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To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (4567)5/29/2003 9:32:34 AM
From: 4figureau  Respond to of 5423
 
America’s $44 trillion unfunded liability

By: Tim Wood


Posted: 2003/05/28 Wed 22:00 EDT | © Mineweb 1997-2003


NEW YORK -- On Monday last week the Boston Globe newspaper ran a tantalizing op-ed by two leading academic economists who said the Bush administration was suppressing a commissioned study that quantified the extent of America’s looming fiscal crisis. The report has now surfaced thanks to sleuthing by the Financial Times and it is staggering reading.
The bottom line is that American politicians have promised far more in social welfare than they can deliver – at least $44 trillion and probably much more. The crisis is set to be triggered by impending mass retirement by the baby boomer generation that claims entitlement to social security and medicare assistance.

$44 trillion was the conservative estimate of a report commissioned by fired Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neil. The report’s finding was never included in this February’s Bush budget, following on a long tradition of government deception about its accounts.

O'Neil, former boss of aluminium giant Alcoa before being drafted into Team Bush, was fired not long after he criticised Congressional Republican economic plans as “show business”. He asked Kent Smetters, who worked at Treasury at the time, and Jagdessh Gokhale, who was consulting to the Treasury to give him the real facts. One of the people they consulted was Laurence Kotlikoff, chairman of the Department of Economics at Boston University, who then blew the whistle in the Boston Globe article he co-wrote.

The report bears an “AEI Pamphlet” hallmark which appears to assign copyright to the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative Washington think-tank.

The report’s premise is that “fiscal imbalances” arise from a “generational balance” and that the problems are being swept under an accounting rug that creates a “bias in favor of current debt minimization at the expense of policies that would be fiscally sounder from a long-term perspective.”

Smetters and Gokhale had a disarmingly simple point to prove – how does the present value of all future revenues stack up against present value of all the future expenditures? The answer is negative $44 trillion, or 4.2 years of 2002 gross domestic product. If no remedial action is taken before 2008, the fiscal imbalance as it is termed rises to $54 trillion. Medicare is the problem child, consuming more than 80% of the imbalance. It looks like medicine is the field to be in ten years from now.

Put another way, the American system has an outstanding bill of $44 trillion. Fortunately the bill is not due tomorrow, but it must either raise revenue or save strenuously to avoid defaulting. Those amount to choices which Smetters and Gokhale lay out, such as nearly doubling payroll taxes forever starting immediately, or raising income taxes by more than a third, or halving social security and Medicare benefits.

Hell will freeze over before the budget crisis is addressed ahead of next year’s national elections. Nevertheless, the longer reform is delayed or antiquated accounting measures are applied, the worse the problem will become. It has the makings of a vicious political war between entitlement seekers and the saps who must be drained to keep them in food and health. Likewise, the potential economic crisis it would generate is almost unimaginable.

The projected shortfall is manna for gold bugs who are predicting American economic woes to restore the metal’s monetary mojo. Meanwhile, look out for carping about the miserly $350 billion tax cut over ten years. That’s a bargain relative to political pork like Boston’s Big Dig which roadwork’s will cost taxpayers $2 billion per mile.


mips1.net



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (4567)5/29/2003 9:40:16 AM
From: 4figureau  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5423
 
DOLLAR DUMPED BY GOLD DIGGERS

By PAUL THARP

May 29, 2003 -- A touch of gold fever is sweeping the world, and could worsen into a deadly allergy to the dollar.
Some investors think gold is ready to hit $400 an ounce - and keep soaring - for the first time in seven years, because there aren't enough safe currencies, bonds or stocks to handle the world's trillions in cash hordes.

The sinking dollar has prompted Asia's central banks to call a session next month on whether to unload their dollar holdings, which account for about 90 percent of the world's dollar reserves.

Gold has jumped 15 percent in recent weeks, but softened here yesterday to $365.20, down $2.60. The dollar, after hitting a new low of $1.1932 against the euro earlier this week, strengthened to $1.1772 - but is still off 21 percent in the past year.

Currency speculators increasingly are using gold to hedge their gambles with the dollar, euro and yen. Some investors believe that if U.S. Treasury bonds get dumped by more foreign investors, gold could skyrocket.

nypost.com



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (4567)5/29/2003 9:43:23 AM
From: 4figureau  Respond to of 5423
 
U.S., U.K. House Prices to Decline `Dramatically'

May 29 (Bloomberg) -- House prices in the U.S., the U.K. and four other major economies will drop ``dramatically'' in the next few years, leading some of those nations to slip into recession, according to a report by the Economist magazine.

Rising home values in the U.S., Britain, Spain, the Netherlands, Ireland and Australia have created a ``property-price bubble,'' the magazine said in an e-mailed release. It collected data going back to 1975 from sources including estate agents, lending institutions and government agencies.

``In all those countries house prices are seriously overvalued,'' said Pam Woodall, economics editor at the Economist. ``At some stage in the next few years, house prices in those countries will fall and when they do the consequences will be far nastier than the stock market burst.''

The lowest interest rates in decades in the U.S. and Britain have helped drive consumer spending, which accounts for about two- thirds of the world's biggest and fourth-biggest economies.

The U.S. Federal Reserve's benchmark rate is at 1.25 percent, the lowest since 1961, and the Bank of England's key rate is at 3.75 percent, the lowest in almost five decades.

``Because interest rates are already so low, central banks have much less room than usual to cushion economies against the fall-out from a slump in house prices,'' the Economist report said. ``If a drop in prices caused a slump in consumer spending, the Fed could not push real interest rates much lower.''

`Dwindling Wealth'

The magazine advised home owners in the six countries identified as having a ``bubble'' to sell up and rent until prices drop. People considering buying a home should hold off until prices have fallen, the magazine said.

``Most home-owners will have to stick it out and watch their wealth dwindle,'' Woodall said. ``Where they went wrong was in expecting double-digit returns to continue.''

The Economist's survey also showed that London is the most expensive city in the world to live in followed by New York and Tokyo.

quote.bloomberg.com



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (4567)5/29/2003 9:47:04 AM
From: 4figureau  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5423
 
Mañana economics

Economists keep saying the sun will come out tomorrow ... and tomorrow ... and tomorrow.

May 28, 2003: 4:35 PM EDT
By Mark Gongloff, CNN/Money Staff Writer


NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Most experts think the economy's rebound to full strength is just a month or two away.

After all, there's a powerful cocktail of stimulus in the shaker -- everything from a falling dollar to tax cuts to low interest rates -- to give the world's largest economy a boost.

But some bearish economists are warning that we've heard these forecasts more than once before, that the forecasts have been wrong every time, and that there's little to indicate they're right this time.

"The principal forecast has been the mañana forecast," said former Federal Reserve economist Lacy Hunt, now chief economist with Hoisington Investment Management in Austin, Tex. Mañana is the Spanish word for "tomorrow," which is when forecasters have consistently said the U.S. economy would get back to full strength.

What's different this time?
On Thursday the government is due to issue its revision of first-quarter gross domestic product (GDP), the broadest measure of the nation's economy, with analysts betting the number will be raised to a 1.9 percent growth rate, on average, from the Commerce Department's initial reading of 1.6 percent, according to a Reuters poll.


But even 1.9 percent GDP growth is lousy. Look at the five years ending in 1994, during which the economy sank into recession and then struggled to recover, but still managed to claw ahead at a 2.2 percent annual rate, on average.

Most economists think 3.5 percent growth is necessary to bring unemployment down. The U.S. economy hasn't managed to put together two straight quarters like that since the third and fourth quarters of 1999, when unemployment was at 4 percent. Since then, unemployment has jumped to 6 percent.

But take heart, many economists say. On average, forecasters predict 3.4 percent GDP growth in both the third and fourth quarters, according to the Philadelphia Fed's latest survey of 37 economists. But these forecasters have been wrong before -- more than once, in fact.

When surveyed at the start of 2001, forecasters predicted 3.6 percent GDP growth for all of 2002; GDP actually grew just 2.4 percent in 2002. When surveyed at the start of 2002, forecasters predicted 3.5 percent growth in 2003. Lately, they've cut their forecast for the year to 2.2 percent.

Now, they're expecting 3.6 percent GDP growth in 2004. Why are they right this time, when they were wrong before?

In response, these economists point to:

tax cuts, signed into law Wednesday by President Bush, which he claims will boost consumer spending, stock prices and business investment

interest rates at 40-year lows, making borrowing costs cheap

the falling dollar, which should help boost U.S. exports and exporters' profits

rising consumer confidence

rising stock prices

"With all that as a backdrop, there are some real positive forces to stimulate growth," said Anthony Chan, chief economist at Banc One Investment Advisors.

And there had better be. Chan noted that when he averaged GDP growth in every quarter since 1948, he found that seasonal factors made the third and fourth quarters the weakest of the year.

And some economists doubt the stimulus in the pipeline will be enough to fight the negative seasonal factors. According to them:

much cash from the tax cuts will be saved, or spent on imported goods, which does zilch for GDP

low interest rates help little if businesses won't or can't borrow and if consumers lose their appetite for new houses and cars

China's the biggest exporter of cheap goods to the U.S. and its currency is pegged to the dollar, so a falling dollar actually helps make that country's exports more competitive

consumer confidence and stocks have risen before during this prolonged weak recovery, with little effect

"With all this stimulus, we've had very little to show for it," said Robert Brusca, chief economist at Native American Securities. "Something seems to have been short-circuiting it."

Though the economy seems unlikely to fall into recession, a prolonged period of sluggish growth, when policy makers' best efforts fail to create jobs, could weaken already shaky consumer and business confidence, Brusca warned.

And even prolonged economic weakness -- not recession, but weakness -- could trigger deflation, an unstoppable drop in prices that cripples corporate profits and starts a cycle of deteriorating economic strength. See Japan for details.

"If the economy continues to muddle through at around 2 percent annualized growth, we could very well slip into deflation in the next two years," Merrill Lynch chief economist David Rosenberg said in a recent research note.

Businesses in no hurry to spend or hire
Lakshman Achuthan, managing director of the Economic Cycle Research Institute, a private research firm, says he doubts deflation will come unless several recessions hit the economy in a row -- and he sees no sign of this. But he also notes that consumers are supporting the economy while businesses remain on the sidelines, where they will stay, he believes, until demand forces them to boost production.


Since demand seems unlikely to zoom any time soon, production capacity will have to deteriorate -- as machines break down, computers become obsolete and workers leave -- in order to trigger another round of business spending and hiring.

"It may simply take time for this excess capacity to be worked off," he said, adding that he believes it all adds up to "a sub-par recovery -- which is corroborated by the leading indexes we watch."

money.cnn.com



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (4567)5/29/2003 9:55:18 AM
From: 4figureau  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 5423
 
Japan's April Industrial Production Falls 1.2%

May 29 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese manufacturers cut production in April as orders for semiconductor machinery and digital cameras slumped, raising concern that the world's second-largest economy may fall into its fourth recession since 1991.

Industrial production fell 1.2 percent from March, seasonally adjusted, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry said. That matched the median forecast of 33 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. From a year earlier, production rose 3.6 percent.

Global orders for computer chip-making equipment made by Tokyo Electron Ltd. and rivals fell in April from a year earlier as customers such as Intel Corp. cut spending. Production may fall further as a deadly virus curbs growth in Asia, which buys two- fifths of Japanese exports.

The extent of SARS ``has been unexpected and we are worried about it every day,'' said Fujio Mitarai, president of Canon Inc., Japan's biggest office equipment maker. The company said it hasn't been directly affected by SARS, though it ``will probably be taking measures against SARS throughout the year.''

Japan's economy didn't expand in the first quarter, ending nine straight months of growth, as the war in Iraq cut exports and a plunge in stocks hurt corporate profits. Exports to Asia may fall as severe acute respiratory syndrome shakes consumer confidence in the region and keeps shoppers out of stores.

The yen weakened to 118.71 to the dollar at 1:54 p.m. from 118.58 late yesterday in New York. The yen has gained 1.5 percent against the dollar in the past month.

Virus

``Exports to Asia have been supporting the recovery, and once that goes, it raises the possibility'' of a recession, said Hisashi Yamada, senior economist at Japan Research Institute Ltd. He expects the economy to shrink 0.1 percent in the second and third quarters.

Merrill Lynch Japan Inc. expects the economy to shrink 1 percent in the second quarter from the first, according to a research report. UBS Warburg Japan Ltd. predicts a contraction of 0.5 percent, said economist Ayako Mitsui.

Growth in China, Asia's second-largest economy, may fall to 6 percent this year from 9.9 percent last year, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Peking University researchers. The disease has claimed 321 lives in China, two-fifths of the world's fatalities.

SARS is disrupting the operations of Japanese companies in the world's most-populous nation. Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., the world's biggest consumer electronics maker, has shut three factories in Beijing since April after finding that its workers may have been infected.

Exports

Exports drove Japan's economic growth last year as falling wages and rising unemployment crimped consumer demand. The jobless rate held just below a record-high 5.4 percent in April, a report tomorrow will probably show, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 36 economists.

Japan is counting on a recovery in demand in the U.S., its biggest export market, to stave off a recession. A report today will probably show the U.S. economy grew 1.8 percent in the first three months of 2003, a faster pace than the initially reported 1.6 percent rate, according to the median of 65 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey.

The No. 249 Japanese government bond, which carries a 0.6 percent coupon and matures in 2013, fell 0.047 to 100.698 at 1:55 p.m. in Tokyo, pushing the yield up half a basis point to 0.525 percent. The yield fell to a record 0.520 percent yesterday. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Inventories fell 0.2 percent in April from March to the lowest level in 15 years, today's report said. It forecast that production would rise 2.6 percent in May and 1.1 percent in June.

Since the forecasts ``don't take into account the risks of SARS, the strong yen and global disinflation, there's a possibility we could see those forecasts cut in June,'' said Soichi Okuda, a senior economist at Aozora Bank Ltd. in Tokyo, who correctly predicted the 1.2 percent decline in production.
quote.bloomberg.com