Congress Avoids the Cliff by Selling Us Down the River
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: No
Way Out
With the possible
exception of the New York Times' editorial board (and the
cast of The Jersey Shore), everyone on the planet understood that
the United States Government needs to cut spending, increase taxes,
or both. Instead, after months of political posturing and hand wringing,
the Federal Government has just delivered the exact opposite, a
deal that increases spending and decreases taxes. The move lays
bare the emptiness of budget legislation, which can be dismantled
far easier than it can be constructed.
One question
that should be now asked is whether Moody's Research will finally
join S&P in downgrading the Treasury debt of the United States.
After the Budget Control Act of 2011 (which resulted from the Debt
Ceiling drama) Moody's extended its Aaa rating, saying in an August
8 statement:
"...last week's
Budget Control Act was positive for the credit of the United States....
We expect the economic recovery will continue and additional budget
deficit reduction initiatives will be put in place by 2013. The
political parties now appear to share similar deficit reduction
objectives."
Now that Moody's
has been proven wrong, and the straight jacket that Congress designed
for itself has been shown to be illusory (as I always claimed it
was), will the rating agency revisit its decision and downgrade
the United States? Given the political backlash that greeted S&P's
downgrade in 2011, I doubt that such a move is forthcoming.
For now, the
real budget negotiations have been supposedly pushed later into
2013, when the debt ceiling will be confronted anew. But who can
really expect anything of substance? The latest deal emerged from
a Congress that is nearly two years removed from the next election.
As a result, Congressmen were as insulated from political pressures
as they could ever expect to be. Nevertheless, they still chose
political expediency over sound policy. If Congressional leadership
(an oxymoron that should join the ranks of "jumbo shrimp" and "definite
maybe") could not put the national interest in front of political
interests now, why would anyone expect them to do so later? They
will continue to ignore our fiscal problems until a currency crisis
forces their hand. I expect deficits to approach $2 trillion annually
before Obama leaves office. Unfortunately, at that point the solutions
would be far more draconian than anything economists and politicians
are currently considering.
In light of
the extensions of the popular middle class tax rates, the loudly
trumpeted tax increases on those individuals making more than $400,000
(and couples making more than $450,000) will not be enough to translate
into higher tax revenues. Instead they will result in perhaps $60
billion per year in new revenue to the Federal government that will
be more than offset by the new spending announced in the agreement.
However, the increases will result in many individuals in high tax
states like California and New York paying more than 50% of their
income in taxes.
While many
economists are cautioning that higher taxes on the wealthy will
take a bite out of spending, in my opinion it is more likely to
result in lower business investment, which is far more detrimental
to the economy. When faced with diminishing discretionary income,
most rich people would sooner cut back on savings and investment
than they would on health care, education, home improvements and
vacations.
But it should
be clear that the rate increases are just the opening crescendo
in a symphony of tax hikes on the nation's entrepreneurial class.
President Obama has recently stated that he will consider needed
cuts in spending and entitlement programs only if they are coupled
with additional tax increases on the wealthy. In other words, as
far as the President is concerned, the hikes included in the budget
agreement that was just passed didn't count for anything.
It cannot,
or should not, be denied that Washington's latest fig leaf will
have a major impact on the markets. The New Year's "relief rally"
is understandable given the clear implications that the government
will simply print its way out of trouble for as long as it can.
In the past, fiscal profligacy was held in check by investors who
would sell bonds and push interest rates higher whenever it appeared
that the government was not serious about national solvency. But
with the Federal Reserve now buying the vast majority of U.S. government
debt, no such roadblock exists. With monetary and fiscal stimulus
pushing up stock and bond prices, and no immediate fear of a rally-killing
spike in interest rates, there is no reason to stay on the sidelines.
Markets are now driven by stimulus, not fundamentals, and the stimulus
is firmly at the wheel. (For more on this see the article
in the January edition of Euro
Pacific's Global Investment Newsletter). But it is important
to look at the nature of the rally. We would bring investors' attention
to the increase in gold and oil and rally against the dollar of
every major currency except the Japanese yen (which
is being deliberately debased by a newly elected government). Our
new Newsletter
edition also includes an analysis of some of the more promising
overseas markets.
But
by taking the nominal risk out of investing, the government is insuring
that the risks to the U.S. economy will grow exponentially. We are
now and will remain a debt-fueled economy for as long
as the rest of the world permits this to continue. But this is no
way to create real, sustainable economic growth. On the contrary,
it will simply permit the growth of government, the depletion of
economic vitality, and ultimately the collapse of the U.S. dollar.
In the meantime,
President Obama and Congressional leaders will take credit for a
tax cut that is in reality a huge tax increase in disguise. Government
spending is the real source of taxpayers' pain and it is only a
matter of time before the bill comes due in the form of inflation.
See
our Newsletter for fresh analysis as to why inflation may already
be higher than you think. Because the deficits will grow even larger,
more purchasing power will be lost in this manner than would have
been lost had all the Bush tax cuts been allowed to expire. In addition,
though entitlements cuts were taken off the table, the real value
of benefits could be slashed, as cost of living adjustments fail
to keep up with skyrocketing consumer prices. That's a Fiscal Cliff
that will not be so easy to avoid.
January
4, 2013
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
© 2013 Euro Pacific Capital
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