Doug
Casey on the Illusion of Recovery
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently
by Doug Casey:
The Ascendence of Sociopaths in US Governance
Doug: Lobo,
get out your mower; it's time to cut down some green shoots again,
and debunk a bit of the so-called recovery.
L: Ah.
I have to say, Doug, the so-called recovery is looking more than
"so-called" to a lot of smart folks. Even our own Terry
Coxon says the recovery is real, albeit weak.
Doug: Terry's
probably looking at it by the numbers, some of which are reported
to be improving. But let's come back to the numbers later and start
with fundamentals. The first order of business, as usual, is a definition:
a depression is a period of time in which the average standard of
living declines significantly. I believe that's what we're seeing
now, whatever the numbers produced by the politicians may seem to
tell us.
L: I was just
shopping for food and noticed that the bargain bread was on sale
at two for $5. My gas costs almost as much per gallon. That's got
to hurt a lot of people, especially on the lower income rungs. I
don't need to ask; a member of my family just got a job that pays
$12 per hour about three times what I made working for the
university food service back when I was in college and it's
not enough to cover his rent and basic bills. If his wife gets similar
work, they'll make ends meet, but woe unto them if anyone in their
family crashes a car or requires serious medical treatment.
Doug: That's
just what I mean. Actually, the trend towards both partners in a
marriage having to work really started in the early '70s
after Nixon cut all links between the dollar and gold in August
of 1971. Before then, in the "Leave it to Beaver" era,
the average family got by quite well with only the husband working.
If he got sick or lost his job, the wife was a financial backup
system. Now, if something happens to either one, the family is screwed.
I think, from a very long-term perspective, historians will one
day see the '60s as the peak of American prosperity certainly
relative to the rest of the world
but perhaps even in absolute
terms, even taking continued advances in technology into account.
Maybe the '59 Cadillac was the bell ringing at the top of that civilizational
market.
My friend Frank
Trotter, president of EverBank,
was just telling me that the net worth of the median US citizen
is only $6,000. That's the median, meaning that half of the people
have less than that. Most people don't even have enough stashed
away to buy the cheapest new car without going into debt. It used
to be that people bought cars out of savings, with cash. Now they
have to finance them over at least five years
or lease them
which means they never ever have even that trivial asset,
but a liability in the form of a lease.
The bulk of
the 49 percent below this guy don't even have that with the
concentration of wealth among the top one percent, most of those
below average have seriously negative net worth, at least compared
to their earning capacity. In other words, the US, Europe, and other
so-called First World countries are in a wealth-liquidation cycle
that will be as profound as it will be protracted.
By that I mean
that people are on average consuming more than they produce. That
can only be done by living out of capital consuming savings
or accumulating debt. For a time, this may drive corporate
earnings up, and give this dead-man-walking economy the appearance
of returning health, but it's essentially, necessarily, and absolutely
unsustainable. This is an illusion of recovery we're seeing
the result of our Wrong-Way Corrigan politicians continuing to encourage
people to do the exact opposite of what they should do.
L: Which is?
Doug: Save.
People shouldn't be getting new cars, new TVs, and new clothes.
They should be cutting expenses to the bone.
The Obama administration,
just like the Baby Bush administration before it there really
is no great difference between the Evil Party and the Stupid Party
and its minions in the US and its cronies around the world,
stubbornly stick to the bankrupt idea that economic growth is driven
by consumption. This is confusing cause and effect. Healthy consumption
follows profitable production in excess of consumption, resulting
in savings accumulated capital that can either be
spent without harm, or invested in future growth.
Consumption
doesn't cause an economy to grow at all. To paraphrase: "It's
productivity that creates wealth, stupid!"
L: Policies
aimed at encouraging consumption, instead of increasing production,
are what turned the savings rate negative in the US and resulted
in the huge sovereign debt issues we're seeing in supposedly rich
countries
Doug: Well,
the governments themselves have spent way more than they had or
ever will have, and that's par for the course when you believe spending
is a virtue. However, it's the false signals government interference
sends to the market that caused the huge malinvestments that only
began to go into liquidation in 2008. That has to do with another
definition of a depression: It's a period of time when distortions
and malinvestments in the economy are liquidated. Unfortunately,
that process has barely even started. In fact, since the bailouts
started in 2008, these things have gotten much worse. If the government
had gone cold turkey back then, cut its spending by at least 50%
for openers, and encouraged the public to do the same, the depression
would already be over, and we'd be on our way to real prosperity.
But they did just the opposite. So we haven't yet entered the real
meat grinder
L: Those false
signals the government sends to the market being artificially low
interest rates?
Doug: Yes,
and Helicopter Ben's foolish leadership in the wholesale printing
of trillions of currency units all around the world I don't
really want to call dollars, euros, yen, and so forth money anymore.
When individuals and corporations get those currency units, they
think they're wealthier than they really are and consume accordingly.
Worse, those currency units flow first to the state which
feeds it power and favored corporations, which get to spend
it at old values. It's very corrupting. There is also an ongoing
regulatory onslaught the government has to show it's "doing
something" which makes it much harder for entrepreneurs
to produce.
In addition,
keeping interest rates low encourages borrowing, and discourages
saving just the opposite of what's needed. I don't believe
in any state intervention in the economy whatsoever, but in the
crisis of the early 1980s, then-Fed Chairman Paul Volker headed
off a depression and set the stage for a strong recovery by keeping
rates very high on the order of 15-18%. They can't do that
now, of course, because with the acknowledged government debt at
$16 trillion, those kind of rates would mean $2.5 trillion in annual
interest alone more than the government takes in taxes. At
this point, there's no way out. And there's much more tinkering
with the system ahead, at the hands of fools who remain convinced
they know what they're doing, regardless of how abject their past
failures have been.
L: And yet,
the interventions seem to be working. The "orderly default"
in Greece seems to have saved the Eurozone for now, and critically
important employment figures in the US show definite signs of improvement.
Doug: Perhaps,
but let's take a closer look. I advocate the Greek government defaulting,
overtly and immediately, on 100% of its debt, for several reasons.
First, it would punish those who lent it money to do all the stupid
and destructive things it's done. Second, it would ensure that the
Greek government wouldn't be able to borrow again for a very long
time. Third, it would liberate young and yet unborn Greeks, who
are being turned into serfs by all that debt. It would also mean
that most European banks would fail. Tough luck for those who relied
on them. When new banks are established it will serve as a lesson
to people to be more careful about where they put their capital.
Anyway, it would be much less of a catastrophe than the way we're
currently heading.
Here in the
US, the twelve-month fiscal deficit is still over $1.2 trillion,
an extreme situation that is gutting the value of the dollar, because
it's mostly financed by the Fed buying US debt. It's temporarily
expanded the eye of the storm we're in, but it's done nothing to
dissipate the storm itself. Their easy-money policies may have bought
them a little more time, but they will only make it worse when we
do exit the eye of the storm.
There's a third
definition of a depression that I use: a depression is the end phenomenon
of an inflation-caused business cycle. Inflation is the sole cause
of business cycles, and inflation is caused by governments and their
central banks printing money. The government the state
is 100% responsible for society's economic problems. But it arrogantly
represents itself as the cure. And people believe it. There's no
hope until the psychology of the average person changes.
L: As
Bob Lefevre
used to say: "Government is a disease masquerading as its own
cure." Want to update us on when you think the economy will
return to panic mode?
Doug: Earlier
this year, I was expecting it sooner than I do now. Unless some
black-swan event upsets the apple cart suddenly, I would not expect
us to exit the eye of the storm at least until after the US presidential
elections this fall. Maybe not until early 2013, as the reality
of what's in store sinks in. I pity the poor fool who's elected
president. In a way, I hope it's Obama who wins, mainly because
the worthless contemptible, actually Republican candidates
yap on about believing in the free market, which means if one of
them is somehow elected, the free market will be blamed for the
catastrophe. Too bad Ron Paul will be too old to run in 2016, assuming
that we actually have an election then
L: So, what
about those numbers, then? Employment is up, and the oxymoronic
notion of a "jobless recovery" was one of our criticisms
before
Doug: Yes,
but look at the jobs that have been spawned; they are mostly service
sector. Such jobs can create wealth for certain individuals
it looks like we've put more lawyers to work again, as well as waiters
and paper-pushers but they don't amount to increased production
for the whole economy. They just reshuffle the bits around within
the economy.
L: Unlike my
favorite mining which reported 7,000 new jobs in the
latest report, if I recall correctly.
Doug:
Yes, unlike mining, which was more of an exception than the rule
in those numbers. But that's making the mistake of taking the government
at its word on employment figures. As we've discussed before, if
you look at John Williams'
Shadow Stats, which show various economic figures as the US
government itself used to calculate them, unemployment has actually
reached Great Depression levels.
The US government
is dishonestly fudging the figures as badly as the Argentine government
which is, justifiably, viewed as an economic laughingstock
in most parts of the world. One reason things are going to get much
worse in the US is that many of those with economic decision-making
power think Cristina Fernandez Kirchner is a genius. A little while
ago there was an editorial in the New York Times the
mouthpiece for the establishment written by someone named
Ian Mount. Get a load of this. I've got it in front of me.
If you can
believe it, the author actually says: "Argentina has regained
prosperity thanks to smart economic measures." The Argentine
government "intervened to keep the value of its currency low,
which boosts local industry by making Argentina's exports cheaper
abroad while keeping foreign imports expensive. Argentina offers
valuable lessons
government spending to promote local industry,
pro-job infrastructure programs and unemployment benefits does not
turn a country into a kind of Soviet parody."
Well, no, I
guess it turns it into something the US can ape. He goes on: "Argentina
is hardly a perfect parallel for the United States. But the stark
difference between its austere policies and low growth of the late
1990s and the pro-government, high-growth 2000s offers a test case
for how to get an economy moving again. Washington would do well
to pay attention."
The guy has
obviously never been here, though he admits that "Argentina
is far from perfect." His modest concession is that the taxes
to imports and exports have "scared away some foreign investment,
while high spending has pushed inflation well over 20 percent. And
it would be laughable to suggest that the United States follow its
lead and default on its debt."
When I first
read the article, I thought I was reading a parody in The
Onion. I love Argentina and spend a lot of time down here.
It's a fantastic place to live but not because of the government's
economic policies. Its only competition in state stupidity is Brazil,
which regularly destroys its currency. Fortunately, though, the
Argentine government is quite incompetent at people control, unlike
the US. It leaves you alone. And there's a reasonable chance the
next president down here won't be actively stupid, which isn't asking
much. But it's amazing that the NYT can advocate Argentine
government policy as something the US should follow. A collapse
of the US economy would be vastly worse than that of the Argentine
economy the US dollar is the world's currency. Here in Argentina
they're used to it and prepared for it to a good degree. Very unlike
in the US.
L: In the US,
the welfare state has bloated beyond imagination. The damage already
done is less visible because where there used to be private charity
soup kitchens, there are now "food stamps" that look like
ordinary credit cards, making the destitute among us look like everyone
else at the supermarket. There are 50 million recipients, and that
number is growing, not declining.
By the way,
John Williams is a speaker at the Casey
Research Recovery Reality Summit we have coming up, April 27-29
in Weston, Florida. Perhaps this would be a good time to invite
our readers down to hear John's take on what the numbers really
are and to meet us. We'll both be there.
Doug:
That's true. Several readers made it to the event we just had at
La
Estancia de Cafayate, which went very well. We have some of
the most interesting people in the world reading these conversations
it's fun to get to meet more of them.
L: Ah,
that must be why you sound both upbeat and tired. A pity I didn't
get to sit in on Coffee with Casey with you in the new spa
you built down there
Doug: Yes,
it's been a long couple of weeks, but I am pleased. You should see
the place now; not only has the spa been completed since you were
last here, they're making good progress on the hotel, and there
are houses going up all over the place. I'm tickled pink with our
world-class 3,500 square-foot gym, where I was pumping iron for
an hour today, and resistance swimming pool, among lots of other
stuff. But the real attraction isn't the toys, it's the people.
L: I'll see
it next time. It may be time to sit down with an architect. Meanwhile,
back at the ranch here, what are the investment implications if
the Crash of 2012 gets put off until the end of the year, or even
becomes the crash of 2013?
Doug: There
are potentially many, but generally, the appearance of economic
activity picking up is bullish for commodities, especially energy
and raw materials like industrial metals and lumber. That's not
true for gold and silver, so we might see more weakness in the precious
metals in the months ahead. I wouldn't count on that, however, because
government policy is obviously inflationary to anyone with any grasp
of sound economics. That will keep many investors on the buy side.
Plus, the central banks of the developing world China, India,
Russia, and many others are constantly trading their dollars
for gold. There are perhaps seven trillion dollars outside the US,
and about $600 billion more are sent out each year via the US trade
deficit.
L: I know I
bought some gold and silver in the recent dip and would love to
have a chance to do so at even lower prices ahead.
Doug: That's
the logical thing to do, given the fundamental realities we started
this conversation with, but a lot of people will be scared into
selling if gold does retreat. A good number will sell low, after
buying high happens every time, and is a big part of why
commodities have such a tricky reputation. Most investors just don't
have the strength of conviction to be good speculators. Instead
of looking at the world to understand what's going on and placing
intelligent bets on the logical consequences of the trends, regardless
of what anyone else says or does, they go with the herd, buying
when everyone else is buying and selling when everyone else is selling.
This inverts the "buy low and sell high" formula. They
let their thoughts be influenced by newspapers and the words of
government officials.
L: In other
words, everything you see calls for gold continuing upward for some
time years making any big retreats along the way great
buying opportunities for those with the guts to act on them. Same
for silver, and doubly so for the precious-metals mining stocks,
and triply so for the junior stocks.
Doug: Just
so. I look forward to the day when I can sell my gold for quality
growth stocks but we're nowhere near that point. But silver
might correct less than gold if gold corrects due to the appearance
of economic recovery silver is, after all, an industrial
metal as well as a monetary one.
L: Agreed.
And I can see the positive implications for energy as well, but
Marin was just saying that natural gas has dropped below $2. That's
apparently starting to force oil and gas companies to remove reserves
from their books because reserves need to be economic, not
just exist which the market isn't going to like. He sees
some great bargains on solid companies ahead, and not just "gas"
companies as many oil companies, including the major ones, produce
both. Marin said one major company gets half its top line from gas
sales. This is a huge shift.
[Ed. Note:
Louis is referring to Marin Katusa, chief energy investment
strategist for Casey Research and editor of Casey
Energy Opportunities and Casey
Energy Report.]
Doug: The devil
is always in the details it's dangerous to oversimplify things,
painting with a broad brush, as in, "A recovering economy will
be bad for gold" or "A recovering economy will be good
for energy." You have to understand these markets well enough
to really see how different forces and factors will affect them.
Marin is unquestionably one of the sharpest analysts I've met in
my life. He's actually something of a genius, both academically
smart and very street smart, in addition to being a workaholic.
He runs a lot of my money. He's done spectacularly well, and I expect
him to do even better, because he constantly learns. Not much gets
by him.
L: Good reminder.
So, if we're looking at signs of economic recovery for a time, would
you buy into copper, nickel, or other base-metal plays?
Doug: Well,
just because we might see signs of a temporary economic recovery,
that doesn't mean we will and even if we do, they could easily
be swept aside by any number of events, such as Europe taking another
turn for the worse, or Japan or China starting to come apart at
the seams. But, as a hedge, some near-term bets on industrial metals
might not be a bad thing.
L: How about
agriculture?
Doug: That's
one thing for which demand can never go down. Economic upturns or
downturns may affect the mix of what people eat, but they won't
stop people from eating or, if they do, we'll have more pressing
concerns than which way to play the markets. I remain especially
bullish on cattle.
L: Anything
else?
Doug: [Laughs]
Many things. The right technology companies should do well; finding
ways to do things faster-better-cheaper always adds value. Select
mainstream equities in currently profitable sectors might do well
as well but I'd be very careful there. I can't stress enough
how close to the edge of collapse the global economic house of cards
is it could take another year or more to topple, or it could
be starting today.
L: Which leads
to the other reason for owning precious metals not as a speculation
on skyrocketing prices, nor as an investment for good yield, but
for prudence.
Doug: Yes.
Gold remains the only financial asset that is not simultaneously
someone else's liability. Anyone who thinks they have any measure
of financial security without owning any gold especially
in the post-2008 world is either ignorant, naïve, foolish,
or all three.
Look, we saw
it coming, but everyone in the world could see Humpty Dumpty fall
off the wall in 2008. Now we're just waiting for the crash at the
bottom, and no amount of wishful thinking otherwise is going to
change that. It's a truly dangerous world out there, and blue chips
are no longer the safe investments they once seemed to be. You don't
have to be a gold bug to see the wisdom of allocating some capital
and not just a token amount to cover the possibility
that I'm right about what's coming. There's some opportunity cost
associated with taking out this kind of insurance, but it's not
catastrophic if I'm wrong, and the cost of failing to do so if I'm
right is catastrophic. That really is the bottom line.
L: Financially.
If you're right about the coming Greater Depression, people also
need to take steps to batten down the hatches on their physical
life arrangements.
Doug: Right.
As we've said many times now, your government is the greatest threat
to your well-being these days. If at all possible, you should be
taking steps to diversify your political risk. Foreign bank accounts
are not illegal for most people in most countries, though they need
to be reported. Getting one is a good start. Buying real estate
I like in various countries is one of my favorite ways to diversify
risk in my life. That's partly because I like speculating in real
estate, but much more so because whichever government thinks you're
its tax slave can't force you to repatriate real estate you own
abroad. Most of all, it's because it's good to have places to go
if things get ugly wherever you happen to be.
L: Very well.
Any particular triggers you think we should watch out for
warning signs that we really are about to exit the eye of the storm?
Doug: In the
US, the Fed being forced to raise interest rates would be one, or
inflation getting visibly out of control which would force
a change in interest rates would be another. Who knows
Obama getting reelected could tip the scales. War in the Middle
East could do it, or, as we already mentioned, China or Japan going
off the deep end. The ways are countless. Black swans the size of
pteranodons are circling in squadron strength. A lot of them are
coming in for a landing.
People will
just have to stay sharp sorry, there's no easy way to survive
a depression. As my friend Richard Russell says, "In a depression
everybody loses. The winner is the guy who loses the least."
It will take work and diligent attention to what's going on in the
world and around us. We'll do our best to help with The
Casey Report, but each of us is and must be responsible
for ourselves.
L: Okay then,
thanks for the guru update. No offense, but in spite of the investments
I've made betting that you're right, I hope youre wrong, because
the Greater Depression is going to destroy many lives, and the famines
and wars it spawns even more millions, I'm sure. Maybe more.
The mind balks.
Doug: Oh, I
agree. I only wish I could believe otherwise, because I'm sure it's
going to be even worse than I think it will be
although I
hope to be watching it in comfort and safety on my widescreen TV,
not out my front window.
L: I think
we need to find something more upbeat to talk about next time.
Doug: [Chuckles]
Maybe. If there's something important in the news we should cover
it. It's sure to be fodder for comedy at least black comedy.
L: As you say.
'Til next week then.
March
24, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
and Associates
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