..
Consumption
--
Recovery Leader or Potential Profit-Killer?
Kurt Richebächer
The
Daily Reckoning
October 31, 2003
The Daily
Reckoning PRESENTS:
" ...The
underlying basic fact is that Americans, in the aggregate, have
been spending and continue to spend in excess of their current
income. What is wrong with that? Why should excess consumption
strangle economic growth? The short answer is, consumer spending
in excess of income inherently means also in excess of production,
and this part of consumer spending essentially emigrates to foreign
producers, adding nothing to the U.S. GDP..."
America's economic
recovery and its likely strength have been and remain the central
preoccupation in economics around the world. In the consensus
view, the U.S. economy will record in this year's second half
its strongest pace of growth since the late 1990s. According
to a monthly survey of 53 economic forecasters conducted by the
Wall Street Journal Online, its seasonally adjusted annual
growth rate during the current quarter will be 4.7% and 4% in
the fourth quarter.
Consumer spending,
propelled by the housing and mortgage refinancing bubble, is
supposed to lead the recovery. It is growing, yes. But even here
acceleration is completely missing. There were temporary boosts
from promotion programs by the car manufacturers and also from
tax cuts and tax refunds, but there always followed a new relapse.
Consumer borrowing
is on the rampage as never before. In 2000, at the height of
the bubble, it increased by $558.8 billion. This accelerated
during 2001, the recession year, to $614.6 billion, and in 2002
to $771.8 billion. During the first two quarters of 2003, it
has further soared to $837.2 billion and $1,000.2 billion, at
annual rate.
The debt binge
is working, for sure. But on closer look, we notice that more
and more debt produces less and less consumer spending.
The fact is
that the growth rate of consumer spending during the past fours
quarters (2.9% y-o-y) is far below its average rate of growth
(more than 5%) in prior post recession periods.
It is true
that creating the greatest consumer borrowing binge, as well
as the greatest monetary and fiscal stimulus, in history has
so far prevented a deeper recession in the United States. However,
this bubble has rapidly diminishing effects, and above all, it
has completely failed to induce an accelerating upward movement.
All the acceleration in real GDP in the second quarter that is
being hailed as proof of an ongoing recovery has come from government
spending and the hedonic pricing of computers. Take the two away,
and there is more economic sluggishness.
The Decisive Failure
This has an
obvious reason -- all the monetary and fiscal stimulus has flagrantly
failed to revive the economic components that are indispensable
for a true self-sustaining economic recovery. For that it needs
sustained growth in employment, personal income, business fixed
investment and profits. But all these key ingredients of economic
growth remain flat or even negative.
In contrast
to previous business cycle recoveries, in which personal income
used to increase strongly, this time it has remained sluggish.
Instead, the rise in consumer spending is being exclusively driven
by heavy borrowing.
But as just
expounded, consumer spending has been distinctly slowing, even
though consumer borrowing is beating ever-new records. There
can be little doubt that the sharp rise in long-term interest
rates is sure to implement still more restraint.
Still, the
consensus is convinced that the U.S. economy's sustained recovery
from slow growth has definitely started. We keep reading such
reports with utter amazement because this assessment flagrantly
conflicts with the very weak economic data from official sources.
We have realized
that this prevailing optimism about the U.S. economy owes everything
to a number of indexes that we call artificial data, such as
the Conference Board, Institute for Supply Management, the University
of Michigan consumer sentiment, including in particular the stock
market, all ranking as early indicators. American economists
and investors are unusually obsessed with the idea of spotting
a change in the economy before it happens.
In the past
few months most of these early indicators have been grossly upbeat
in comparison to the official data. Just recently, the Federal
Reserve published its production index for August. It inched
up from 110.1 to 110.2, and was 1% below its level a year ago.
The output of consumer goods even dipped 0.2%. There was a single
big increase y-o-y: defense equipment, up 6.5%.
This protracted
stagnation of production, fully two years after the recession
ended, compares with steep increases by 7-8% during the first
two years after recessions in past cycles.
The decisive
point here really is the growing disparity between demand growth
and production in the United States. The most striking example
of this gross imbalance between supply growth and demand growth
are the disparate paths of retail sales -- up 6.3% y-o-y -- and
manufacturing -- down 1.6% y-o-y. We think this particular gross
imbalance is symptomatic of the situation across the whole U.S.
economy. America has the most powerful credit machine in the
world, but it lacks saving and investment.
The comparison
between the two figures says that over the past year the entire
increase in the U.S. domestic demand for goods, as reflected
in sharply rising retail sales, went to foreign producers. Literally
nothing of that demand growth ended with domestic producers.
Essentially,
this fact raises a few critical questions about the supposed
existence of large excess capacities. Why are they not used to
meet the rapidly rising demand? There are two possible answers:
first, the excess capacities do no exist; second, they exist,
but they are not competitive.
Years of Rampant
Overconsumption
Manifestly,
America's bubble economy of the late 1990s had its center in
the most profligate consumer borrowing and spending binge in
history. In particular the fact that consumption soared as a
share of GDP towards 90% and higher, as against a long-term ratio
of about 67%, bears this unmistakably out.
This really
is the U.S. economy's key imbalance that is obviously the root
cause of its protracted sluggishness. The underlying basic fact
is that Americans, in the aggregate, have been spending and continue
to spend in excess of their current income.
What is wrong
with that? Why should excess consumption strangle economic growth?
The short answer is, consumer spending in excess of income inherently
means also in excess of production, and this part of consumer
spending essentially emigrates to foreign producers, adding nothing
to the U.S. GDP.
But that is
not all. At the same time, the overconsumption creates a variety
of growth-impairing imbalances in the economy, both on the macro
and micro level. Among them the most spectacular and also the
most impeding to economic growth is the monstrous trade deficit.
In America,
it is the consensus view that such a deficit is simply typical
and normal for a country that is growing faster than the rest
of the world. That is not at all true. The normal experience
over decades and centuries is the exact opposite. Fast-growing
economies used to have an export surplus, like Germany and Japan
in the earlier postwar decades.
The reason
is that economies with high economic growth used to be high-investment
and high-savings countries. They chronically consume less than
they produce, and that makes for the export surplus. America,
in contrast, is a low-investment and low-savings country where
consumption has now exceeded current production for many years.
That, and nothing else, is the key cause of the trade deficit.
The Growth and
Profit Killer
The decisive
adverse effect of the huge trade deficit on U.S. economic activity
arises from the fact that the money spent for purchases abroad
represents for American businesses an equivalent loss of revenue
that essentially hurts profits. It actually devastates the profits
of American corporations when the money spent abroad comes from
the wage bill of American businesses. And that actually means
a double whammy for U.S. profits. U.S. businesses have the wage
costs and forego the revenue.
Manifestly,
the capital inflows are not undoing these adverse effects of
the trade deficit on domestic incomes and profits. They do not
flow into the real economy, building factories; they flow into
the financial markets, overwhelmingly purchasing existing financial
and real assets. And that means the absence of any income effects.
It is the traditional
American view that consumption, being by far the biggest component
of GDP, is therefore also its most important component that essentially
leads recoveries. America had in the past years more consumption
than ever, but capital investment and profits disappeared.
That is precisely
what European growth theory expects to happen. If consumption
grows to excess, it crowds out investment and spills over into
imports. With its tremendous size, the trade deficit is America's
main growth and profit killer.
Regards,
Kurt Richebächer
Oct 31, 2003
for The
Daily Reckoning
P.S. During
the 1960-70s, by the way, there was on average about 1.5 dollars
of debt added 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.
As we noted
in these pages last week, 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.
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."
In the September issue
of his newsletter, Dr. Richebächer aggressively dissected
the data economists are interpreting as a miracle 'recovery'
- including a critical look at defense spending and its aggregate
effect on the revised GDP numbers for Q2. His conclusion: the
recovery is hokum. If you are not already a subscriber, you can't
afford to miss this special report: Greenspan
Is Robbing You Blind!
A version of
this essay was originally published in The Daily Reckoning, a
free daily email service brought to you by the authors of "Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of The 21st
Century"
(John Wiley & Sons).
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