The United States: The Largest Ponzi
Scheme in the World
Bill Bonner
Provided as a courtesy
of Agora Publishing & The
Daily Reckoning
posted Feb 20, 2009
"Greenspan backs nationalization,"
says a headline.
Well, that does it for us here
at The Daily Reckoning . If Greenspan is in favor of it, we're
against it. No one man bears more responsibility for the present
worldwide financial crisis and coming depression that Alan Greenspan.
The Fed's job is to take the
punchbowl away when the party gets too wild, said former Fed
chairman William McChesney Martin. Greenspan did no such thing.
As soon as the party began to quiet down and people began fumbling
for their car keys, Greenspan added more rum to the punch and
turned up the music. By the time the credit cops finally shut
it down, people were dancing on tabletops all over the world.
And now, poor Mr. Obama has
to deal with the headaches.
Yesterday, [Wed?] the Dow held steady. But the Dow is
a bit of a fraud anyway. Failing stocks are routinely removed.
In the present case, financial stocks slipped below $10 and were
taken out of the index. Result: the index does not measure real
world results.
Elsewhere in the financial
news, oil traded at $37 at close of business yesterday. The dollar
rose - to $1.25 per euro. And gold added another $10, to bring
it to $978.
Gold looks a bit stretched.
It could be ready for another pull back. But the bull market
in gold is unlikely to end anytime soon.
What is odd is that while gold
goes up, so does the dollar. And so do U.S. Treasury bonds. It
is as if investors couldn't make up their minds. They bid up
the price of U.S. Treasuries... and bid up the price of anti-Treasuries
at the same time. What gives?
On the right side of their
brains, they figure that U.S. Treasury bonds are the only place
you can put your money and be sure of getting it back. Stocks
are a disaster. Bonds - except for U.S. Treasuries - are too
risky; heck, even England could go broke.
Commodities? We've seen what
can happen there... just look at oil! Even gold could easily
take a 20% haircut. That's why U.S. Treasury bonds are the place
to be.
But wait... the left side of
the brain is sending a message too. Buy gold, it says; something
fishy is going on in the Treasury bond market, it tells us. How
it is possible that the feds can borrow trillions of dollars
without causing interest rates to rise? How can they increase
the quantity of something so much... without lowering its quality?
Where's the point of diminishing returns?
One question leads to another
one: 'How are they going to pay this money back?' the left side
wants to know.
The more the left side thinks
about it, the more it doesn't understand what is going on. Let's
see... the biggest spendthrift on the planet issues trillions
more in IOUs... with no obvious way to pay back the money...
...and let's see... this same
spendthrift actually has the right to pay off its IOUs with more
IOUs that it prints up itself...
...and it actually WANTS to
make its IOUs less valuable... so that people won't hold on to
them. It wants people to spend its IOUs on goods and services...
as fast as possible... in order to "get the economy moving
again."
'What am I missing here?' asks
the left side of the brain of no one in particular.
"The rest of the world
has queued up to lend America as much money as it might wish
to borrow in order to get its consumers to spend again,"
writes Spengler in the Asia Times . "It won't work, but
that is another matter..."
Spengler is a clever guy. Unfortunately,
many of his thoughts are unworthy of a clever man.
"A fearful world is buying
trillions of dollars of securities from the US Treasury,"
he continues. "Of all the cash flows in the world, nothing
is more reliable than the tax revenues of the American state,
the longest-lasting government on Earth presiding over the world's
largest economy."
Yes, and General Motors was
the world's most successful automobile company - until it wasn't.
The fearful world is buying Treasuries, but not because the tax
revenues of the American state are so reliable; they're buying
Treasuries because the United States is the only substantial
debtor in the world that can make good on its debts with money
of its own making. Tax revenues in the United States are falling
sharply. Already, they're far short of what is necessary to cover
America's public expenses. That's why both Republican and Democratic
administrations have run deficits - real deficits - since the
Nixon administration. And it's why the United States is now the
largest Ponzi scheme in the world. The only way to pay off the
old lenders is to bring in new ones - or run the printing press.
That's all lenders have to worry about - inflation. And for the
moment, prices are going down. They'll keep going down too -
until they go up.
*** President Obama has come
up with another plan - for $75 billion, he's going to try to
prevent foreclosures. It was determined a half century ago that
home ownership was a good thing. Since then, the government has
bent the rules in favor of the homeowner - with artificially
low mortgage rates... and substantial tax benefits. As an unforeseen
consequence, the feds helped create the biggest mortgage-backed
credit bubble in history. Not only that, they changed to geography
of America - with vast suburbs stretching out in all directions,
rather than cheaper and more efficient tightly packed apartment
buildings.
Now, Obama compounds the mistake...
When he signed the $787 billion
bailout bill on Tuesday, he warned the nation that we're not
at the end of our troubles. "Nor does it constitute all
of what we are going to have to do to turn our economy around,"
he said. "But today does mark the beginning of the end.''
Maybe so. But it feels like
the beginning of the middle to us. We've had the initial shock.
We've had a small rebound. Now, we're ready for the second phase.
In this stage, we ought to have a better rebound... but also
another big leg down. Stocks are still selling for 15-18 times
earnings (which are falling fast). They need to get down to 5-8
times earnings. That will bring the Dow down to around 5,000,
or lower. This could take a long time. We're in a depression,
remember. And in depressions economies need to be restructured,
not just refreshed.
In the '30s, none of the bailouts
and stimulus packages of the Roosevelt Administration did any
real good. At the end of the decade, the economy was about where
it was when the decade began - with 11 million people still unemployed.
And the poor Japanese have been waiting 19 years to get to the
beginning of the end of their restructuring crisis. They probably
would have gotten to it years ago, were it not for the diligent
efforts of Japanese politicians. Instead of letting the banks
fail, they bailed them out and propped them up. Result: an on-again,
off-again depression that has lasted longer than most marriages.
*** Our intrepid correspondent,
Byron King, offers some more insight:
"Congress collects a lot
of funds through taxes. But not nearly enough to pay for all
the spending. It's not even close. So will Congress raise taxes?
And do it during a recession? I don't think so. Herbert Hoover
tried that in 1930. Didn't work too well.
"What about the federal
government borrowing? OK, it borrows a lot. But can it borrow
even more? Trillions of dollars? From whom? Who has an extra
trillion dollars lying around that they want to loan the U.S.?
Will China and the oil-exporting nations continue to buy up U.S.
Treasury paper? If so, with what? Chinese exports are down. Oil
income is way down as well. (Oil is selling at $34 per barrel
today.) So good luck with borrowing.
"That leaves the U.S.
government with only one choice. The U.S. is about to embark
on the greatest currency-creating binge in modern history (excluding
that of Zimbabwe, perhaps.) A lot of that trillion dollars is
going to come right out of nothing. The Fed is just going to
monetize the debt. So we'll have new dollars chasing the same
amount of goods. That's the basic definition of inflation.
"The bottom line is you
need to own precious metals. Own gold. How much? For now, the
more, the better. Own coins, if you can get 'em. Own bullion,
if you can get it. Own shares in good miners with reserves in
the ground while you can buy 'em. Just get some gold."
While there may a short-term
pullback in the gold price, Byron believes that in the long-term,
our favorite yellow metal is going to go to the moon... all the
way to $2000 an ounce. If you haven't already, you're going to
want to pad your portfolio with this precious metal. Find out
how here .
*** On the other hand, our
old friend Mark Hulbert notes that whenever investment advisors
become this positive about gold the yellow metal usually goes
down.
*** "Dad, this is the
best house we've ever had... why would you want to sell it?"
We were sitting on the verandah
last night, having dinner. Beneath us, the waves slapped against
the rocks. In front of us, a long, wide beach curved around toward
green hills. There are a few lights from the condominia in the
distance. Above them, the stars began to sparkle in the sky and
the moon lit up the ocean like an old newsreel.
To bring you further into the
picture, dear reader, this is a house that we built about five
years ago. At the time, we thought we might want to retire here.
Property prices were rising so rapidly, we saw little risk. Besides,
your editor can't help himself. Some men play golf; he works
on houses. He's been at it for the last 40 years; at this stage
he can't stop.
The house he built in Nicaragua
is probably his best work. He didn't build it with his owns hands.
"That's probably why," his wife would say. She is no
fan of his handiwork. As a carpenter, she thinks he makes a good
plumber. As a plumber, she would recommend him as an economist.
But with the help of a good
architect and a good crew of workmen, the house went up and now
is a delight. It has aged gracefully... and now looks like it
has been here forever.
The idea was to build a new
house on the beach that reflected the elegance and charm of Nicaragua's
colonial past. And so it does. Columns, porches, arches, solid
wood doors, shutters, cement tiles - all are recreated from elements
found in Granada, one of the oldest cities in the country.
Unlike our other houses, this
one is coherent. The whole place was done in one style... at
one time... with one design. In France, for example, we have
an old house, which was built, rebuilt, remodeled, expanded,
reduced and redesigned a number of times over the centuries.
To the architectural variety we added our furniture moved over
from Maryland... ancestral portraits... sideboards that belonged
to our great-grandmothers... and chairs found at a local junk
shop.
We still have our house in
Maryland too. It is rented out to a carpenter. We built it in
the '90s... before we had enough money to build a proper house.
Your editor did much of the work himself - including the wood
parquet that he made from trees on the farm.
"It shows," says
Elizabeth.
It is not a bad house. But
it certainly wouldn't be mistaken for an elegant one.
People get attached to houses.
That is why we have so many of them. We can't seem to sell them.
One is an architectural gem. Another is where the children grew
up. Still another is "our family home." And the last
of them we keep only because we can't sell it; like one of Elizabeth's
broken-down horses, we keep it because no one else will take
it.
But each house is a glutton.
It eats money. Time. Energy. Attention. Whoever thought houses
would be good investments must not have known anything about
investments. Or houses. Or women.
"Look," we said to
Elizabeth, "we've got to get rid of these houses. They're
costing us money. And in the spirit of the worldwide financial
meltdown, we have to cut back."
"Are you kidding? They're
not worth that much. Besides, the houses are solid. They're not
going away. We enjoy them. We can use them. And we can leave
them to our children. Not like those gold mining stocks you bought...
or those Indian stocks; they lost half their value in just a
couple of weeks. They could be worthless tomorrow, for all we
know. I'd rather hold onto the houses and sell those stocks."
Bill Bonner
Source:
http://www.dailyreckoning.com.au/the-united-states-the-largest-ponzi-scheme-in-the-world/2009/02/20/
email: DR@dailyreckoning.com
website: The
Daily Reckoning
Bill Bonner
is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning.
Bill's book,
Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and
Politics, is a must-read.
He is also the
author, with Addison Wiggin, of The Wall Street Journal best seller
Financial
Reckoning Day:
Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century (John Wiley
& Sons).
In Bonner and
Wiggin's follow-up book, Empire
of Debt:
The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis, they wield their sardonic
brand of humor to expose the nation for what it really is - an
empire built on delusions.
Copyright ©
2000-2013 Agora Financial LLC.
321gold Ltd
|