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RESTRUCTURING AMERICA'S SUBURBAN DREAM:
The root cause of rising oil prices must be addressed
if we are to provide a Sustainable Future for Our Grandchildren
by
Michael Hampton
January 7, 2008
The comfortable
fantasies that have sustained the American Dream for several decades,
are fading fast. 2007 was the year when we took a peek behind the
curtain, and saw what financial machinations are sustaining the world's
largest economy. American consumer spending represents 25-30% of global
GNP, but the money that Americans are spending is not all their own, nor
is much of the energy we are using. Keeping the oil and the money
flowing relies on spin, financial manipulation, and statistical
adjustments which are now being exposed as fiction. If the dollar loses
its purchasing power, how will US energy consumers go on importing the
oil they need to maintain an extravagant lifestyle?
. . . .
. . A "House of Cards"?
We learned something important in 2007. Mortgage loans were being
repackaged and sold at high ratings. This practice had helped to sustain
the final years of a massive US housing bull market. But when the
subprime crisis hit, shocked investors learned that these securities
were they were not worth what they thought they were. In some instances
they were worthless. Now these securities are no longer in demand, the
money is no longer flowing so easily into mortgage loans, and the US
finds itself in a deep housing crisis.
This story is only at its beginning. The US economy is reliant on
"the kindness of strangers." But those accommodating foreign
strangers can lose confidence in dollar-denominated investment
opportunities, and their "kindness" can be quickly withdrawn.
Even if they can be persuaded to go on providing capital, they will do
so on less generous terms. It is now very likely, they will be providing
less money in the future. The US will find that it has to rely more upon
its own capital, and that may mean that certain excesses, and fantasy
lifestyles such as are found in the American suburbs will need to be
curtailed or cutback.
We are beginning to see the impact of credit tightening on US consumer
spending, and that may put the US into recession. But don't expect the
Fed to provide a quick fix. There are other serious vulnerabilities
likely to hit the confidence of dollar investors in the next year or
two. With China holding almost $1 Trillion of US dollar assets, Japan
about half that amount, and Middle Eastern oil exports holding gigantic
dollar assets too, their confidence cannot be taken for granted. They
are already beginning to lose their appetite, and may dump dollars if
they hear more bad news from the US.
Other fictions that I expect will be exposed are:
+ US inflation is low : -
The true rate of inflation could be more than 2 to 3 times the
widely-reported "core" rate, which is near 2%. Imbedded in the
core rate, are items like "owner equivalent rents", which
represent almost 40%, and hardly moves, while energy and food costs
(which everyone pays) are not included. These vital items are now
soaring ahead at rates of increase we havent seen the 1970's. Higher
inflation, will also impact on real growth calculations. If more
realistic adjustments to nominal growth are made, we would find that the
US economy is not growing at all, and is already in recession.
+ The US banking system is solvent
: - Once American banks have finished writing down their tier three
assets to more realistic market-related values, and they have recognised
all their losses from their credit derivatives business, much of their
capital may be wiped out. It will not be cheap and easy to replace the
lost capital, as many banks are now finding. They have turned to
sovereign wealth funds, who are providing convertible preferreds at high
interest rates, like 9-11%. When capital is as expensive is that, and it
is supporting assets earning half that rate of return, then the banks
are passing away more than their profits just to stay alive.
+ US government finances are sound :
- Too many future liabilities have not been funded, and are being
improperly accounted for, and some would say the government's position
has been mis-represented. As Comptroller General, David Walker and
others have pointed out, if someone were put all the liabilities onto a
"balance sheet", the US government would be seen to be
insolvent. It looks virtually impossible for the US to meet its future
obligations, without massive inflation or huge tax rises. Meantime,
Presidential candidates are speaking about introducing expensive health
care initiatives, while others are saying it is essential to maintain
the Bush tax cuts. If the government keeps borrowing and printing money
to meet its obligations, rather than raising taxes, there will be no
alternative to colossal inflation.
+ American pensions are adequate
: - Many Americans have inadequate pensions. They are relying on future
extractions of equity from their homes, to get them through retirement
years. But demographic changes mean that many retiring baby boomers will
find little demand for their large and expensive homes in the years to
come. If home prices slide back to the real prices of 2000-2001, as some
hitherto accurate forecasters have predicted, many Americans will find
they have difficulties in their retirement years. Meantime, if we see
high inflation, it will greatly erode the value of traditional pension
assets,
+ The American suburban way of life
is sustainable : - Most of the US suburbs were originally
built when oil was cheap, and the US was the world's largest producer of
oil. Now the US remains the largest user of oil, but imports over half
its requirement. High US oil consumption reflects the widespread
suburban lifestyle. 25% of the world's oil is consumed by America, yet
the country has only 4% of the world's population. Other countries, like
China and India, are becoming richer, and competing with America for
scarce oil, so oil prices are bound to go higher, and probably far
higher when priced in a sliding dollar. As the largest users per capita,
North America consumers (including Canada), are highly vulnerable to a
rise in oil prices. A peak in oil production may be apparent within a
few years, putting ever more upwards pressure on the oil price. Global
competition will eventually force prices to levels which make America's
"wasteful" suburban life style unsustainable. And it is not
only the cost of transport fuel that will hit suburban dwellers.
Individual homes are expensive to operate, with high costs of heating
and air conditioning. With more residential space per capita than other
countries, and lacking the efficiencies of multi-family apartments,
suburbanites will find themselves hit hard if electricity, gas, and
heating oil prices rise.
The sad thing is that the crisis point is coming from many of these
issues, all at the same time. That will make them doubly difficult to
address with traditional remedies (ie. a moderate recession, with
moderate cuts in oil consumption, while simply buying time until more
oil production comes onstream.) The old muddle-through strategy will not
make oil more abundant. The most worrying thing is that intense global
competition for scarce oil is about to hit at a time when the US dollar
is beginning to rapidly lose its purchasing power.
Americans are not prepared for the coming crunch, and the leading
politicians are focussed on other issues. Most politicians are content
to leave the main fictions unchallenged. They know that negative
campaiging rarely succeeds. Few have the courage to make the call to
sacrifice and change of lifestyle that is needed. So we may find
ourselves sleep-walking when the crisis hits. Ultimately, a big shock
may be the only thing that will get the average voter worried enough to
demand that their leaders start to address the root problem : America's
traditional yearning for the a suburban way of life, which has left the
country with a mammoth and unsustainable appetite for oil.
Author and cultural commentator, James Howard Kunstler, has called The
American suburbs "the greatest misallocation of resources in the
history of the world". This grandiose claim struck some as a
massive exaggeration when he first made it several years ago. But since
then we have seen oil prices zoom up to $100, and US real estate prices
have gone into serious decline. Assuming these ominous trends continue,
Kunstler's pronouncement will be seen to be correct, and we may be
headed towards "the Long Emergency" that he has warned us
about. America's investment in the suburbs, will need to be restructured
or written off, in order that we can find a new and more sustainable
future for our children and grandchildren.
. . . .
. . Too much complacency?
The coming crisis is fundamentally an American problem, and Americans
will need to solve it for themselves, because the rest of the world is
losing patience. Without foreigners willingness to sustain an obsolete
lifestyle, by allowing America to over-borrow and over-consume, the
decades-old American dream will simply collapse under its own weight.
The gravity of financial reality and fact of limited resources will be
finally driven home to Americans through the market. Oil prices could
easily surge to $200 per barrel, $250, or higher - whatever is needed to
deliver the necessary shock and coerce people into changing their living
and commuting patterns. The props that hold up the fantasy were barely
adequate in 2007, and they are getting more wobbly as we move into 2008,
and oil threatens to make a sustained breakout about $100.
The American dream, for many is a home in the suburbs, with commuting to
work, to school, and to social activities by car. It grew up after the
invention of the automobile. Unlike Europe, most of America lacked a
developed railway system. So the invention of the car, spurred the
growth of the suburbs. The few streetcar routes that existed, were torn
out and replaced by highways. Only a fewer older cities, mainly on the
East coast, had exploded in size before the invention of the car. A
handful of big cities had already provided themselves with an effective
mass transport system, which did not rely on automobiles. The rest of
the cities and suburbs are an oilman's dream. The vast majority of the
inhabitants get around by private car. While poorer folk take buses, and
only a tiny minority use the rare rail connections. The result? Per
capita consumption of oil is more than double in America, compared to
what it is in the UK and continental Europe. Only Canada, with its
sparse population, and wide open spaces, exceeds America in per capita
oil use. An important difference is that Canada has the oil it needs to
meet its domestic requirements. The US must turn to foreigners, many of
whom are actively hostile to its politics, and unsympathetic towards the
ill-disciplined "energy hog" which keeps asking for ever-more
oil. Might it not make sense for oil exporting nations to conserve some
of that scarce oil for its own future generations?
Almost half of American live in the suburbs, where their daily routine
requires driving. This makes them reliant on cheap energy, and
particularly dependent on moderate gasoline prices. America's oil
addiction is a necessity of its living-and-transport infrastructure, and
it has been maintained by a belief that inexpensive oil is a birthright.
Cheap gasoline is so fundamental to the American economy that no
politicians have been willing to risk votes by proposing higher gasoline
taxes to discourage over-use, as most European countries have done years
ago.
. . . .
. . Decision Gridlock and Bad Decisions?
The idea that we can simply replace an oil-fueled car with a new one,
fueled by an alternative fuel, and need to do nothing about changing our
transportation infrastructure is misguided, and even dangerous. Such
thinking stops us from taking needed actions while there is still time,
and encourages poor decision making. A good example of a bad decision,
are the extensive tax incentives which have created an industry around
ethanol. These policies ignore the reality that, as Richard Branson has
put it, "Sugar-based ethanol is seven times more effective than
corn-based ethanol, so every acre of land can create seven times the
volume of fuel."
Added demand has forced up the price of US-grown corn, and other
derivative food products, while doing little to reduce our dependence of
foreign oil imports. Ethanol is lower grade fuel than gasoline, and
requires much energy in its production, so there is little net energy
gain from its production. The inadequacy of this "solution"
becomes more apparent when we consider the energy and fertilizer
required on a farm to produce corn, the raw material for ethanol. Higher
oil prices will force up farming costs, and so corn and ethanol prices
too.
Unfortunately, China and India have shown some willingness to follow the
US pattern, with a growing proportion of their citizens living in the
suburbs. In a time of peak oil, the world can simply not afford two or
more large countries, with a transport infrastructure like America's.
The longer we persist without seeing this, the more capital that will be
committed to an outmoded transport infrastructure, and a wasteful way of
living.
It will not be easy to turn back. Americans have invested far too much
in their suburban dream, to make an easy u-turn. However, we have moved
beyond the horrors of Greenspan's Money Machine (see my article, "The
Lessons of Grandparents", FinancialSense.com October 3, 2005),
which helped to recycle US dollars spent on Chinese products, back to
America, when the Chinese bought dollar-denominated bonds.
. . . .
. .
This financial recycling operation helped to keep dollar mortgage rates
artificially low for years, and thereby encouraged Americans to buy too
much of everything, while piling up increasing debts against their
homes. Many refinanced their homes, and purchased excessive amounts of
foreign and Chinese goods. And they bought properties that they did not
need, using houses as "chips" in a wild gamble that real
estate prices were headed forever higher. Now, with the tightening of
credit, and a fall in property prices, there has been a change in
sentiment, and new construction has stalled. This will slow new
properties being added to the already-huge surplus (4.27 million unsold
homes in November 2007) that's enough to satisfy 10 month's worth of
demand. But the problem of too many homes, and too few buyers will not
go away quickly. Prices will have to fall until those homes are
affordable to buyers, without the help of funny finance. And the
location of the homes in relation to cheaper forms of transport, and
become a factor long before the bottom is hit.
. . . .
. . An unhappy legacy
The years of excess have left the US with an unhappy legacy:
- Huge malinvestment in suburban property,
- A massive build-up of mortgage debts, and
- An unpredictable pool of dollar reserves held by sovereign foreign
governments, like China, Japan, and various Middle Eastern countries.
Those dollar instruments represent a liability that needs servicing, and
also a threat. If they are discarded quickly, it could trigger a crash
in the dollar. The subprime crisis has precipitated a rethink in the
desirability of holding big dollar reserves. Foreign governments are now
diversifying away from dollar bonds, preferring to use their dollars to
purchase strategic equities, such as private equity firms (like
Blackstone), commodity producers, and the preferred shares of investment
banks. Some of the dollars getting recycled into other hands in this
way, are then invested outside equity markets, and find their way into
gold, oil, and food - forcing higher the prices of those commodities.
Implications:
+ American mortgage finance may be starved for capital for many years to
come. Costs of borrowing will be higher, and terms will be less
favorable.
+ US house prices will continue to fall, until prices reach a level
where they are affordable to the masses, on more normal financing terms-
not the zero percent down, low start-up rates we saw in 2004-6. That
could mean a fall of 30-40 percent, or more, compared with peak prices.
+ Higher oil prices mean that transport costs will take an increasing
share of American budgets, leaving less for housing related expenses.
This is will mean forced downsizing for many. People will move closer to
their places of employment, giving up long and expensive drives to work.
+ A downwards spiral in the dollar, as foreign governments disgorge
their excess holdings, will push dollar oil prices higher, making the US
suburbs even less viable.
+ Remote suburbs will be in less demand, allowing their real estate
values to slide, and probably sharply, until a restructuring of the
suburbs becomes financially possible. As an extreme example, if a
neighborhood is mostly in foreclosure, it will be easier and cheaper to
bulldoze a part of it, and replace it with a new light rail line.
The Way Forward
I see many changes coming, as Americans face up to the need to change
their suburban way of living. Here are some of the many changes which
can be anticipated. Each of these may represent a partial step towards
restructuring the suburban/living infrastructure of America. Many more
are needed, but these may represent progress:
+ Transit Village concept:
In California and other states, new types of "villages" are
being built. Homes are put closer together, within walking distance of a
transport hub, from which villagers can commute to work by rail.
Properly designed, these new villages feel and look like old fashioned
communities, with a main street, shopping, and school all within a short
distance. Property values in these communities have held up better than
those in remote suburbs, as they are popular with current residents, and
there is much less need for expensive commuting by private car.
. . . .
. .
+ New commuter train lines on top of
highways: The highways are already there, forming arteries
for a new transport system. Why not build light rail or other mass
transit on top of them? The roads can be taken underground and hidden as
they approach the main transit hubs- the new villages.
+ Use the new transport system, as a
mechanism for capital creation: In Hong Kong, where I live,
the MTR Corporation is sometimes granted land around the rail links it
builds as an inducement to spend the many millions of capital
expenditures required to build a new rail line. This technique was also
used 150 years ago with the building of trans-American railroads- they
got land by putting down rail, and were in effect property companies.
This is a win/win, because once the rail link is built, the land near
the stations is worth more. The railway companies literally build value
for themselves.
+ As the dollar falls, US exports
will become more cost-competitive: And with that, imports
will also be more expensive. This will help to stabilize the dollar, at
some point the balance of trade will be restored. However, America will
need to rebuild some of its old export-oriented industries. And
Americans will need to become accustomed to a lower standard of living,
both in relative and absolute terms. The change will be less visible and
create less political stress, if it is delivered through erosion of the
dollar's value.
+ The US will have to reorient its
economy: The new way for the US economy will be away from
recent borrow-and-spend, and back towards the 19th century pattern of
produce-and-export. Many changes will be needed and can be suggested.
For instance, shopping malls may be turned into factories in America.
Ironically, this transformation may occur while the reverse happens in
some Chinese cities.
America will not be the only nation facing these challenges. However,
because of the tremendous oil appetite of the US, and its weak currency,
the crisis will hit America especially hard. The potential for it to be
the global leader in finding a new and more sustainable way forward will
be particularly compelling. If American finds a new mission as a leader
for positive change, towards more sustainable living, it will have a
more positive role on the planet, and its global popularity will
improve. Once they are woken up, I believe Americans will face the
challenge, and even demand effective leadership from its politicians.
But the day of reckoning, and the rude awakening still lies ahead.
The Political Debate
Few of these dramatic
changes will happen until Americans are ready. At the moment the
majority of American seems to be clinging to their hopes. Most are
believing and acting as if there are just some temporary stresses on the
US economy, and these will go away; things will eventually "go back
to normal." A few politicians (Al Gore, and Ron Paul) and some
business men (Matt Simmons) are warning that there is no return, and the
conditions that allowed the US suburbs to bloom were unique, and are not
repeatable. The US was the "last man standing" after the
ravages of WWII. It had the strongest economy, and in the 1950's was an
oil exporter, with its own huge resources of oil. Those old resources
are being depleted rapidly, and other countries have caught up with
America, and can now compete effectively for those limited global oil
resources that remain. Part of me hopes that some wise politicians will
learn to talk about a return to 19th century patterns, with extensive
rail links and tighter village communities, as a more "normal"
way of life for American children of the future.
What we need now is an army of vigorous truth tellers (Al Gore, Matt
Simmons, Ron Paul, JH Kunstler, and Jim Puplava come to mind) and an
uncorrupted mainstream media willing to report their views. A co-ordinated
national effort will be needed to repair the damage, and build an
American dream which is sustainable, and that can be passed on to our
Grandchildren.

© 2008 Michael
Hampton
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AKA Dr.Bubb
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