%, the economy is actually crawling at a feeble rate of
1%.
Big difference!
No matter what, right
now, even the overstated rate is slipping: The government reports that
GDP growth fell to annual rate of just 2.9 percent in the second quarter
of 2006.
Distortion
#4
Deficits and Debts
The official 2005
budget listed the U.S. federal deficit at $319 billion.
But according to the
GAO, if the government followed the same generally accepted accounting
principles it demands of corporations, the real 2005 deficit would have
been $760 billion — or more than DOUBLE the official number.
And that’s just one
year of new debt the government has to take on to make ends meet.
If you take a look at
the total debts and obligations the government has accumulated
over the years, the picture gets worse, much worse.
At the end of the
first quarter, the total federal debt, including government agencies and
government-sponsored enterprises, stood at $10.2 trillion. (In the Fed’s
Flow of Funds report of June 8, 2006, see Table L.4. Then sum lines
4 and 5.)
But if you also
include the estimated unfunded liabilities for Social Security, Medicare
and other programs, the total federal debt is at least $54
trillion.
And that’s based on
three separate studies — by the American Enterprise Institute (AEI),
the National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) and the Brookings
Institute.
My
Recommendations
First,
don’t take government stats for granted. If you can’t trust Ford and
Fannie Mae, what makes you think you can trust Uncle Sam?
At the very least,
recognize that the government has a built-in institutional and
methodological bias in favor of good news. It’s simply not prudent to
base your long-term financial future upon them.
Second, take
steps to protect your assets from the ravages of inflation, whether
hidden or not. That includes a continuing allocation to gold- and
energy-related investments, despite any temporary ups and downs.
Third, keep
a substantial portion of your money as safe as possible to protect
yourself from the day when the truth starts pouring out. It hasn’t
happened yet. But just as occurred with Enron and WorldCom, once the
bubble of fantasy bursts, it doesn’t take long.
My favorite havens:
Treasury-only money market funds such as:
American Century
Capital Preservation Fund (800-345-2021),
Dreyfus 100% U.S. Treasury Fund (800-645-6561),
Fidelity Spartan U.S. Treasury Fund (800-544-8888),
USGI U.S. Treasury Securities Cash Fund (800-873-8637),
Vanguard Treasury MMF (800-662-7447), or
Weiss Treasury Only Money Fund (800-430-9617).
Although government
officials may distort the numbers, the U.S. Treasury Department has
never failed to meet its obligations for the payment of principal and
interest.
Good luck and God
bless!
Martin
Martin
Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money Report
support@martinweiss.com

© 2006 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editorial Archive
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