Snow
Job
by Bill
Bonner
Baltimore is full of strange and curious things; it is home
to bouffant hairdos, the Formstone Preservation Society and other
wonders. Filmmaker John Waters makes the city his home, he says,
because it is the tackiest metropolis in America. He is inspired by
it in the way that other artists are moved to poetry by Paris or
Rome.
But
what caught our eye last night was not art but advertising. A block
or two from the huge billboard with the provocative headline Who's
the Father? DNA Paternity Testing... sits another intriguing sign
of the times:
BANKRUPTCY! Chapter 7
$50 Chapter 11 $100
In
America, in the springtime of the third year of George W. Bush's
rule, we conclude, bankruptcy has become as popular as
weight-loss.
The
sign is not merely an invitation, but a reproach. Bankruptcy rates
are hitting records despite the best efforts of those who manage the
economy.
In
his Congressional testimony last week, Alan Greenspan sailed through
his customary delusions that additional mortgage debt is good for
consumers...that technology has brought a New Era to the
economy...and that modest productivity increases have some
exceptional quality as yet unnamed.
He
was cruising in the wake of John Snow, U.S. Treasury secretary who
made the following remarkable comment to the G7 finance
ministers:
"...the United States is not growing fast enough and neither
are you, but we are growing a lot faster than you...We get
complaints from our friends around the world who say, 'your current
account deficit is so high.' And our response is: 'Yeah. You know
why? Because you don't buy enough from us. And because we provide
the highest risk-adjusted returns on capital in the world, so your
capital flows over here. So why don't you take steps to improve your
domestic economy so you'll be stronger and buy more from us? And you
might think as well about steps to improve return on invested
capital, and then capital would flow your way as well as to the
United States."
"The
fact is," and the head of the Treasury department may have been
tempted to toss his head back a few degrees as he made this point,
"the American economy is strong. The underpinnings are
good."
And
yet, on the corner of Charles and Lombard streets, bankruptcy is
such a good business it is worth advertising for new
clients.
There are other signs that the underpinnings of the U.S.
economy are not as good as Mr. Snow thinks. In addition to
bankruptcies and unemployment, business profits as a percentage of
GDP have fallen to their lowest level in about 40 years.
No
mention of this has been made by either the Treasury secretary or
the Fed chief. And yet, without profits, why would people invest in
new machinery, new ventures, new employees? How could the economy
grow? Why would stocks go up?
Another question worth asking: what is going on? How is it
possible for an economy to be 'strong' with people going broke at a
record rate...and businesses unable to make any money?
And
why would profits decline even as productivity increases and
technological marvels proliferate?
Hearing no answer from the authorities, we offer one
ourselves:
The
world's central banks' reserves increased only 55% in the last 20
years of the Bretton Woods/Gold Standard period '49 '69. But
then, the Gold Standard was replaced by the Dollar Standard. Dollars
being easier to replicate than bars of gold, central bank reserves
rose 2000% in the next 33 years.
That
kind of money was bound to tempt people; all over the world bankers,
consumers and investors gave way to an orgy of credit excess like
looters at a liquor warehouse. Soon, they were all drenched in the
stuff.
The
Nixon Administration put a final end to the Bretton Woods/Gold
Standard in 1971. Four years later, stocks bottomed out in America
and the Great Boom began.
Trillions of dollars sloshed around the world, creating
booms...and then busts. Japanese companies selling to Americans
were the first ones to get soaked. Then, Japanese share prices
sprouted...followed by kudzu-like growth in Japanese real
estate...and bonds. Then, other Asian nations boomed and busted.
And then, it was America's turn. Stocks had begun to pullulate in
the late '70s...by the late '90s they burst into spectacular,
intoxicating full flower...succeeded, as in Japan, by real estate
and bonds. Since 2000, U.S. stocks have wilted somewhat, but the
heady growth in real estate and bonds continues.
Americans had what appeared to be a big advantage; they were
the ones who got to create 'money...out of thin air.' But there was
a price to be paid for being so close to the source of such
stimulating libations; Americans dipped their cups in more deeply
than anyone. And while they drank, the source of their wealth
slipped away.
"For
generations it has been an economic truism and a matter of simple
common sense," begins Dr. Kurt Richebδcher, "that in essence, a
person or a nation can only become richer if it consumes less than
it produces." What America produced and exported was cash and
credit. Trillions of dollars' worth. Foreigners produced cars,
televisions, food, vacations anything and everything that they
could trade for dollars. This is the trade of which Secretary Snow
is so proud. It has resulted in a mountain of empty containers at
U.S. ports (they come in loaded...they do not leave, because America
has little to export, except money) and mountains of dollars piled
up overseas.
The
treasury secretary seemed not to notice it, but it also ruined the
profitability of U.S. businesses, stifled real incomes of American
workers and pushed millions of jobs overseas. American businesses
pay their workers in dollars. Normally, they could expect the money
to come back to them as the employees spent it on the goods they
produced. Instead, it goes into the hands of foreign producers, who
do overseas what might have otherwise been done at home build
factories, hire workers and make profits.
And
what did they do with their profits? As Mr. Snow tells us, they
bought U.S. dollar assets thus enabling Americans to keep buying.
In the late '90s, they bought stocks. Recently, especially for the
Japanese, the buying has shifted to U.S. bonds.
While the effects of so much apparent prosperity continue to
splash here and there, the world begins to wonder about the source
of it. The dollar has lost 31% of its value against the euro in the
last 18 months. Against gold, it has lost a similar amount. Has the
Great Boom of the last quarter century already turned into a Great
Bust?
June 4,
2003
Bill Bonner [send him
mail] is the founder and
president of Agora Publishing, and the author of The Daily
Reckoning.
Copyright © 2003 LewRockwell.com
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