The Not So Super Hero
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Priced
for Collapse
The past week provided clear lessons not just in how central bankers
have a limited ability to positively influence the economy but also
how they are limited in their capacity to deliver the shortsighted
policy actions that investors currently crave. The developments
should provide new reasons for investors and economy watchers to
abandon their faith in central bankers as super heroes capable of
saving the economy.
The employment
report released on Friday confirmed that the U.S. economy is stagnating
at best and actively deteriorating at worst. While the numbers of
jobs created in July was actually better than many economists expected,
it was still far below the levels that would indicate a growing
economy. But more important than the official unemployment rate
(which ticked up to 8.3%) or the number of jobs created, is the
number of people who have left the workforce out of frustration
or despair. This number continues to head higher. The labor force
participation rate, which is the percentage of healthy working age
Americans who actually have jobs, is at one of the lowest points
since women first started working en masse in the 1970's. It's also
instructive to add back into the unemployment rate those who want
full time jobs but who have had to settle for part time work. This
figure, reported under the "U6" category, currently stands
at 15.0%. This is just a 12% decline from the 17.1% high seen December
2009. In contrast the "official" (U3) unemployment figure
has declined 17% from its peak.
In explaining
these bad results, most economists simply look at the stimulating
effects of monetary and fiscal policy, not at the problems that
those measures create. As a result, it is assumed that not enough
stimulation, in the form of quantitative easing or federal deficit
spending has been applied to the economy. The next logical assumption
is that if the measures of the past few years had not been applied,
we would have seen much weaker results over that time. In other
words, no matter how bad things are now, defenders of the status
quo will always describe how bad things "could have been"
if the Fed hadn't stepped in. This counterfactual argument gets
increasingly threadbare as the years wear on.
Rather than
admit that its policies have failed, the Fed statement last week
gave all indications that it will continue with its current inflationary
policy to the bitter end. These are the same errors that inflated
the stock and real estate bubbles and ultimately resulted in the
2008 financial crisis and our continuing economic malaise. Without
any fresh ideas, Fed press releases have become a Groundhog Day
repetition of the same pronouncements and diagnoses. Oddly, many
market watchers are frustrated that the Fed has not telegraphed
that more stimulus is forthcoming. While it should be obvious that
our current "recovery" is dependent on monetary support,
it should be equally plain that the Fed can't actually admit that
fragility without spooking markets. To be clear, QE III is coming,
but the markets should not expect Bernanke to supply a precise timetable.
Without question,
if the Fed had not stimulated the economy with zero percent interest
rates, two rounds of quantitative easing and operation twist, the
initial economic contraction would have been sharper. But such short-term
pain would have been constructive. By not taking away the cheap-money
punch bowl, the Fed has delayed the pain and prolonged the party.
But to what end? So far all we have received is a tepid phony recovery
that has sown the seeds of its own destruction.
In contrast,
real economic restructuring would have resulted if the Fed had withdrawn
its monetary props. This would have paved the way for a robust,
sustainable recovery. Instead, the Fed helped numb the pain with
unprecedented (and apparently permanent) liquidity injections. Its
actions merely exacerbate the underlying imbalances that lie at
the root of our structural problems, and thus act as a barrier to
a real recovery. So long as the Fed fails to learn from its prior
mistakes, the phony recovery it has concocted will continue to fade
until we find ourselves in an even deeper recession than the one
we experienced in 2008.
Those who believe
that artificially low interest rates are needed now, fail to see
the price that will be paid down the road. By keeping rates too
low, the Fed continues to lead an overly indebted economy deeper
into the financial abyss. However, its ability to maintain rates
at such low levels is not without limits. Just as real estate prices
could not stay high forever, interest rates cannot stay low forever.
When rates finally rise, the extent of the economic damage will
finally be revealed.
The sad fact
is that no matter how impotent and dishonest Fed officials become,
their elected rivals on Capitol Hill (who control the fiscal side
of the equation) have become even less significant. The complete
lack of any political conviction to take steps to confront our fiscal
imbalances means that Ben Bernanke and his cohorts are seen as the
only cavalry capable of riding to the rescue. But no matter how
often they blow their bugles, our economy will continue to deteriorate
until we stop waiting for a savior and instead fight the battle
for prosperity ourselves.
August
8, 2012
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
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