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To: Chip McVickar who wrote (1499)5/12/1999 10:43:00 AM
From: Lee  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3536
 
Not Far OT: PJO on SS

> Rolling Stone, April 15, 1999
>
> By Straight Arrow Publishers Company, L.P. 1999.
> All Rights Reserved.
>
> The Great Ponzi-Scheme Rescue Act of 1999
> The last Social Security story you'll ever have to read.
>
> by P. J. O'Rourke
>
> P.J. O'Rourke is the Cato Institute's Mencken research fellow.
>
> Sometimes the most dangerous thing about political issues is
> trying to figure them out. We're all getting what we want from
> Social Security without understanding it. This is what economists
> call "rational ignorance." Old folks get something to carp about
> -- the $770 average monthly payment. Young folks get to tell old
> folks to shove off: That $770 will be a fortune in Sun City; we
> need the spare bedroom for a home gym. A huge number of government
> bureaucrats get a huge government bureaucracy to run. And
> politicians get an issue that everybody's for and nobody's
> against. Plus, every couple of election cycles, there's a "crisis"
> with this issue -- a crisis that politicians don't have to
> understand, either, but that allows them to make thoughtful,
> caring and statesmanlike noises.
>
> At the moment, the crisis with Social Security is that the Social
> Security trust fund will run out of money in 2032, which is right
> around the corner -- if you're a sequoia. Whatever the politicians
> propose, these politicians will be on their way to the grand-jury
> room in the sky before their proposals take effect. Meanwhile, in
> the name of "shoring up the Social Security trust fund," the
> politicians have an excuse to spend surplus tax dollars. As
> President Clinton told a crowd in Buffalo, on the day after his
> State of the Union speech solved the current Social Security
> crisis, "We could give it all back to you and hope you spend it
> right. But...if you don't spend it right..." So, on top of
> everything else, Social Security has saved us from foolishly
> buying a snowmobile just when an Al Gore administration with all
> its global warming is about to set in.
>
> If we began to investigate Social Security, we could become
> irrationally knowledgeable. Our heads might explode. We should
> not, for example, peek into that Social Security trust fund.
> There's nothing inside. Since 1939, the Social Security payroll
> tax on employers and employees has been used simply to pay Social
> Security benefits. In 1916 an Italian immigrant named Charles
> Ponzi created an investment fund that paid large dividends without
> making any investments. Money from new investors was transferred
> to old investors, while the new investors received money from
> newer investors yet. The system had flexibility and boldness, and
> worked as long as an ever-expanding pool of suckers could be
> found.
>
> Charles Ponzi made a profit on this, and so does the U. S.
> government. Social Security payroll-tax receipts have always been
> greater than Social Security benefit payments and will continue to
> be until about 2013, when the baby-boom sucker pool retires. The
> federal government has taken this surplus revenue, spent it and
> given the Social Security trust-fund IOUs in return. That is, the
> government spent the money and then promised to spend it again
> later.
>
> Debts owed to the government by the government are absurd in the
> first place. Furthermore, these IOUs have the same force of law
> as, oh, the statutes against perjury and obstruction of justice in
> a case against the president of the United States involving sex.
> Our Social Security taxes do not have to be spent on Social
> Security. In 1937 the Supreme Court ruled that Social Security
> taxes "are to be paid into the treasury like any other internal
> revenue generally, and are not earmarked in any way." This despite
> President Roosevelt's saying, "Those premiums are collected in the
> form of taxes...held by the government solely for the benefit of
> the worker in his old age."
>
> Roosevelt also said, "We put those payroll contributions there so
> as to give the contributors a legal, moral and political right to
> collect their pensions." But in the 1950s, a deported communist
> filed a capitalist suit to reclaim his Social Security premiums.
> The Supreme Court said, "To engraft upon the Social Security
> system a concept of 'accrued property rights' would deprive it of
> the flexibility and boldness in adjustment to ever-changing
> conditions which it demands." Charles Ponzi never had the
> opportunity to appoint Supreme Court justices. He went to jail.
>
> Having a Social Security trust fund is exactly like not having a
> Social Security trust fund. Social Security will go into the red
> no matter what. Without a trust fund, the government will have to
> pay off the Social Security deficit by raising taxes and cutting
> benefits. With a trust fund, the government will have to pay off
> the Social Security IOUs by raising taxes and cutting benefits.
>
> Unfortunate people who scrutinize the Social Security trust fund
> discover two facts: It's not there. It's not theirs. But, for the
> rest of us who are rationally ignoring such things, the real
> question is, how are we doing with this retirement fund that
> doesn't exist and we don't own? We're doing surprisingly well.
> We're getting an average return of more than 16.5 percent on our
> employer/employee payroll contributions. If we're eighty-two years
> old. On the other hand, if we're sixty-seven, we're getting about
> 1.4 percent -- a financial coup we could have managed on our own,
> without the help of the federal government, by holding onto our
> Beanie Baby collections a little too long. And if we're age
> twenty-four to sixty-two, we can expect a return of between -0.34
> percent and -1.7 percent, and might be better off leaving the
> money in our old jeans and going through the closet when we
> retire.
>
> Here again we see the genius of Charles Ponzi. Initial payments
> into Social Security were very small. From 1937 to 1949, the
> combined employer/employee payroll tax rate was two percent, and
> this tax was levied on only the first $3,000 of annual income. The
> generation that made these payments then went on to surprise
> demographers, shock their heirs and delight Winnebago dealers by
> taking a really long time to die. The first Social Security
> recipient, Ida M. Fuller of Vermont, retired in 1940 after paying
> Social Security taxes for three years. She and her employer had
> put a total of forty-four dollars into the system. Ms. Fuller
> lived to be 100 and collected $20,933.52 in benefits. Mr. Ponzi
> could have done as well, and been honored for his business savvy,
> if only he had the legal and legislative muscle to create a Ponzi
> scheme that preyed upon the most gullible of all suckers: people
> who haven't been born yet.
>
> But although the Social Security system does a good job of
> stealing prospective candy from future babies, this won't work for
> long. There are too many old people. In 1950 there were sixteen
> working Americans for every retiree. Now there are 3.3 (the 0.3
> being down in corporate communications, eating hash brownies and
> putting the company Web site together). By 2025 each George Bush
> or Bob Dole will be supported by only two George W.s or Liddys.
> We're going to need a really aggressive assisted-suicide program:
> "Sure, Pops, it feels like indigestion, but it's probably
> pancreatic cancer. I'll help you put the plastic bag over your
> head."
>
> And that is the great conundrum of Social Security, the thing that
> makes all rational people want to stay as ignorant as possible
> about it: Everything we could do to fix Social Security would make
> it worse.
>
> We could, for one thing, forget the whole concept of Social
> Security as a government-run pension and insurance system, and
> just pay the benefits out of general tax revenue. This would be
> more honest, which is why it's such a bad idea. The delicate
> fabric of rational ignorance would be destroyed. People would see
> where their retirement money was coming from -- from voting for
> any candidate who'd raise Social Security payments to $100,000 a
> month. Old people vote like the dickens. And tapping general
> revenues does nothing about the fundamental ratio problem of one
> geriatric duffer getting AARP skydiving discounts to two of us
> trapped in office cubicles.
>
> Or we could stick to the present system, which, as mentioned,
> would mean raising taxes, cutting benefits and increasing the
> retirement age by so much that Reagan would still be president. (A
> chief executive with Alzheimer's would be an awful thing. He might
> get mixed up about what the meaning of is is or forget to bomb
> Serbia.) Keeping the present system would tick off the retired,
> the unretired and those about to retire -- in other words,
> everybody. It's an unusual kind of politician who has the guts to
> do this, the kind of politician we will have gotten rid of through
> the assisted-suicide program.
>
> We could also stick with the present system while trying to put
> some real money into the Social Security trust fund. During the
> next fifteen years, there is supposed to be a $2.7 trillion
> federal budget surplus. Let's save it all to pay for Social
> Security. Except this can't be done. The federal government does
> not have the same relationship to money as a human does. The
> federal government issues that money. When the money comes back to
> the federal government, it must go away again or it gets unissued,
> in effect destroyed. Yanking $2.7 trillion in currency (about
> one-third of the gross domestic product) out of the economy would
> cause a howling recession. When the government reissued that
> currency, it would cause screaming inflation. And such
> money-supply shenanigans would give Alan Greenspan a heart attack.
> Where would the nation be then?
>
> When a budget surplus happens, the federal government can (per
> Clinton's suggestion) give it back. This is nice because then
> there's more money and we can all have some. Or the government can
> pay down the national debt. This is nice, too, because then
> there's more money to lend and we can all borrow some. Or the
> government can do what it usually does, which is fund public
> television, welfare, NASA, the military, etc. And this is also
> nice, because then we get more Teletubbies, surplus cheese, space
> stations and maybe (if the draft is reinstated) free trips to
> Kosovo.
>
> What government can't do is save that money in the Social Security
> trust fund. The only way to place money, as opposed to IOU's, in
> there is for the government to buy something real -- such as $700
> billion worth of Microsoft stock. This would put the government in
> an interesting position with its antitrust suit against that
> company. We were just kidding, Bill.
>
> Having a government that owned economic assets is what made the
> U.S.S.R. the success that it is today. Maybe Bolshevism could be
> avoided, but conflict of interest couldn't be. Businesses would
> all want a slice of the federal investment pizza, and so would
> labor unions, special interests, pressure groups and every ad hoc
> group of scalawags and hard graspers you can imagine. Not to
> mention that the government itself might be tempted by all the
> mushrooms, pepperoni and extra cheese sitting around uneaten.
>
> The track record of trust funds run by individual states is not
> encouraging. California and Illinois raided their funds to balance
> state budgets. Pennsylvania put $70 million into a Volkswagen
> plant now worth half that. Kansas wasted $87 million because
> Kansas legislators insisted on investing in Kansas. Minnesota
> tried to be moral and lost $2 million selling off tobacco stock.
> Connecticut tried to be amoral and lost $25 million bailing out
> Colt's Manufacturing. And the Missouri State Employees' Retirement
> System venture-capital fund was shut down because of low yields
> and lawsuits.
>
> The marvel of President Clinton's proposal for Social Security
> reform is that it combines all these ways of making Social
> Security worse. It does so with what economist Robert J.
> Samuelson, writing in the February 10th Washington Post, called
> "programs of mind-boggling complexity." (And if you took econ, you
> know that economists' minds don't boggle easily.)
>
> Clinton would spend the current Social Security surplus in
> traditional government fashion, giving the trust fund an IOU.
> Clinton would use some of that surplus to reduce the national
> debt. But he wouldn't really repay any federal obligations. He
> would transfer these paper claims from the individuals who hold
> T-bills and treasury bonds to the Social Security trust fund. This
> would give the trust fund a claim on general tax revenues while,
> at the same time, leaving it more full of debt than ever.
> Meanwhile, Clinton would also keep expenditures at the current
> levels, so somebody (not Clinton) would still need to raise taxes
> and cut benefits. Furthermore, Clinton wants the Social Security
> trust fund to purchase $18 billion worth of common stock. That
> isn't much, since Social Security spends $347 billion a year. But
> it's enough to cause plenty of influence-peddling scandals and
> bureaucratic cock-ups.
>
> The above paragraph is the most eloquent plea for rational
> ignorance that I have ever read, let alone written.
>
> The only real solution to Social Security is to own it --
> privatize the whole system of national social insurance. This
> would still leave us with enormous unfunded liabilities owed to
> people too old to go private. But we'll have those anyway. And
> privatization would work. There is no twenty-year period in
> American history when stocks lost money. And even from 1930 to
> 1939, a conservative portfolio -- half stocks, half bonds -- would
> possibly have made 0.68 percent a year. That's not a spectacular
> return, but it beats waiting until we're sixty-five to rummage in
> the Silver Tabs for change to buy cat food.
>
> Privatization, however, will happen at about the same time Al Gore
> and Liddy Dole get naked and hook up. Thirty-eight percent of the
> federal budget is spent on Social Security and other social
> insurance. By 2020 that share will be between fifty-nine and
> sixty-eight percent. Two-thirds of a politician's throw weight
> will come from controlling social-insurance dollars. Money is
> power. What use is it to endure the Dutch rubs and Indian rope
> burns that are politics if you can't obtain mastery over people
> and give them noogies back? Politicians would rather discard their
> spouses than discard two-thirds of their power. Some politicians
> would much, much rather.
>
> And what about the rest of us? We'd have to take responsibility
> for ourselves and maybe even our parents if the Beanie Baby fad is
> really over and Mom and Dad's investment strategy flops. We'd need
> to pay attention, learn things, make difficult decisions. It's far
> more pleasant to slide along in blissful (and rational!) ignorance
> and hope that before we lose our teeth (and shirt) something will
> come up. It did for Charles Ponzi. After he got out of jail, he
> went back to Italy and became a top economic adviser to Benito
> Mussolini.



To: Chip McVickar who wrote (1499)5/13/1999 7:28:00 AM
From: Chip McVickar  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3536
 
Henry and Thread,

Here's one of Martin Armstrong's recent articles

Crash or Breakout
That is the Question
By Martin A. Armstrong
Princeton Economic Institute
© Copyright April 12th, 1999

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

We have clearly reached a decision point for the share markets here on the 8.6 month timing interval in April. Up to this point, the last two months have been building a nice sideways base at a higher level. The volatility indeed has begun on our target week of April 12th and today even fulfilled our Daily Panic Cycle target as the S&P 500 Futures first crashed and then soared following the pattern of late – lower opens followed by a strong close.

Monthly timing models continue to show key targets as April and August with June appearing to be a minor irritation. We show extremely high volatility in early May and again in September/October. We had warned at the start of this year that a high by April 8th would be very good for the market long-term. However, we also cautioned that making new highs BEYOND April would put the entire global economy at risk because the U.S. market would then appear to be moving into a classic "bubble top" as was the case in Japan. Such a pattern would then indeed warn of a very serious correction into 2002.

While it is still too early to declare the outcome from this current 8.6 month target period, continued pressure on the upside is biasing the outcome toward a bubble top type pattern where the NASDAQ could reach the 3000-3500 level by late summer. This, by any standard, is total insanity and the collapse that would follow would be of outstanding proportions.

In our upcoming edition of the World Capital Market Report, we will revisit the critical study "Sectorial Shifts" and released back in 1984 updated for our current time. It is important to understand the investment and business cycle moves not merely up and down, but it also moves through patterns of sectorial investment. Capital may concentrate for each business cycle in a particular sector – such as real estate, stocks, commodities and so on. Because of this sectorial investment shift, the majority are often left waiting and watching a particular sector to repeat history. Goldbugs continue to watch for signs that their prized investment will rise from the ashes into the spotlight of its former glory. Unfortunately, those who are biased towards gold have waited 20 frustrating years believing that every $10 rally is the start of a change in trend.

Equity investors suffer the same fate. However, because the equity market itself is far more diverse in its sector makeup than commodities, equity investors will get the chance to experience additional opportunities for bull markets. Still, within equities, the sectorial shift prevails.

It is important to understand that prior to 1929, the industrial stocks were not very popular. The main focus during the late 19th century moving into 1907, had always been the transportation stocks – namely railroads. The Panic of 1907 was devastating to many of the railroad companies most of which never survived. The industrials began to capture the eye of the investor and for the next bull market going into 1929, the Dow Jones Industrial stocks had become the new blue chips.

The bubble top syndrome applies NOT to the broad market, but to the "hot" sector within the market. For this reason, our models continue to suggest that the likelihood of a major collapse for the Dow or even the S&P 500 beyond the 60% correction mark is almost nil. However, the NASDAQ is starting to show signs that IF this turning point indeed produces ANOTHER Directional Change to the upside, then there is indeed a danger of a serious meltdown.

The battle between long-time professionals and the new breed of day trading novices can end only in a blood bath. While there are plenty of people who continue to cheer and tout how this market will never end, one must begin to fear those first few days of a true meltdown and its impact upon the housewife day trader depicted in TV commercials right now.

The verdict is still out. The month volatility appears to begin during the first week of May. In order to produce a serious Directional Change to the upside, new highs must be achieved during May. Still, this does not quite "feel" like the grand major high. We do show that an April high could be followed by a 2 month correction into June, but one more rally would still be in the cards pressing into August. It is possible that April could remain as the major high with an August retest of the highs. If this were the outcome, then expect a base building period next year and a possible rally into 2003 for the final major high.

The key still remains the dollar. Any sell-off in the dollar at this time would most likely be coupled with a correction in the share market for up to 2 months. The key fact will remain the closing of this week. If we close higher, then it will be off to the races into the end of the month. A closing for this week BELOW 1358.20 on the S&P 500 Futures, and we may indeed see a correction FIRST followed by a summer recovery.

The BIG ONE appears to be likely from a high either in August or January of 2000. Even Quarterly Panic Cycles appear for early 2000. For now, we must be careful of the higher open. If this pattern changes, then the higher open will lead to the lower close.