..
Ponzi
Economy
Kurt Richebächer
The
Daily Reckoning
September 15, 2003
The Daily
Reckoning PRESENTS: Bullish sentiment is riding at 1987 levels;
tech stocks are leading the way in the reflation rally. What
can we say, dear reader, but "oh là là...
look out below!"
Hope and hype
are again triumphing over reality.
The primary
preoccupation in economics worldwide is the U.S. economy's "recovery,"
presently hyping the markets. We note three different views.
First, a cocksure bullish consensus; second, doubtful
voices, among them the Federal Reserve, stressing the lack of
conclusive evidence; and third, a few lonely voices, ours
among them, who flatly repudiate the possibility of a full-scale,
self-sustaining economic recovery in the United States.
We see years
of Japanese-style sluggish growth for America, if not worse.
Yet, the latest
American Association of Individual Investors poll showed 71.4%
bulls and a miniscule 8.6% bears. The gap between the two is
the highest since August 1987, just weeks before the crash. Merrill
Lynch surveys show institutional investors more fully invested
than at any time in the past two years, and heavily overweight
high tech.
The case of
the bullish community rests crucially on the assumption that
the U.S. economy is basically in excellent shape. Fed Chairman
Alan Greenspan, and with him the large bullish community, have
actually never seen anything seriously wrong with it.
In their view,
its failure to return to normal economic growth is mainly due
to a series of exogenous shocks inflicted one after the other
on the economy: the stock market crash, the September 11 terrorist
attack, the corporate governance scandals and the Iraq war. Rather,
they consider it a sign of health that the economy has not weakened
more in the face of this unusual sequence of shocks.
Yet compared
to the extraordinary exuberance prevailing in the markets, the
Fed has been remarkably hesitant in declaring the economy's impending
recovery. In his testimony to Congress, Greenspan acknowledged
that the "economy is not yet showing convincing signs
of a sustained pickup in growth." In the same vein, Richmond
Fed President Alfred Broaddus said a bit later in an interview,
"We still don't have a critical mass of hard evidence
that the economy is accelerating," defining "hard
evidence" as increases in employment, production
and capital spending.
Now to our
own opinion: after careful analysis both of recent economic data
and also of basic micro- and macroeconomic conditions for the
resumption of strong economic growth, we have come to two conclusions:
- First, the
U.S. economy neither improved nor accelerated in the second quarter.
The reported GDP growth of 2.4% is grossly misleading. From the
perspective of quality, it has distinctly deteriorated.
.
- Second, as
we shall explain in detail, the crucial macro- and microeconomic
conditions for a self-sustaining and self-reinforcing economic
recovery remain flatly missing. Necessary economic and financial
adjustments of past economic and financial excesses implicitly
involve pain. But pain is not accepted in the United States.
In essence, policymakers are trying to cure past borrowing excesses
by more of the same and new excesses.
Trying to assess
the U.S. economy's prospects, the first thing to realize is that
past cyclical experience offers no guidance to the present downturn
because it has completely different causes and also a completely
different pattern.
All past recessions
had their main cause in monetary tightening. As soon as the Federal
Reserve loosened its shackles, the economy promptly took off
again, propelled by pent-up demand. For the first time in history,
the U.S. economy went into recession against the backdrop of
most rampant money and credit growth.
Manifestly,
the forces depressing the economy this time are radically different
from past experience. The typical, major imbalance in post-war
business cycles has usually been in inventories. To correct it,
retailers and manufacturers temporarily sold from stock, depressing
production. Once the stocks were down to desired levels, production
came into its right again. At the heart of the regular V-shaped
business cycles was the inventory cycle.
In contrast,
the present downturn has its brunt in the combination of a profit
and capital-spending crisis. At the same time, there has accumulated
an array of economic and financial dislocations that tend to
depress the economy in many ways, such as extremely poor profits,
badly ravaged balance sheets, a variety of asset bubbles in different
stages of development, excessive leverage in the whole financial
system and shrinking cash flow. There is nothing normal anymore
in the U.S. economy and its financial system.
For the old
economists, investment in tangible assets - factories, commercial
buildings and machinery - was paramount in creating both economic
growth and wealth. It creates demand, employment and income as
the capital goods are produced. And with their installment, all
these new buildings, plant and equipment create increased supply
along with increasing employment and income with increased productivity.
The United
States has always been a low-savings and low-investment economy.
Putting it in reverse: a high-consumption economy. But all three
went to unprecedented extremes over the past several years. Savings
and investment have been run down to atrociously low levels that
are typical for underdeveloped countries.
To repeat:
Investment in tangible assets is paramount in creating everything
that is decisive in generating our wealth and raising our living
standards. Given the low levels of saving and investment in the
United States, American policymakers and economists in recent
years have elevated productivity growth to the single most important
achievement of an economy. But just by itself, productivity growth
creates only unemployment. It is the normally associated capital
spending that makes for the necessary, simultaneous demand and
employment growth.
This simple
recognition - gross lack of saving and capital formation - is
really at the root of our controversial and highly critical view
of the U.S. economy's sanity and vitality. True, its growth rate
has been the highest among the industrial countries for years.
But it has all the time been economic growth of the most miserable
quality. The striking hallmarks of this extremely poor quality
were collapsing savings, low rates of business fixed investment,
a profit carnage that began at the height of the boom, exploding
consumer and business debts and an exploding trade deficit.
Today's economists
have at their disposal information in quantity and speed as never
before. But reading numerous reports, we have the impression
that very few are making use of it.
Particularly
shocking in this respect were the immediate euphoric reports
about growth acceleration in the second quarter.
During the
1960-70s, by the way, the U.S. accumulated on average about 1.5
dollars of additional debt for each dollar of additional GDP.
Just extrapolate this escalating relationship between the use
of debt and economic activity. And think of it: the GDP growth
of today is tomorrow a thing of the past, while the debts incurred
remain.
Plainly, Greenspan's
policy has collapsed into uncontrolled money and debt creation
that has rapidly diminishing returns on economic activity. The
late economist Hyman P. Mynsky would call this a Ponzi economy,
where debt payments on outstanding and soaring indebtedness are
no longer met out of current income, but through new borrowing.
Soaring unpaid interests become capitalized.
Kurt
Richebächer
Sep 12, 2003
for The
Daily Reckoning
P.S. We keep
asking the question of the American economists: Are they providing
deliberate misinformation or simply performing slipshod work?
In our view, as usual, the latter rings true.
The whole economic
discussion today is fixated on the next economic data with one
single question in mind: is it better than expected? Careful,
more detailed analysis with a longer-term perspective is completely
missing. Obviously, most economists and journalists read no more
than the brief summaries provided by agencies, like Bloomberg
and Reuters, that only rehash the summaries preceding the official
releases.
Editor's note:
Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker once said: "Sometimes I
think that the job of central bankers is to prove Kurt Richebächer
wrong." A regular contributor to The Wall Street Journal,
Strategic Investment and several other respected financial publications,
Dr. Richebächer's insightful analysis stems from the Austrian
School of economics. France's Le Figaro magazine has done a feature
story on him as "the man who predicted the Asian crisis."
Dr. Richebächer
continues to warn readers about the follies of the Fed's current
easy-money policies. For more, click below:
Greenspan Is Robbing You Blind
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/RCH/RighteousGains/
______________
321gold
Inc ref: 2754
|