Forever
in Bubbles
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Yesterday
we
ventured into Bubble World.
Whats
going on? When will this be over? How bad do you think it will get?
What can we do to turn this around?
Members of
Congress have the same questions the rest of us have. They read
the same claptrap in the newspapers. They hear the same balderdash
explanations from economists and federal officials. Theyre
wondering what is really going on.
Not that we
know. But they asked us anyway.
We report to
you today from the banks of the Potomac. Our old friend, Congressman
Ron Paul, organized an off-the-record discussion with several other
members of Congress. The subject was the financial meltdown
and
the bailout. We were there to talk, of course, but we were more
interested in listening.
You dont
understand, said a Senate functionary we met later, these
people live in Bubble World. Theyre protected from the real
world by their staffs and by the system itself. You imagine that
they would know what is going on. But they dont. They know
less than we do. And theyll be the last to find out. They
are so busy meeting constituents
dealing with donors
working
out deals with their political parties and supporters
and feeling
like big shots
they dont really have any time to study
the issues. So they count on staff and party committees to tell
them what to say, how to vote
and what to think.
Waiting in
the corridor of the Cannon building, two men in grey suits walked
by
we overheard this conversation:
Did you
vote no on that last resolution? You were supposed
to vote yes.
I thought
I was supposed to vote yes to cutting off the argument
as
far as Im concerned weve heard enough about Nancys
problem with the CIA
But that
wasnt about cutting off the debate, that was just technical
about
allowing them to modify the previous vote
What
are you talking about?
I dont
know
I didnt think it had anything to do with stopping
all this gabbing about Nancy and the CIA
We take it
for granted that members of Congress often dont know what
they are talking about. But it is shocking to realize that they
often dont know what they are voting on either. And neither
do the voters.
The Economist
reports, for example, that the measures put before California voters
in a recent plebiscite were challenged
not by the courts, but
by a grammarian. She claimed they worded it in such a way that it
was impossible for a reasonably intelligent person to understand
what they were supposed to mean.
Since the meeting
was off-the-record, we cant tell you who was there
or what they said. We can only report what we had to say.
Look
economies
and
empires
go in cycles, we began. We thought we ought to
start with the basics, since we didnt know what they thought.
Growth
maturity
then,
decline. Thats just the way it is. So in order to get an idea
of what lies ahead you have to figure out where you are in the cycle.
You never
know for sure, but there are tell-tale signs. The credit cycle,
for example, has been on an upswing in the US since the Great Depression.
First, there was in-store consumer credit as early as the 20s.
There was some mortgage credit
and some margin credit for investors
too. But during the 30s, the financial strain was so great
that most people regretted their debt and paid it down. Or they
defaulted.
You could
get a mortgage back then if you put 50% down
and paid it off
in full in 3 to 5 years. And then Franklin Roosevelt set up the
FHA
along with Fannie Mae. And pretty soon, you could borrow
80% of the house price and pay it off over 15 years.
Major
credit cards MasterCard and Visa didnt become
widely used until the 60s. And then, credit began to rise
more steeply. Total debt had been about 150% of GDP in the 50s
and 60s
but it rose quickly after the 80s. By the
2000s, you could get a mortgage for 110% of your house price
an inflated price at that. And you could take 30 years to pay it
off.
As for
credit cards, hardly a day passed when you didnt get a new
one in the mail
usually with a higher debt limit. Debt rose
and
rose
and rose
up to 350% of GDP. And finally, the whole
debt bubble blew up.
You have
to remember that the US economy in fact, much of the whole
world economy came to rely on more and more debt as a way
to expand. At first, a fellow could borrow $1.50
hed
spend it and invest it
and it would lead to an increase in
GDP of $1. But, as time when by it took more and more debt to produce
more GDP. The fellow would borrow a $1.50
but then, part of
it would have to be used to pay the interest on what he borrowed
before. Eventually, it was taking more than $6 to produce a single
ounce of GDP.
You can
see that this wont work for long. GDP is like national income.
You cant have debt increasing 6 times faster than income
at least not for long.
But remember,
the US economy depended on this debt-fueled growth. Without the
extra credit, the economy would slip back
which is what is
happening now.
Weve
reached a turning point. The financial industry has blown itself
up. It realized that all those credits it had, from people who didnt
have the cashflow to repay their debts, werent worth what
they were supposed to be worth. Were now on the downhill slope
of the credit cycle
and most likely, the imperial cycle too.
What
everyone wants to know is how long it will take before we have a
genuine recovery. And then, everyone
everyone
seems to
think that the government can stir up new growth by pushing more
debt onto the public
this time, public debt. And get this
the
feds are now adding debt to the system at a rate four times greater
than the previous record.
They
you
are
running a budget deficit of $1.8 trillion this year. Could be higher.
How much in extra GDP do you get from all that extra debt? Well,
thats a good question
because GDP is now going backwards.
The latest numbers show output going down at a 6% rate in the US.
And thats one of the worlds better rates. Exporters
notably Germany and Japan are doing much worse. GDP
is falling 14% in Germany. Its going down at a 15% rate in
Japan.
So, the
feds are adding trillions in new credit (debt) and getting no GDP
growth from it zero
zilch
nada. In other words
debt is growing infinitely faster than GDP.
How long
can this keep going? No one knows. But one thing we do know is that
the economy is not going to start up again and deliver good, old-fashioned,
healthy growth. Were in the process of deleveraging. That
is, were on the downside of a credit cycle. Were getting
rid of debt, not adding to it.
If wed
had todays newspaper in front of us, we would have pointed
at the headlines.
Recession
Turns Malls Into Ghost Towns, says the Wall Street Journal.
Malls are emptying out because they were built for a world that
no longer exists. They were built for a world where people increased
their debt and their consumer spending far faster than they increased
their real incomes. Now that people are cutting back on spending
in order to reduce their levels of debt they can no
longer afford to go to the mall. As a business or an investment,
malls have got to be bad places for your money.
The private
sector is not going to take on more debt, we continued our
explanation. People know it doesnt pay. And theyve
got too much already. The private sector is not going to begin a
new growth period until theyve paid off, worked out, defaulted
on, or shirked a lot of their present debt load. Weve estimated
that they need to get rid of about $20 trillion worth. And thats
going to take time. And a lot of painful decisions by a lot of people.
Bad business, investment and spending decisions need to be recognized
and
fixed. Debt needs to be reduced.
And thats
why this downturn is not going to end tomorrow.
If wed
had the mall example in front of us, we could have explained that
a mall represents a kind of bubble-era investment that now needs
to be restructured. After Americas industrial age was over,
the country found itself with empty factories and warehouses. They
were mostly written off and destroyed. Some were converted
into lofts and shopping malls. Now that the retail age is over,
well have to find new uses for malls too.
This
is going to take time, we told them
and then we took
a break to listen
and eat some shrimp.
May
23,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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