THE DOG THAT DIDN'T BARK by the Mogambo Guru
The Fed has screwed up, massively. And the result is, the United States is headed down the path to economic ruination.
If you want a good explanation why, then look no further than the Wayne Angell article in the Wall Street Journal last Thursday, entitled "The Rubin Recession." This Angell character was a member of the Fed Board of Governors from 1986 to 1994. So you would think that he would have a pretty good idea what he was talking about when he is talking about economics. But then you'd be wrong, sort of.
The first sentence of the article sets the tone, as Angell blames the recession that started in "the third quarter of 2001" on - and hold onto your hat because it is going to comically jump up off of your head when you hear this - "the Clinton administration's attempt to pay down the federal debt."
This is the first I've heard of that! And if you have been paying attention to the accumulation of government debt, then this will no doubt be a surprise for you, too!
So I know that this where I have to do a little research, because I'm sure that you are not going to take my word for it, as Angell is a former Fed governor and a big shot, writing in the Wall Street Journal and advising important rich people, and I am just an angry, crazy man writing with a crayon on the wall and begging for spare change from people going into the mall, even though I am pleading, "Please take my word for it! Please!"
So I grudgingly get up off of my big, fat butt with a lot of whining and complaining, and I trudge over to where I keep some graphs, still whining and complaining, and I dig around in there awhile, and then I get tired and after awhile I forget why I am there. Then I come back and sit down and read what I wrote, and then I remember why I went over there in the first place, and then I do a little swearing and then, with a little more whining and complaining, go back, and finally, finally, I locate the graph of Treasury debt. I blow the dust off of it and hold it up to the light.
Okay, admittedly from about 2000 until the third quarter of 2001 the accumulated debt does not go up that much. But it did not go down, and only slightly trended up for a few months, but that is a long way from the glib characterization that anybody was paying down anything. And Angell should know that.
Furthermore, this lack of borrowing was due, in the greater part, to the fact that the government was taking in bigger, more gigantic loads of money via the expedient of higher taxes, especially the Social Security/Medicare tax, which was tragically boosted to a mind-shattering 15.3% of gross income, where it sits today.
But that "third quarter of 2001" is infamous for other things. That is the exact moment when two things simultaneously happened, 1) the debt really started to explode, going from $5.8 trillion to today's $7.1 trillion and 2) something else. And for all I know, there was a third thing that happened, too, because these kinds of things do not happen in isolation.
Then Angell goes on to castigate former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin et al, declaring that they did "not understand the first principle of macroeconomics." I can tell by the way your head snapped around that you are as curious as I am about this fabulous "first principle." I love this "first principle" thing, as it makes me think of Sir Isaac Newton, or "Izzy" as I call him, because his Principles of Physics are easy to comprehend, and there is never anybody saying things like, "Well, before we can get started we need a quick little review of the topographical hexadecimal mathematical system in N-space."
This First Principle According To Wayne Angell is, and I know you are going to love this as much as I did, "Output growth is not sustainable without a growth of total credit and debt." I say "huh?" I gotta tell ya that I have read a lot of things in my life, although lately it is mostly letters from collection agencies demanding that I send them some money real fast or they will take stronger action, but I have never, ever heard anybody tell me that "Output growth is not sustainable without a growth of total credit and debt." And especially never has anybody told me that it was some basic principle! Because I am here to tell you that if you want a Basic Principle that you can really take to the bank, output growth can be sustained by profits alone! And it usually was, all the way through the history of mankind! And at the beginning of production, output growth it can be started with savings alone! As it usually was, similarly all the way through the history of mankind.
But it gets better, as we now see where the current Fed idea of massive and irresponsible increases in Fed credit comes from, as Angell concludes that since the private sector has loaded up on debt, "this household debt burden continues to require both low interest rates and rising household wealth from real estate and the stock market to avoid deflationary pressures." In other words, the private sector has now gotten itself so loaded up on consumer debt, real estate debt and total reliance on the stock market, that it is now necessary to continue to force interest rates down, and down, and down, down down down, downdy down down de down down, so that the idiots who got themselves into that kind of bankrupting mess can be saved from their own folly. And not only that, but everybody thinks it will work! Hahahaha!
But the really troubling thing about the mess the Fed has gotten us into is that its chairman, the honorable Sir Alan, knows better. I had lunch the other day with two guys who are also scribblers about economics, Bob Wood and Steve Heller. Over our meals, we all wondered aloud why it is that Greenspan, an erstwhile gold-bug/sound money/Austrian- type dude, and therefore recognizably one of the more intelligent of our species, has apparently given up the faith. Why is this Greenspan guy, who not only knows better, but has actually proved that he knows better by writing one of the better defenses of gold and the utter refutation of fiat money, doing this to us? Why?
Steve Heller thinks he is doing it on purpose. For Greenspan so loves mankind that he is deliberately proving to the people of the planet that you MUST have gold as money, and proving the profound wisdom of the Founding Fathers, who were so careful to write into the Constitution - the very Constitution itself! - that money shall only be silver and gold. And he is teaching this Grand Lesson to us via the brilliantly simple expedient of doing literally everything that a central bank can do, to every excess, when unencumbered by the strictures of gold, to ensure a boom. Including enlisting, through the global financial system, the cooperation of almost all foreign central banks on the globe, to do the same things! Gaaaahhhhh! Uh-oh! I feel one of my "spells" coming on.
The purpose of this deliberate boom-bust cycle, with the emphasis on "bust," is to prove to the primitive savages, namely you and me, once and for all that when the inevitable bust comes, so that there will be nooooOOOooo doubt in anyone's mind, that you cannot have a monetary system that uses a fiat currency, especially one in which you have fractional reserve banking, and DOUBLY especially when you allow such leverage inside the banking system on such an absolutely massive scale, and TRIPLY especially when the expansion is accompanied by bigger government and an economy receiving huge money transfers, which is the government literally handing out money.
You don't need a big brain to see what is coming. All you need to do is stop drinking heavily, lay off those prescription medications that have a mind-altering component, and take a look at some of the other times in history when people did what we, and I am talking about us Earth creatures again, are doing. And the one thing that you would notice, if you were paying close attention with your magnifying glass, snooping around looking for clues as to what is going on around you, is what you did NOT see. It is another famous case of the Dog That Didn't Bark.
Specifically, you never read about a time when people used a fiat currency to expand government and its spending, multiplied by a massive fractional reserve system of banking, where everybody ended up rich and fat and happy. Instead, what you always read, and lots of times there are really neat pictures and photos with captions to make it a more interesting read, is how all the fiat-currency people went broke and died of starvation in utter poverty at the end of the boom-bust cycle, usually involved in some disastrously expensive and destructive war.
I shiver at the thought.
Regards,
The Mogambo Guru, for The Daily Reckoning |