We are going dark
economically, in good time, but not before the Credit Cycle have wound
up.
Lights out, but not
until the Federal Reserve has attempted to monetize the governments way
out of their insipid hole, a stage managed, centrally planned school of
Marxist Physiocracy at work, making certain we are ruined beyond ruin.
There is simply no
other explanation in my opinion.
Have at it... even Das
Capital held little mention of the socialist alternatives, but instead
attacked the predatory nature of our system.
Apparently, the Federal
Reserve does not give a damn what the market wants because they have
figured out how to control the price. And now, price has nothing to do
with the market.
This manic desperation
is simply insane.
The Fed defends the
derivatives markets because no one needs them more than the Fed and
without them, they would have to monetize 10 to 12X more cash than they
already are at present.
They are up to their
necks in the Equities and Bond Markets.
Both markets are priced
for perfection at a time when perfection is merely a sentimental
objective.
Considering GNP and its
net income from abroad are heavily weighted into our phantom GDP
figures, the efforts being made to maintain the machinery, structures
and 'productive' financial endeavors will continue without measure.
Factors that should
produce 'stability' only produce waste.
The building has been
burned to the ground and now we are simply detonating its foundation.
Waste is everywhere;
especially within the FED's manic desperation... none of us will find
this useful or even purposeful for our own well being.
When the day arrives
Foreign Central Banks stop hurling good money after bad, a nuclear bomb
is going to go off in the financial markets, we just don't know when
that's going to happen, but can look for signs.
The majority of
economists have atoned, inline with Alan Greenspan, that rising interest
rates will improve the US savings outlook. Entertaining this notion is
perverse yet, an excellent example of how dismal the black art of
economics has become.
The structural absence
in savings requires a US dependence on international investors for
funding of the Current Account and Budget deficits. Higher rates are THE
panacea to repairing Global imbalances. The Fed continues to pander this
cure as if the very imbalances they have fostered have a cure to the
equivalent of ‘Financial Plague.’
Remarks
by Chairman Alan Greenspan: Globalization and innovation
At the Conference on Bank Structure and Competition, sponsored by the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
May 6, 2004
"To
be sure, even with the increased flexibility implied in a paradigm of
expanding globalization and innovation, the combination of exceptionally
low saving rates and historically high ratios of household debt to
income can be a concern if incomes unexpectedly fall. Indeed, there is
little doubt that virtually any debt burden becomes oppressive if
incomes fall significantly."
Oddly enough, real
incomes and real savings have been declining for decades. Clearly, an
oppressive debt burden is significant. Our ‘standard of living,’
earnings have fallen 11% since 1968, 7% alone in the past six years.
The GDP calculation is
fallacious at best; it increases regardless of whether a dollar is
placed into government or private hands. Generating debt is the greatest
component. The economy may appear to be expanding, but outside of
government, private sector income has been on the decline for a very
long time.
Wages, savings,
investment and capital accumulation priced in debt.
So now we must prepare
to save and not lament higher rates, for they are the very vehicle in
which we will be driven to save by way of ‘oppressive’ burdens of
debt. Fear not the waste employed by the public sector.
Brilliant, and by the
way Chairman, were you not encouraging everyone assuming debt under your
recent reign of compounding moral hazards to shift to adjustable rate
mortgages with rates at 54 year lows.
‘We may not be able
to usefully determine at what point foreign accumulation of net claims
on the United States will slow or even reverse, but it is evident that
the greater the degree of international flexibility, the less the risk
of a crisis.’
The Federal Reserve’s
Monetary Policy remains expanding bank credit, accelerating open market
desk operations and a printing press 24/7 as the stick save for the US
economy. Deflation fears have required conscious decision making on the
part of the Federal Reserve to raid all Capital Stocks and inflate asset
bubble after asset bubble to avoid what they perceive to be a
catastrophe, referred to as ‘recession.’
Their fears and manic
operant avoidance suggest it will be far worse than a mere recession.
Asset bubbles in stocks, bonds, real estate and credit (credit is an
asset until the bill is due) and grossly distorted and artificially low
interest rates have constantly sent the wrong signals to consumers.
After two decades of usurping the globe’s savings, the bill is coming
due there as well for the US Treasury, Government and out Corporate
Kleptocracy.
Diminished
‘savings’ was replaced with the ‘wealth effect’ through a
‘productivity miracle’ in credit and as returns of cash provided
historically low rates of return; so why not borrow short and lend long.
The Federal Reserve has
provided the greatest thrill ride in recorded financial history, a
one-way bet with only one outcome; an unprecedented credit collapse
whereby default is the most probable outcome. Just how rates remain
negative in real terms is difficult to imagine.
A collapsing currency,
our stock in trade, the dollar will begin to unwind with such voracity,
it is nearly impossible to accept an interest rate environment whereby
the cost of ‘money’ remains low. Unless, of course, there is an
adjacent tool that can mitigate the shortfalls in the near term.
There is, it is the
printing press and I fully expect the insane mindset currently
inhabiting 33 Liberty Street in New York City to employ it. It is their
nature, the history of their actions and entirely congruent with
‘policy.’
Risk and uncertainty
never entered the equation until now.
Now, it is simply too
late.
‘The resolution of
our current account deficit and household debt burdens does not strike
me as overly worrisome, but that is certainly not the case for our
yawning fiscal deficit. Our fiscal prospects are, in my judgment, a
significant obstacle to long-term stability because the budget deficit
is not readily subject to correction by market forces that stabilize
other imbalances.’
I often wonder what
does strike our good Chairman as ‘worrisome’ as he seems to believe
everything outside of the very government he is financing is likely to
stabilize. Are derivatives ‘stable’ and one must wonder what they
truly create out side of the transfer of risk. They certainly do not
create ‘Value.’
‘The
last three decades have witnessed a significant coalescing of economic
policy philosophies. Central planning has been judged as ineffective and
is now generally avoided. Market flexibility has become the focus,
albeit often hesitant focus, of reform in most countries. All
policymakers are struggling to understand global and technological
changes that appear to have profoundly altered world economic
developments. For most economic participants, these changes appear to
have had positive effects on their economic well-being. But significant
minorities, trapped on the adverse side of creative destruction, are
suffering. This is an issue that needs to be addressed if globalization
is to sustain the necessary public support.’
Had I
just fallen off the turnip truck or been slumbering in front of a new
plasma TV, I suppose it would be palatable to accept the excuse
mongering above.
At no
time in history has ‘Central Planning’ been embraced with such
necessity.
The
process of Creative Destruction is certainly present. Unfortunately it
is merely a subjective point of view. Empirically, the much vaunted
concept the new economy replacing the old is riddled with holes.
I
still need to eat, drink and use the loo. I must work to earn income in
order to consume. In order to consume, I must save. If ‘technology’
allows me to be more efficient within this fundamental process,
efficiencies are gained.
At
present the new economy is maturing and providing diminished returns at
the margin. On balance, for every new paradigm, there has been a
countervailing correction of excess.
The
new economy was simply a catch phrase of Wall Street’s propaganda
machine, yet another poorly defined concept used to justify another of
Alan Greenspan’s Bubbles as the Industrial Economy was arbitraged.
Remember this when it comes time to defend America and the need to
productive endeavors is hampered by a lack of capital resources and
stock.
I
suppose in the New & improved Globally Interdependent Economy we can
toss paper airplanes at one another in times of war, disease and famine
Basic economic models
assume:
Output: y = f(N,K,L)
This is not the real
issue, the real issue is incomes to service the mountainous DEBT:
Y = Consumption (C) +
Government Spending (G) + Investment (I)
Given consumption is
credit based asset inflation through Alan's Greenspan’s surreptitious
‘Wealth Effect’... far less consumption is forthcoming.
Investment?
Who in their right mind
'invests' in distorted price signals with little if any intrinsic value?
That leaves... 'G' and
I see no signs of that letting up.
Hyper Inflation of
asset base stocks is going to spillover into price in exchange. We
produce very little, yet consume a disproportionate amount. I sincerely
doubt out paper airplanes will replace hard work when it comes time to
rebuild capital stocks.
If you somehow are
managing to hold onto conventional monetary analysis implying
'deflation' is a pure monetary phenomena, you have a lot of explaining
to do... as we are deflating with rapid expansion of both monetary
facilities and credit.
The issues remain
capital & cash flows. Free flowing property... we do not have this,
what we have is a constricted system designed to channel flows.
When an economic system
can no longer perform due to dislocations, it matters little how much
money you print or credit you facilitate. It remains tightly within the
domain of ‘First Abusers,’ namely the Fed’s shareholders. This
privilege only serves to exacerbate the dislocation in terms of price,
function, flow and form.
Foundational economists
having embraced all sorts of seemingly benign 'truths' and have much to
learn as well, we all do. Conventional analysis is dead on arrival. The
data points project benign neglect unprecedented in both scope and
scale.
Adam Smith's ‘Wealth
of Nations’ could not have imagined the wrath of globalization, yet
the Statist remains firmly entrenched in failure.
Ricardo... ditto.
Competitive advantage for whom... the lowest cost producer? Someone
wins, yet another loss. How is this mutually advantageous? It is not,
the simple fact is the IMF/World Banks loans made to nations thought to
be prime candidates for this advantage, found a concentration of
industry into a few hands.
Marx.... divides
property into property owners, the rest are a proletariat herd at their
beck and call... people embrace economic slavery for the greater good.
Von Mises believed in
the competitive efficiencies of markets, aligning the value of money and
independence of capital and property, by far the best school of economic
thought in my opinion, one step short of brilliant.
Keynes did not believe
in truly free markets, but intervention.
Freidman... adjusting
the monetary base for stability is utterly devoid of logic and clearly
requires ‘Central Planning.’
At present we are faced
with a new age of purism for the greater good.
This environment is run
by computers programmed by fallible humans with one eye on the prize...
Utopia.
What
a mess, protect yourself and the ones you love; there are distinct
relationships between tyranny and poverty. History is replete with
examples.
©
2005 John Mackenzie
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