Where
To Wait Out the Great Correction
by
Bill Bonner
Daily
Reckoning
Recently
by Bill Bonner: Why
US Job Creation Heats Up in Cold Weather
Tired of running
out of time and money? Scrimping and saving just to make ends meet?
Try moving
to Harlingen, Texas. The cost of living there is only about 40%
of the cost of living in Manhattan.
Heres
Real Time Economics with a report:
Obama has
spoken about having the rich pay their fair share, and $250,000
is a lot of money. But to characterize those households that earn
that sum as rich depends very much on where they live.
Thanks to regional differences on costs, $250,000 does not go
so far in places like New York City and Honolulu, compared with
cities in Texas or Tennessee.
The Council
for Community and Economic Research calculates cost of living
indexes for US cities based on goods and services bought by households
in the top-income quintile, which nationally covers incomes of
about $100,000 and above according to US Census data.
What the
data show is that the cost of living in Manhattan is 118% higher
than the national average. On the other hand, a household in towns
like Harlingen, Texas, or Memphis, Tenn., has a cost of living
15% less than the US average.
What the
differences do mean is a New York household earning $250,000 is
not nearly as rich or has nearly the buying power
as a Memphis household bringing home, say, $150,000 a year.
You can live
more cheaply in a place like Harlingen. Youre almost guaranteed
to lower your spending, because theres not much there to spend
money on.
Weve
never been to Harlingen, so maybe were wrong, but we imagine
it is a pretty slow place. Few fancy restaurants. Few theatres.
Few luxury shops. Which makes it hard to part with money.
Of course this
improves your cash-flow. But it also allows you the glorious privilege
of doing nothing.
As our friend
in Florida reminded us, most people cant stop. Money in; money
out. They have to work to pay the bills. No question of taking time
off. No time to think. No time to sit still
and wait for the
storm to pass.
Back in the
time of the Great Depression, millions of Americans were still not
completely caught up in the money economy. Many still lived on the
land. They kept pigs and chickens. They tended their own gardens
and put up their own canned goods. They cut their own
wood to heat their houses. They pumped water from their own wells.
Many still made their own clothes.
When the Depression
came, they could hunker down and wait it out.
But today,
the developed world is in a Great Correction. And it shows no sign
of coming to an end. Japan is already in a slump that has lasted
off and on longer than most marriages. Europe is headed
into a slump with half of all young people jobless in many
countries. And in the US, at this stage in a typical recession/recovery
cycle, the economy should be growing at an 8% rate. Instead, growth
is below 2%.
Why? This is
no typical recession/recovery cycle. Instead, the private sector
is cutting back on debt. At the present, household debt is going
down (mostly via mortgage foreclosures) at about 5% of GDP per year.
At this rate,
it could take 10 years or more to get household debt down to more
comfortable levels, say, around 70% of disposable income.
But the average
household cant wait 10 years for de-leveraging to do its work.
Heck, it cant even wait 2 months. Both parents work. Theyve
got two cars. And two mortgages. Money in; money out. 24/7
No garden.
No firewood. No chickens. No time to wait. No time to sit still.
Just bills
bills
bills
Theyve
got to work
theyve got to earn money
theyve
got to spend
They cant
do nothing.
They should
move to Harlingen.
Not much action
on Wall Street. The Dow barely moved yesterday. Oil is right at
$100 a barrel. The 10-year T-note yield is still below 2%.
The Greeks
are toast, says our colleague Chris Hunter. The Germans
are fed up with them. It looks like they are going to push the Greeks
into default
and out of the euro.
But the threat
of a Greek default casts a shadow over all of Europe. The New
York Times is on the story:
BRUSSELS
Moodys Investors Service cut the debt ratings on
Monday of six European countries, including Italy, Spain and Portugal,
and became the first big ratings agency to switch Britains
outlook to negative.
The move
came a month after similar downgrades by Standard & Poors
and Fitch Ratings. All three agencies cited the debt crisis and
its ramifications for the regions economy.
In a statement,
Moodys said the main reasons underpinning its decision were
the uncertainty over the euro areas prospects for
institutional reform of its fiscal and economic framework and
the resources that will be made available to deal with the crisis.
It also cited Europes increasingly weak macroeconomic prospects,
which it said threaten the adoption of austerity programs and
the structural reforms needed to promote competitiveness.
Empires come
and go. And in coming and going, they seem to be symmetrical. The
way up takes about as long as the way down. The Roman Empire took
hundreds of years to reach its peak and hundreds of years to go
away. The Third Reich was supposed to last for 1,000 years, too.
Instead, it lasted 12, with about 8 years of expansion and 4 years
of contraction.
The British
Empire got underway with the conquest of Scotland and Ireland. One
hundred years after the Battle of Culloden, which crushed the clans
and sealed Scotlands fate, the Brits ruled half the world.
But 100 years later, their empire was mostly gone
with the
US having taken away the imperial crown.
Americas
empire could be said to have begun with the defeat of the South
in the War Between the States. Or, perhaps with the invasion of
the Philippines in 1899. It peaked in the early 70s
when
US wages reached a top. Or, maybe in the 80s, when China began
to compete with it and the US shifted from a creditor nation to
a debtor. Now it is on the downward slope. In a few years, China
will have the worlds biggest economy. A few years later, it
will probably have the worlds dominant military force.
Will the decline
be graceful and dignified? Or marked by bankruptcy, hyperinflation,
war and shame?
John Kagan,
writing in The Wall Street Journal, doesnt think he
will like it.
If and when
American power declines, the institutions and norms that American
power has supported will decline, too. Or more likely, if history
is a guide, they may collapse altogether as we make a transition
to another kind of world order, or to disorder. We may discover
then that the US was essential to keeping the present world order
together and that the alternative to American power was not peace
and harmony but chaos and catastrophe which is what the
world looked like right before the American order came into being.
We dont
know what will happen. But we doubt we will like it either.
Still, were
not silly enough to think that the path to imperial decay can be
blocked by our own willpower. Heres Kagan again, delusional:
international
order is not an evolution; it is an imposition. It is the domination
of one vision over others in Americas case, the domination
of free-market and democratic principles, together with an international
system that supports them. The present order will last only as
long as those who favor it and benefit from it retain the will
and capacity to defend it.
He seems to
think that if an imperial power spends more money on its military
industry it will somehow resist the tides and the winds. All of
imperial history argues that hes wrong.
When an empires
time is up
its up.
February
18,
2012
Bill
Bonner is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
The New Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis
and the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007). His
latest book is Dice
Have No Memory.
Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force
behind The Daily Reckoning.
Copyright
© 2012 Daily Reckoning
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