Author: Bill Bonner

  • In a Properly Functioning Economy Prices Go Up and Down

    Poor Ms. Cosgrove. The Florida woman wrecked her car in 1976. While driving under the Brooklyn Bridge a tarp filled with rainwater fell on it. Then, she lost the $17,500 compensation check from the insurance company.

    Her luck seemed to change last week – 33 years later. She found the check in a drawer. But now she discovers two disagreeable things at once – that her insurance company has gone out of business…and the check would be worth barely $5,000 – if she were able to cash it.

    What follows is a brief reverie on the way credits go bad. There are accidents. There are mistakes. There are acts of God and acts of parliament. To give readers a preview, we suspect that the world’s savers and investors are about to follow Ms. Cosgrove – losing money due to bad luck, bad judgment, bad management and bad policy decisions. We leave God to explain His own acts, if He cares to. Our attention is on Ms. Cosgrave’s claim check.

    Price movements are neither good nor bad; it depends on the cause of them. In a properly functioning economy, prices go up and down. Rising prices suggest scarcity, signaling to consumers that they should switch to substitutes. And they tell producers to get on the ball and stock the shelves with new supply. Falling prices send the opposite message…trimming profit margins and telling producers to cut back.

    Here at The Daily Reckoning, when we go into a liquor store and find lower prices, we are delighted. We stock up. But we are clearly out of step with mainstream economists. Most economists want to see higher prices in the liquor store. And they think they can improve the economy by forcing prices upward. Their beef with falling prices is that they trigger what Keynes described as a “propensity to save.” Consumers see lower prices, he theorized; they then delay spending in the hopes of a better price. Demand falls, incomes go down. And you have a depression on your hands.

    “Unfortunately, most historians and economists are conditioned to believe that steadily and sharply falling prices must result in depression…” writes Murray Rothbard in his History of Money and Banking in the United States. Mr. Rothbard noted that falling prices were neither cause nor effect of depression, but a natural feature of prosperity. In the decade of 1879 to 1889, for example, wages in America rose by 23% – in real terms. “No decade before or since produced such a sustainable rise in real wages,” comments Rothbard. In terms of improvements to material well being too, the economist R. W. Goldsmith concluded that no decade matched the 1880s…with 3.8% annual gains.

    But this was also a decade when prices fell. Prices at the wholesale level fell 10%. Retail prices dropped 4.2%. How come falling prices didn’t cause a depression? In 1884, several big Wall Street banks…including Grant and Ward, the Marine Bank of New York and Penn Bank of Pittsburgh…along with 10,000 businesses across the country…went broke. There was panic on Wall Street. But even this did not cause a depression. The government did nothing. Thanks perhaps to its incapacity, within weeks the economy was back on its feet and the decade of prosperity continued.

    This is just the way of the world, when the world is allowed to have its way. In a normal economy, prices are honest. They tell capitalists where and how to invest their money. Businesses increase capacity. They get better at what they do. Unit costs go down. Increased productivity brings higher wages and lower prices – prosperity, in other words.

    If that is all there were to it, the world would be more prosperous, but less entertaining. There are honest price movements. And there are the other kind, prompted by changes in the money supply. Natural price movements send useful information; inflation (or deflation)-driven signals are a form of economic counter-intelligence – fraudulent signals intended to mislead. Monetary inflation pushes prices up; but only because money is becoming more abundant, not because goods are becoming more scarce. Businesses, investors and consumers get the wrong idea. Typically, consumers overspend and businesses over-invest. The consumer thinks he sees increasing scarcity. The businessman thinks he sees rising demand. Both are wrong. Both lose money. Even the government is misled by its own flimflam; it sees increasing tax receipts and expands services.

    The planet has never seen so much monetary inflation before. In just the last 7 years, worldwide monetary reserve assets have tripled – from less than $2.5 trillion to more than $7.5 trillion. And yet, consumer prices continue to fall…as they have for the last 27 years. In January, despite the Fed’s target, The Wall Street Journal reports that “consumer prices [in the US] actually fell by 0.1%….”

    Last week, leading economists at the IMF and the Fed wondered aloud they shouldn’t deceive the public even further, by setting higher inflation targets. Currently, central banks aim for 2%. Talk is of doubling it to 4%.

    Maybe they know what they are doing. Maybe they don’t. Advice to readers: if you get a large check, don’t wait 33 years to cash it.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • How Do You Enjoy a Depression?

    The depression is alive and well!

    Unemployment claims just came in higher than expected.

    And new house sales in January were at their lowest ever. Pundits were quick to blame the snow. But sales were off even in areas that had better-than-usual weather.

    Household income has gone nowhere in 10 years. Stocks have suffered a lost decade too. And now Ben Bernanke says we’d better be careful…because the recovery ain’t no sure thing.

    The Fed chief has no idea. But average people know what’s going on. They know how hard it is to find a job. If you’re in the building trades…or you have only a year or two of college…you’re pretty much out of luck. You may have to retire before you ever start work again.

    That’s why there was such a big drop in consumer confidence.

    But look on the bright side. Building more houses for people who couldn’t afford to live in them was not exactly the greatest business strategy. And all those people who were appraising, mortgaging and selling houses can now find more useful work. Real jobs. Doing something more useful. What are those real jobs going to be? We don’t know yet. But it could take a long time to find out. And in the meantime, we have a depression on our hands…

    So, let’s enjoy it…

    How do you enjoy a depression? Well, the first thing is to make sure you’re not in its way…

    Dear readers may not know this, but in addition to writing The Daily Reckoning your editor also has a serious job…

    Yes, in the morning he is a moral philosopher…gratuitously insulting public officials, whole professions, and entire nationalities. He is grateful to them all…they make life so entertaining! Imagine what kind of world we would have if people minded their own business and got on with their lives… People would be richer and happier, we don’t doubt it…but at whom could we point a finger and laugh?

    No, dear reader, the world needs its bumblers, fools, politicians (are we repeating ourselves?), grifters (sorry…we did it again!), and megalomaniacs. It needs someone to challenge the gods from time to time. Otherwise, the gods wouldn’t have the fun of whacking them. And we wouldn’t have the fun of watching.

    But getting back to the point…what was the point? Oh yes, the point is we have a serious job to do too. In addition to writing about the world of money, we actually have to live in it.

    You see, we have a Family Office…a little group of researchers and analysts that actually has to make decisions… In the afternoon, we have to decide. What to do? Long or short? Buy or sell?

    One thing we need to be on guard against is allowing our emotions to take over. For all our deep thinking and cynical detachment, we’re human too. We get emotionally attached to our own ideas. Then, we’re very reluctant to give up on them…no matter how bad they turn out to be.

    We remember…sadly…our own feet dragging after the bull market in gold of the late ’70s. We didn’t want to sell. So we delayed…we hesitated… By the time we realized how wrong we were we didn’t have to sell. The bear market in the yellow metal was over! Gold had hit bottom. Gold was down 70% from the top. Much more in real terms.

    ********************

    This afternoon, your editor’s aging aunt called from Pennsylvania.

    “This economy has been very hard on my family,” she explained. “I’ve got two sons-in-law…and they’re both laid off from their jobs.”

    “What do they do?” we wondered.

    “One drives a truck for a steel producer. The other is in construction. There’s just not much work, I guess.”

    Nope.

    And that’s why, despite all the recovery talk, real people are turning real gloomy. Consumer confidence just registered its lowest reading since 1983. People don’t have jobs…and they’re beginning to worry that it could be a long time before they work again. Mortgage demand just fell to its lowest point in 13 years. State tax receipts are still falling – for the 5th quarter in a row. And the number of problem banks just rose 27%.

    Recovery? Forget it. There is no real recovery. This depression has to run its course, like it or not.

    You’ve heard us say that a depression is a period of transition from one economic model to another. You might ask: what’s an economic model? And what economic model are we leaving behind? What economic model are we going towards? And what’s this got to do with monetary and fiscal stimulus?

    Good thing you didn’t ask those questions before. We didn’t have any answers. But here is David Goldman with a partial explanation:

    “There is some analogy to the Great Depression in the present situation. Between 1918 and 1939, American agriculture was in permanent decline, because the end of the First World War reduced demand for American exports, and because the substitution of the tractor for draught animals freed up an enormous amount of land set aside for animal feed. There was nothing to be done but to get the farmers off the land into other occupations, and that was not accomplished until the Second World War.”

    The farmers found work in wartime factories…and in military service. After the war, they took up new jobs, in a new economy with new factories and new professions.

    What work will today’s laid-off construction workers find? Darned if we know.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Depression: A Time of Falling Prices

    The depression is alive and well, thank you.

    The Dow rose 91 points yesterday. Gold fell $6.

    Officially, the crisis is over. Everyone says so. Central bankers and Treasury officials have been congratulating themselves. It’s been a year now since the end of the world didn’t happen. These fellows take credit for it.

    Bernanke said yesterday that he’ll keep the monetary spigots wide open for a while longer…but that’s just because the recovery is fragile. He also talks of an ‘exit’ from stimulus programs, now that the economy is getting back on its feet.

    Claptrap! Balderdash! Flimflam!

    The mainstream economics profession is guilty of dereliction of duty. They should be telling people that this ‘recovery’ is a scam. They should be warning investors that the markets could fall apart any day. They should be buying gold and selling US Treasuries…and explaining to the politicians that you can’t buy your way out of a depression with phony dollars squandered on wasteful projects!

    Instead, the dopes are patting each other on the back…praising themselves for saving the planet from destruction.

    But what really has gone on? And what’s going on now?

    Glad you asked.

    First, there is a real economic phenomenon going on – the depression. It’s alive and well…and doing just fine. Households are de-leveraging. Businesses are building up cash. People are losing their jobs. Savings rates are edging up.

    Almost everything is happening as it should.

    Depressions are times of falling prices. Markets are always discovering what things are worth. In a depression, they find that assets – stocks and real estate primarily – are not worth nearly as much as people thought.

    That’s why we have our ‘crash alert’ flag still flying. Prices are vulnerable to sharp, unannounced drops until they finally get down to real depression levels. Since that hasn’t quite happened yet…we figure it’s still to come.

    On the employment front, this depression has put more than 6 million people out of work. And every month, more people join the unemployment ranks. So far, so good. The US economy didn’t need so many marble countertop installers and so many mortgage refinancers. (If only something could be done to get rid of lobbyists!)

    But the worst thing about a depression is that it holds jobless people prisoner for so long. Many of them will become lifers…they’ll never work again.

    In that regard, this depression is similar to Japan’s 20-year depression, 1990-2010. After the bubble burst, the Japanese…who were aging faster than any race ever had…figured they needed to get serious about saving money. So, they cut back on spending…and saved. Domestic spending collapsed. Fortunately, the rest of the world – especially Americans – were still spending their fool heads off. And Japan is an export-led economy. Even so, with its own consumers dragging their feet, the Japanese economy didn’t go very far or very fast.

    The Japanese put their vast savings, directly or indirectly, into Japanese government bonds…helping the government fund its massive stimulus programs. Of course, the stimulus programs were a waste of money. The economy never really recovered…and now the government is expected to have gross debt equal to 200% of GDP next year, according to the IMF.

    For reference, the US is expected to reach 100% of GDP next year. Britain is hard on America’s heels with debt at 94% of GDP.

    And now Americans are entering retirement savings mode too. The biggest age cohort – the boomers – need to do some fast saving in order to finance their retirements. They’re cutting back…not just temporarily…but permanently. They will never, ever again spend money like this did during the big bubble years 2003-2007. That’s what makes for a durable depression…

    Another thing that makes for a depression is a lack of lending. Bank credit is still falling. Households cut back because they need to get out of debt…and save money for retirement. Businesses cut back too. New projects typically don’t do well in a depression. Small businesses struggle…and fail. Big businesses get bailouts and subsidies. Depressions are times to neither a borrower nor a lender be.

    Debt is only increasing at the government level. But that’s another story for another day…

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • US Economy Still in a Deflationary Contraction

    A couple of years ago, we used to get such a kick out of making fun of the financial industry. Its pretensions were absurd and shocking. Its delusions were breathtaking. Its leaders were lunkheads and grifters.

    But the financial industry blew itself up in 2007-2009. Now, what do we have?

    The government! Doing all the same things…making the same mistakes (only worse)…and working hard to blow itself up.

    “Basically, it’s over…” says Charlie Munger. Warren Buffett’s partner figures the glory days of the US economy/empire are behind it. He spelled this out in what he calls “a parable,” in Slate Magazine.

    This puts Munger in direct opposition to all those economists, bankers, politicians, pundits and meddlers who think they can do better than the financial industry. Martin Wolf, in The Financial Times, says the challenge is to “walk the tightrope” between too much additional stimulus and cutting off stimulus too soon.

    Richard Koo and Paul Krugman think the feds need to give the economy a lot more stimulus in order to offset the forces of contraction.

    Most people think the economy will muddle through somehow…thanks to all those geniuses working at the Department of the Treasury and the Fed.

    Dream on! The economy might muddle through or it might not. (The Wall Street Journal says growth rates have already returned to normal.) But if the economy does pull out of this depression…it will be in spite of all those ham-handed central planners who are telling it what to do, not because of them.

    Yesterday, the Dow fell 100 points. Gold dropped $9.

    As far as we can tell, we’re still in a depression – that is, a deflationary contraction. You’ll see a lot of contradictory statistics and BS analyses for the next 5 to 10 years. What you won’t see is real growth…not until debt is substantially written off, costs are reduced and a new economic model is discovered. The ‘growth’ we’re seeing now is largely an illusion, a mirage, and an attractive nuisance. We’ll have to pay for it later!

    To put it another way, you won’t see real growth until there’s something solid to build on – a new foundation of lower costs and fewer leeches.

    Yes, dear reader, the problem is not a liquidity problem. It’s not a banking problem. It’s not even just a debt problem. The bigger problem is that the US economy – but nearly the same could be said of Japan…the UK…Italy…and other places – is too expensive, too rigid and too full of zombies.

    Munger is right. At least, he’s right about what has gone on so far. The financial industry turned the country into a casino…and too many people lost their money.

    We don’t know what happened in the second part of Munger’s parable. We couldn’t get the 2nd page of the Slate article on our laptop screen. But he’s a smart guy. We doubt he missed the government’s role. First, the private sector loaded itself up with debt. Now, it’s the feds’ turn.

    Was it Ronald Reagan who said of the Soviet Union, that it was on the “wrong side of history?” The derelict Bolsheviks were definitely on the wrong side of history in 1989. We knew it. They knew it. It was such a glaring problem; they had no choice. Their economy was imploding – thanks to rigid central planning. They gave up and switched sides.

    But now it’s the US that is on the wrong side of history. Like the Soviet Union, it tries to impose its will, by force, on Afghanistan. Like the Soviet Union, it has too many expenses and not enough income. And like the Soviet Union, it tries to impose its will on the domestic economy too – by central planning. Not exactly in the heavy-handed fashion of the old apparatchiks… This is post-Berlin Wall central planning. Collectivism with a clown face.

    The US nationalizes key industry and borrows heavily…shifting the weight of economic ‘growth’ from the private sector to the government. Everything from home finance, banking, insurance, automobiles, employment and food is now owned, provided or subsidized by the US government.

    After the Soviet Union fell…the rest of the world went over to look down the collectivist hole…and then slid in too. In October 2009, the IMF counted 153 separate stimulus or bailout programs. If you bought a house or a car in 2009, you may very well have had the government to help you. And now, if you hire a new employee, you will have the government by your side again. If you get sick, you will have the comfort of knowing that the feds are in practically every examining room, every operating room, every drug laboratory, and every pharmacy. And if Obama has his way – there will be even more of them. Is there any economic act, howsoever trivial, that no longer involves government support, approval, or funding?

    Munger may have pointed out. Or maybe he didn’t. In either case, we will: the US economy was at its strongest before it was burdened by so many people depending on it…and so many smart people helping it along.

    It won’t make much progress again until it gets rid of those people. And that won’t happen until it has crashed…and become desperate. Living at the expense of others is a hard habit to break.

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Occurences Within Economy Consistent With a Depression

    “How can you keep talking about a depression,” asks a Dear Reader, “when the economy is clearly recovering just as it should be.”

    Ah ha! We’ll explain in a minute.

    First, the latest from Wall Street: The Dow fell 18 points yesterday. We’re still not sure whether the final, fading phase of the bear market has begun or not. This bounce took the Dow back to 10,725 on January 19th. It hasn’t seen that level since. Was that it? Was that as high as it’s going to get? Is it down from here on out… until the Dow finally bottoms out somewhere south of 5,000?

    We don’t know. We’ll just have to wait to find out… along with everyone else.

    Now… back to that ‘recovery’…

    It’s true that there are some signs of “stabilization.” The unemployment rate is not getting badder as fast as it was a few months ago. And house prices seem to have stopped falling – for the moment.

    It’s also true that the economy managed to register positive ‘growth’ in the last quarter… mostly thanks to government spending and inventory restocking.

    The trouble is, all of these things are consistent with a depression – especially a depression that the feds are fighting every inch of the way. In the 1930s, there were several years of growth… and there were great years for the stock market too. Then, things fell apart again. The nation ended the ’30s not one penny richer than it had been when it began them.

    And Japan has seen some good years and some bad years, too, since its depression began in 1990. Oddly, Japan’s population is falling… so in per capita terms, Japan’s downturn hasn’t really been so bad. Per person, the Japanese got richer over the last 10 years.

    It’s also true that here at The Daily Reckoning, we use the term ‘depression’ a bit differently than most economists. Most economists believe GDP growth represents increasing prosperity. They think a depression is merely a recession, with negative GDP growth, that lasts longer and goes more deeply than normal.

    Our definitions are better:

    A recession is a pause during a period of growth. A depression marks the end of the period of growth… giving the economy a chance to make adjustments so that a new period of growth may begin.

    GDP growth alone is a fraud. The gross number just doesn’t tell you anything worth knowing. It doesn’t really matter how fast an economy is growing. What counts is how fast it is growing per person… and whether that ‘growth’ is real or phony.

    Growth is not the same as prosperity…

    Someday, we promise you, modern economists will be ranked below doctors who bled their patients to death and jungle tribes who threw maidens into volcanoes. They are quacks.

    These imposter economists think they can fix a recession and prevent a depression. When the private sector stops spending they urge the public sector to step in and replace the missing private spending. That, in a nutshell, is Keynes’ theory.

    A nutshell is the appropriate container. Because there’s a world of difference between private spending and government spending. Private spending is voluntary; people choose to spend their money on things they really want. When the government spends, on the other hand, it is merely squandering stolen property. It may look like private spending. But it’s not at all the same thing. You can hand out checks to people; it’s not the same as when people earn money. You can build bridges and airports too… but they are only valuable to the extent that they are used efficiently. And you can hire all the government employees you want; they don’t necessarily add to the sum of human happiness or wealth (most likely they subtract from it!).

    Just look at societies that put everyone to work. There was no unemployment in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge! Or in the Soviet Union. North Korea is another good example today. They all show that putting people to work for the government doesn’t make them rich… it makes them poor.

    Yet, these modern economists – Martin Wolf at The Financial Times, Paul Krugman at The New York Times, Bernanke, Summers and Geithner in Washington – believe that they can control and cure a depression. All they have to do is to keep the GDP expanding… and keep unemployment from rising. How? Just spend money!

    The GDP calculators can’t tell a phony expense from a real one. Whether the government spends money to do something that is not worth doing… or hire someone who is not worth hiring… or just gives away money to someone who is not worth giving money to… the GDP quants don’t know the difference. They think one dollar spent is as good as any other…

    … even if it is a dollar that didn’t exist! (Don’t get us started on that one… )

    And who knows if a job is worth doing? Only the person who pays for it. That’s the trouble with government employment; the people who pay the bills don’t make the hiring decisions.

    Modern economists don’t even bother to think about it. All they care about is the unemployment rate… not about whether the job is actually useful or efficient. Want to boost the job rate? Easy. Just hire people. Does this make people better off? Of course not.

    The Financial Times had a full page in its Wednesday edition devoted to China’s empty towns. Bloomberg has been on the story too.

    It is the story of what actually happens when government meddles in an economy.

    Last year, China ordered its banks to lend money to infrastructure programs in order to offset the worldwide financial meltdown. The banks responded, doubling their lending.

    Observers in the West were stunned… and envious. If only we could ‘get things done’ like that, they lamented. If only our governments had more authority and control over the economy!

    But let us go back a year and put ourselves in the shoes of the bankers. They must have had loan requests. Some of them they must have judged worthy of funding, others not. But how was it possible that the number of project deemed creditworthy doubled in the space of a few months?

    Well, it didn’t happen. Instead, the Chinese government merely changed the rules of the game. The banks, under pressure to loan out money, reacted by lending it out… to marginal projects. Now, we’re beginning to read about them in the paper – mostly towns without any people. Just wait until China blows up. Then, we’ll read about banks without money. Stores without customers. And businesses without a prayer.

    China is either going to blow up… or slow down.

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • A Depression in Full Technicolor

    Stocks ended Friday trading not much higher than where they began. Gold rose $3. Oil is trading over $80 a barrel this morning. And stocks in Asia are “recovering” from the Fed’s discount rate increase of last week.

    If the market wanted to crash, it would have plenty of reasons to do so. China is tightening bank lending rules. Here in the US, there is the aforementioned Fed discount rate increase. In Europe, Greece is going back to the marketplace to raise more money. And in the Mideast, today’s news tells us that many Kuwaiti could be wiped out by the latest downturn in their multi-billion dollar investment industry.

    Many things could go wrong; something will.

    If no panic comes it is because the market is just not ready to panic. Still, we leave our “Crash Alert” flag flying…and stand clear. There is just more downside to this market than upside. Markets are always discovering what things are worth. We don’t want to be holding a lot of stocks when the market discovers that they’re worth only half what we paid for them. So, the flag stays up…until prices come down.

    Gradually, people are coming to two contradictory realizations. On the one hand, there really does seem to be a kind of economic renaissance going on…or, at least that is what you might think if you read the business and investment news. On the other hand, people are also coming to realize that we’re in a depression.

    We’ll leave it to the mainstream press to describe the rebound, such as it is. We’ll focus on the depression.

    “Millions of Unemployed Face Years Without Jobs,” says The New York Times.

    Readers may wonder what kind of economic renaissance fails to produce jobs. Answer: a depression.

    As we’ve opined many times in the past, a depression is not just a time when people stand in line to get bowls of soup or sell apples on street corners. It’s a time of adjustment…when mistakes of the previous boom are corrected…and a new economic model is found for going forward. This doesn’t happen overnight, no matter how much federal money is put to work helping it. In fact, the government money just gets in the way…distorting the picture and delaying the necessary changes.

    Those black-and-white depression days of the ’30s are gone. Now, we have a depression in full Technicolor…with plenty of shades of gray, too.

    More people today get food handouts than ever got them in the ’30s. We call our soup lines the Food Stamp Program. More people are out of work too….

    …but here you have to look carefully at the figures to understand it. In the ’30s, there was no public safety net. No unemployment compensation…no severance packages…and no government welfare. People didn’t give up looking for a job; they had no alternative. They kept looking until they found something. Either you were working…or you were jobless. If we reported the numbers the same way they did in the ’30s…the number would already be up near Great Depression levels…at about 15% to 18% joblessness.

    But there’s something else. Now, there are more people per household working. Back in the ’30s, the man of the house was the one that had a job. Typically, the family relied upon him, and him alone, as the breadwinner.

    And guess what? If you look at the men of the house…men 25-54…what you see is that one out of every 5 of them is out of work.

    For men…this is clearly a Depression…no, it’s worse. Not only are they unemployed. They’re going to stay unemployed for a long time. Because it takes times for a depression to do its work. And when it is over – maybe five or ten years…or 20 years ahead – not only won’t they find their old jobs again…they may never work again. And they won’t have wives or families either.

    Men’s jobs are disappearing – jobs in manufacturing and building. As the NY Times explains, they probably aren’t coming back any time soon. What’s more, studies show that the longer a person stays unemployed the harder it is to get back into the workforce. Employers don’t like to take a chance on someone who’s been out of the job market for a long time. They’re afraid they’ve lost the habit of work…or that there’s some other reason why they have been out of work for so long.

    Women’s jobs…in information and services…are doing relatively well. So, men not only lose their incomes…they lose their places in the family, and in the world. What woman wants to marry a guy without a job and without income? Not many. During the Great Depression, marriage and family were almost automatic. People got married. Then, for better or for worse, they lived in families.

    Even before the depression began, marriage had become optional. Women get more college degrees than men. They typically don’t like “marrying down.” They delay marriage while developing their careers…and then, when they are ready to marry, it’s hard to find a suitable man.

    Result? Well, we don’t know where this leads. But it doesn’t look good for the beer-swilling, football loving X chromosome half of the population.

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Government Sachs

    Last week, Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou slipped. He said not what he should have said, nor what he wanted to say. Unwittingly, he said something that was true: his country’s budget was “out of control.” He begged for more time to straighten it out. “We’re trying to change the course of the Titanic,” he said. The EU ministers gave him a month.

    Mr. Papaconstantinou was speaking of Greece. But he described much of Europe, Britain, Japan and the US. And, in his fortunate metaphor, he prophesied. The big ships can’t be turned around. They’re going to sink.

    Greece has been taking on water for many years. But this was the first time a finance minister of any country signaled to lenders that they should head for the lifeboats. Then, looking around, the press noticed that one of the lifeboats had already been launched. In it were no crying widows and no shivering orphans. Just one very satisfied Lloyd Blankfein, chief executive of Goldman Sachs. He had sold the Greeks their debt, said the papers; now he has sold it short.

    Der Spiegel was first to break the story. Then, it came out in The New York Times. And then Bloomberg was on Goldman’s case. It wasn’t the mess that the Greeks had gotten themselves into that attracted the press attention, it was who had helped them get into it. Greece has been in default to its creditors in one out of two years since it got independence in the early 19th century. It is almost the definition of a poor credit risk. By what crook and what hook did the slippery Hellenes manage to get themselves into the Euro Club?

    Creativity in art makes for masterpieces. Innovation in industry may lead to success. But when the financial industry schemes and canoodles, it invariably leads to disaster. Goldman Sachs, the most cunning of Wall Street’s financiers, is fundamentally a debt monger. Like a liquor store or a drug dealer, it earns money to the extent it is able to move its merchandise. The more the customer wants, the more Goldman earns. Whether the purchase is good for the customer or not is not Goldman’s concern. But just look at where the moneylenders have been most creative and you will surely find something you should not own.

    In the present example, Goldman earned a total of $300 million. Immediately, the pundits kvetched that its work was both criminal and noxious. As to the noxious charge, Goldman needs no defense. Greece has always been a notorious drunk. Goldman is merely a bartender. The money monger seeks neither the ruin of his customer, nor his reformation.

    As to the criminal charge, Goldman says it was perfectly legal to structure the deal with Greece the way it did. Moreover, the authorities in Brussels have been aware of it for years…and even seemed to approve of it. Member states were allowed to “use derivatives to adjust deficit ratios,” The Financial Times revealed last Wednesday. Goldman arranged for Athens to swap cash for a stream of income coming from an airport and a lottery. Was it debt or equity? Had Goldman lent Greece money…or had it bought part of the national patrimony? It really makes no difference; whatever you call it, the Greeks had impaired their balance sheet. Goldman had merely made a buck helping them do it.

    Goldman need not worry about persecution; it has friends in high places. Such as Mario Draghi. Mr. Draghi has a long and impressive résumé. Not only has he been a managing director of Goldman Sachs, in charge of business development in Europe, he’s also served as director general of the Italian Treasury and lately, Italy’s central bank governor. And now he’s up for the post of head of the ECB, to replace Jean-Claude Trichet, who is scheduled to step down next year. He is Goldman incarnate – banker, servant of the people, one of the financial world’s high priests from whose hands come unction, salvation…and cash.

    In the US, Goldman is so tight with the feds it is known as “Government Sachs.” But what’s new? Governments always turn to rich, well-connected moneymen for finance. The Rothschilds largely financed Britain’s continental allies in its war against Napoleon in the early 19th century. Then, in the early 20th century, JP Morgan financed the British in WWI. In both cases, the lenders found innovative and often complex ways to keep the money flowing. Now, we are in the early 21st century and Goldman is providing the money.

    But this time it is different. Borrowers are not at war. Instead, they borrow to blow themselves up. There is no foreseeable end to their borrowing. The Greek affair is peanuts. America’s ink is so red it looks as though it has cut an artery; this year’s deficit alone is $1.6 trillion. Japan, the world’s second largest economy, now borrows more than it raises in tax revenues. And while the Greeks run a deficit of 13% of GDP, in the UK the deficit is even higher at 14%.

    Goldman is right; this is a good time to sell government debt. Better to get into the lifeboats too early than too late.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Gold Not a Perfect Way of Measuring Wealth, Just the Best Way

    Oil edged up towards $80 a barrel yesterday. And the latest numbers for producer prices showed more inflation than was expected.

    Meanwhile, jobless claims were up. And the Dow rose 86 points…

    What do investors see that we don’t? A mirage…the shimmering of hot money…money that comes from the feds. And they can’t believe it’s not real.

    But that’s the problem. No one can tell the difference between real money and the counterfeit stuff. Nor can they tell the difference between real prosperity and the phony variety. And who can really know whether the feds are doing some good…or just up to their usual tricks?

    Oh my…it’s Friday…and we’re too tired to dig very deeply into these issues. We’re going to keep it simple…even superficial…

    Yesterday, gold rose $4. Is it too expensive…or too late… to buy in now?

    What we’re looking at is a huge, systemic failure. Instead of ‘keeping it real,’ the financial system has been so phonied up that you can’t tell what’s what.

    And then, when prices move…you have to figure out what’s really moving. Is the world spinning? Or just you?

    We’ve been following the gold market for years. Gold has gone up about 300% over the last 10 years. But what does that mean? Does it mean gold has gone up? Or that the dollar has gone down?

    We raise the question because we’re wondering how to keep score… Richard Russell suggests that you should keep score in ounces of gold, not in dollars. He’s right. Gold is not a perfect way of measuring wealth…it’s just the best way.

    Over the long pull of history, gold is more reliable a measure of wealth than just about anything else. Whether you had 100 ounces of gold at the time of Caesar or 100 ounces at the time of Charlemagne…or 100 ounces during the Jimmy Carter years – you were well off.

    Note that we said gold is a ‘measure of wealth’ not means to wealth. Gold is inert. Lifeless. Incorruptible. But inherently shiftless. It never gets out of bed in the morning. It has never earned a penny in its entire life.

    Gold won’t make you rich. It toils not; neither does it spin. Since it doesn’t hustle, it won’t increase your wealth. That’s why, in the Bible, the slave who kept his master’s wealth safe in gold got beaten. Gold won’t earn a profit. It won’t pay you a salary or give you a company car. All it will do is help keep you from getting poor. We’ve never heard of a man who had 100 ounces of gold who was poor. On the other hand, we’ve read about millions of people with stacks of paper money who couldn’t afford a cup of coffee. In our wallet, for example, is a 10 Trillion Dollar bill from Zimbabwe. A dear reader gave it to us. You could have a stack of those a foot high. You still wouldn’t be able to buy a latte at Starbucks. On the other hand, imagine you had a stack of Krugerrands or maple leafs. Well, you still couldn’t buy a cup of coffee at Starbucks. Because the dumb clerk wouldn’t know what it was. And if he did take the gold coin in exchange for coffee, he’d probably rush over to the mall where some sharp dealer offered to take it off his hands in exchange for PAPER MONEY!

    You see, the average person has no idea what real money is. One dollar bill looks the same as another to him. And gold? He’s probably never seen gold, unless it was wrapped around his finger.

    Gold is real money. At least, it’s as real as money ever gets. Gold represents wealth. It can be exchanged for wealth. And since the above-ground supply of gold grows about as fast as the economy itself, gold tends to hold its value over centuries. Today, gold is worth about the same as it was worth 2000 years ago.

    But you’ve heard us make that point before, haven’t you? Well, the point we’re making today is different. If gold holds its value, more or less, year after year…how can you expect to make any real profit by holding gold? Won’t it hold its value in the future too?

    Yes, dear reader, it probably will. As inflation increases, you’ll watch your gold shoot up in price…along with other prices!

    BUT…gold is subject to manias and bubbles…just like everything else. Though, it can be expected to hold its value in the long run, in the short run, it could become very over-valued. Why? Because the paper money system is doomed. It is doomed because we can’t tell the difference between a real dollar…and a phony one. And it is doomed because the people in charge of dollars find it more convenient to introduce new counterfeit dollars than to strictly control the quantity and quality of the US currency.

    Little by little, average people will come to see gold as a way to protect themselves. Then, suddenly, they will begin talking about gold. Cab drivers will have opinions about which gold coins are the best one to own. Hairstylists will want to convert their savings into gold rings and bracelets. Investors will talk about how much they made by trading in and out of mining stocks.

    Gold will soar. Gold’s bubble will have finally arrived. Then, it will be time to sell.

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • The Story Behind China Dumping its US Treasury Debt

    The big news yesterday was that China was dumping its US Treasury debt. Behind this story is another story. And, of course, there’s another one behind it. And about a million in front. But let’s begin in the beginning:

    WASHINGTON (AP) – The government said Tuesday that foreign demand for US Treasury securities fell by the largest amount on record in December with China reducing its holdings by $34.2 billion.

    The reductions in holdings, if they continue, could force the government to make higher interest payments at a time that it is running record federal deficits.

    The Treasury Department reported that foreign holdings of US Treasury securities fell by $53 billion in December, surpassing the previous record of a $44.5 billion drop in April 2009.

    The big drop in China’s holdings meant that it lost the top spot in terms of foreign ownership of US Treasuries, dropping to second place behind Japan.

    Japan also reduced its holdings of US Treasuries, cutting them by $11.5 billion to $768.8 billion in December, but that amount was still more than China’s December total of $755.4 billion.

    The $53 billion decline in holdings of Treasury securities came primarily from a drop in official government holdings, which fell by $52.3 billion. The holdings of foreign private investors fell by $700 million during the month of December.

    For all of 2009, foreign holdings of US Treasuries dipped by $500 million. In 2008, foreigners had increased their holdings of US Treasuries by $456 billion as a global financial crisis triggered a flight to the safety of US government debt.

    Let’s see, China is cutting back on US debt purchases. So is Japan. And so are the big bond funds, such as PIMCO, the biggest in the world. Who will buy US bonds? Where will the US get the money it needs to squander on wars for the young and pills for the old?

    Chris Hunter, who runs the research department at our family office, says the number of potential buyers is getting dangerously low…to the point where an auction of Treasury debt could fail for lack of interest.

    What this seems to mean…on the surface…is that treasury yields will rise. Less demand. More supply. Prices fall. Yields rise. In fact, that is what seemed to be underway yesterday. Prices on 30-year Treasury debt fell.

    If yields rise significantly you can say goodbye to any hope of a recovery. Rising yields make it harder for investors and businesses to make money. New projects will be cancelled; new workers will be fired even before they are hired, and investors will move their money out of investments that are ‘risky.’

    Especially hard hit will be Japan.

    Yesterday, in London, we caught up with Dylan Grice of Societe Generale. Dylan does economic research for the firm and recently authored a report suggesting that Japan will slip suddenly into inflation…and then hyperinflation.

    Yesterday also brought news that the feds’ stimulus program has been a big success. Barack Obama says so. The New York Times, via columnist David Leonhardt, says so. So does The Financial Times’ lead economist, Martin Wolf.

    ‘Hic hoc, ergo propter hoc…’ or something like that. Here at The Daily Reckoning, we commanded the sun to rise this morning. The sun did rise. So, we must be able to tell the sun what to do, right?

    The feds spent a lot of money. The world didn’t end. So, the feds – and their cheerleaders in the press – say they saved the world.

    But did they?

    No.

    As to the actual state of the economy, the evidence is mixed and confusing. Yesterday, for example, stocks rose another 40 points on the Dow…but volume is low and another big drop could begin any day.

    The NAHB announced that its index rose in February – but it was still the 6th worst reading for the housing index in the last 25 years. Meanwhile, mortgage applications are down. But housing starts are up.

    Manufacturing is improving. Corporate profits are way up. But people don’t have jobs…and there is not much hope of finding them any time soon.

    Besides, the world wasn’t coming to an end in 2008. All that was happening was that people who had made mistakes were getting what they had coming. Instead, the feds stepped in to save them…by ‘socializing’ their errors. Now, we’ll all pay for their errors. And pay much more. Not only are the private debts still there – more or less – now, we have trillions more in public debts to pay too.

    Way to go, feds…

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Barack Obama, a Throwback to Jimmy Carter?

    Yesterday’s big move in the Dow throws us back to our customary position – uncertainty, bordering on da-daism. The Dow rose 169 points yesterday. Gold shot up $29 to $1119.

    “I think, therefore I am,” said Rene Descartes. How did he know he thought? And what if he thought he wasn’t? Would he not be? He should have tried following the stock market! It would have improved his philosophy. “I think I think,” he would have emended his famous quotation. “But maybe I don’t…”

    Yesterday morning we were uncertain about the direction of the stock market. By evening, we weren’t so sure… We thought the markets were headed down. But yesterday’s strong showing puts our hypothesis in doubt.

    Why should stocks go down? Because they’re-priced for a strong recovery. But we’re not getting a strong recovery. We’re not getting any recovery at all. Investors were bound to notice, sooner or later.

    A new index of the trucking industry – based on how often they fuel up their big rigs – fell 37% in January, from a big rise in December. Neither unemployment nor housing show any sign of real improvement.

    Greece is on the edge of default. China sits on the Great Wall like Humpty Dumpty…threatening to fall off at any moment.

    And yet…there is still no big sell-off in the stock market. Why?

    Our old friends Mary Anne and Pam Aden recently suggested that this market was like the period in the ’70s when a bear market had already begun – years before – but which was marked by a couple of major rallies. The rallies lasted about 17 months each. And each time, the Dow approached its previous high.

    Hmmm…maybe they’re right. This rally could go all the way to the summer.

    Let’s put the all-time high of the US stock market at January 2000. The Dow had gone up about 11 times since its low in 1982. Then came the bear market. First, the Dow got whacked in 2001. And the government came in with the largest stimulus package the world had ever seen. That brought about a rally…a large rally…that took the Dow over 14,000 – well over the previous high. Even so, if you adjust the Dow for inflation it made no real progress. And then, in 2007, the Dow got whacked again. This brought the Dow down below 7,000, reaching its low point last March. Since then, stocks have been rebounding.

    A typical bounce – if anything is typical – takes a few months and recovers about half of what was lost. This bounce is typical in that it recovered about half of what was lost. But it has gone on for much longer – like the big bounces of the ’70s.

    How did the ’70s period end? Inflation increased and the Dow sank. It didn’t hit its final low until August 1982. But at that point, stocks were undeniably cheap. You could buy the Dow for about 5 times earnings.

    Will we relive the ’70s?

    Passing through the airport in Washington, we noticed a bar. It was named “Harry’s Bar” or something like that. What caught our eye was the décor. It had beige stone on the walls…greens and browns…and sleek wood paneling. Just like the ’70s…

    And then, we noticed. Elizabeth had on a new outfit. There was something familiar about it. A flouncy sweater…jeans flared out at the pant leg…

    “Yes, the ’70s are back in style,” she explained.

    Some would say that Barack Obama is another throwback – to Jimmy Carter. He seems indecisive…and aloof from the people. He seems destined to be a one-term president too.

    The politicos in Washington regard Carter as a failure. Yet, to us, he is still a hero. He was the only presidential candidate your editor ever voted for. And he turned out to be one of America’s greatest presidents. He didn’t push the nation to war or to bankruptcy. He left Washington and the nation more or less as he found them. What more can you ask for?

    But Mr. Obama is no Jimmy Carter. On Obama’s watch the nation will take on about $5 trillion in extra debt. While Carter left the nation in no worse condition than it was when he took over the helm in 1977, Obama will leave it much worse off.

    Of course, his idea that energy conservation was the “moral equivalent of war” was silly. But at least it was mostly harmless.

    Besides, Jimmy Carter displayed enormous personal courage. First, he did a remarkable thing – he actually cancelled a pay raise for the military. Then, in 1979, Carter was fishing in Plains, GA, when his presidential boat was attacked by a giant, mad ‘swamp rabbit’ that tried to board without permission. Alone and unarmed, the president beat off the invader with an oar.

    As far as we know, no other president has been similarly threatened…and none has shown Carter’s sangfroid under attack.

    ********************

    Back to the ’70s?

    Probably not. The ’70s period was marked by stagflation, following the Johnson Administration’s big spending and Nixon’s elimination of the gold backing for the dollar. The CPI reached as high as 14% at one point. And Paul Volcker – a Carter appointee – fought it seriously…driving yields on the 10-year T-note up to 18% at one point. This was co-incident with a severe recession, and it got the job done. It turned around the bond market, the stock market, and the economy. The stage was set for an 18-year boom.

    Today, inflation is not the immediate threat. Deflation is still the proximate problem. Here in England, inflation rates are going up. The papers whine that Britain’s middle-class is caught in a vise – between rising living costs and a punky economy. And sooner or later, inflation will be a major problem again – for Britain and America. Pundits argue about whether it will be sooner or later.

    We don’t know. But our guess – and it is only a guess – is that the process of deflation, deleveraging, and depression has only just begun. The problems – too much debt, too many bad investments, too much money badly allocated – that existed before the crisis of ’07-’09 have not been corrected. There are still millions of people in houses that they can’t afford. There are still millions of mortgages for more than the houses are worth. There are still trillions of dollars at risk…still waiting to be worked out, written off, or inflated away.

    The major contribution of the Bush/Obama administrations has been to add to these credit mistakes with trillions more in federal debt. That, too, will have to be reckoned with. But now there is Ben Bernanke at the Fed, not Paul Volcker. Now we are dealing with deflation (we think), not inflation. And now we have total official US debt 10 times as great as it was when Carter left office…and 3 times as much in terms of GDP.

    What can we expect? Well, here’s one thing we feel fairly sure of: ahead lies a crisis much worse that the recession/bear market of the early ’80s.

    What is wrong with these New York Times columnists? David Brooks is a smarter version of Thomas Friedman…which is to say, he is more thoughtful. But his thoughts seem to run into similar dead ends. He notes that more men in America are finding it difficult to be the breadwinners of their families. Women now get more college degrees than men. And women typically work in industries that are not suffering as much as construction and manufacturing, where men work. Result: men are out of work and out of money. And who wants to marry a man with no work and no money? So, men end up being lonely too.

    Naturally, Brooks has a solution: “we need to redefine masculinity, creating an image that encourages teenage boys to stay in school and older men to pursue service jobs.”

    That’s right. “We” need to do that.

    And this too: “somebody has to provide institutions for unaffiliated 24-year-olds.”

    Don’t worry. Someone will. Someone will give them black shirts. And set them to marching in the streets, beating up ‘class enemies.’ Someone will do something…and make the situation worse.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Investing in Japan…

    Alex Green on Japanese shares:

    “Here’s a handy way to know when to sell your investments: everyone is talking about them.

    “There is an obvious corollary to knowing what to sell. If you want to know what to buy, consider what no one is talking about.

    “And that brings me to investing in Japan…

    “From a high near 40,000 in 1989, the once-mighty Nikkei 225 – the equivalent of our S&P 500 – fell over 80% and hit a 27-year low early last year. It’s still more than 70% below the highs of 21 years ago.

    “The main culprit – aside from a real estate bubble that made the one here in the United States look bush-league – was misguided government policies. Japan waited too long to clean up its ailing banking system and spent trillions on public works projects that simply weren’t needed.

    “However, Japan has a new government that has promised to shrink the country’s massive bureaucracy and cut wasteful public spending. It also intends to end more than 20 years of economic stagnation by cutting taxes and focusing on small and mid-sized businesses.

    “Japanese stocks have rallied off the lows of 10 months ago. In fact, the Tokyo Exchange is one of the world’s best-performing bourses so far in 2010.

    “But it’s still among the cheapest and most unloved in the world. Virtually no one is enthusiastic about Japanese stocks.”

    Virtually no one? Hey…that’s us!

    Another colleague, Merryn Somerset Webb, says it’s time to buy Toyota. “You don’t get a chance to buy companies like Toyota at book value very often,” she says.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Paul Ryan and His Roadmap for America’s Future

    Markets in the US were closed yesterday. In the rest of the world, the noise continued.

    European investors still have their eyes on Greece…a welcome diversion from their own sins and errors. More on this later in the week…

    Asian investors still have their eyes on China. The powers-that-be in the Middle Kingdom seem to have begun tightening credit… If it continues, China’s bubble will burst… Perhaps the most remarkable thing about this is that no one seems to know who the powers-that-be are. Ben Bernanke may be a fool. At least he’s predictable. China’s real leaders are unknown…and unpredictable. More on that sometime in the future too…

    But for today…let’s focus on the good news. Well, our first item is good news if you were fool enough to follow our “Trade of the Decade.”

    We suggested that buying Japanese stocks could be the best investment you can make in the next 10 years. We immediately heard from dozens of friends and enemies. The friends were concerned because they thought we’d made a bad bet. Enemies were delighted that we’d lost our grip completely. After all, they remarked, who in his right mind would buy Japanese stocks?

    Well hardee, har, har… Guess what market is leading the world so far this year? That’s right… Japan. Later, colleague Alex Green explains why Japan hasn’t been such a bad bet after all.

    We’re six weeks into the new decade, we’ll claim victory now…and change the subject. Who knows what will happen in the next 514 weeks.

    Meanwhile, here comes more good news: the US federal government may not go broke after all. Rep. Paul Ryan, who hails from the sovereign state of Wisconsin, has come up with a solution.

    Before we get to the solution, however, let us take a minute to describe the problem. In short, the feds are spending too much money they don’t have. The Obama administration says it doesn’t see any balanced budgets anywhere in America’s future. The Congressional Budget Office, a far-sighted group if ever there was one, looks all the way to 2080. It sees no hint of fiscal equilibrium either. Just deficits and debt. By its estimate the US budget grows to 50% of GDP and the official US debt rises to 7 times GDP.

    This exercise by the CBO is not a forecast. It is merely an extrapolation. If present trends continue, that is where we would end up by the time your author is 131 years old. Of course, there is no way present trends could continue that long. Even at 2 times GDP…debt cannot be sustained. It would cost more than half of all America’s tax revenues to the pay the interest on such a large debt. Already, depending on how things go in the economy, as much as 30% of the money borrowed by the US could soon be necessary just to pay the cost of past borrowing.

    Fortunately, Mr. Ryan has a solution. He calls it a “Roadmap for America’s Future.” After studying it for all of 30 seconds, we’re convinced that Mr. Ryan should get a GPS. His roadmap is a series of squiggles, dodges and twists to US tax laws…along with a few torques to the spending side too… that leads the country to a dead end. Most of his effort has been concentrated on bringing health care outlays under control. No effort is made, on the other hand, to cut military spending. Typical. Weak, limp, pusillanimous. The benefits now; the costs later. That’s why America’s residual respect for Congress is just about exhausted. The institution is incapable of correcting its own mistakes. Instead, it just makes them worse. Even with Mr. Ryan’s roadmap, America drives in the wrong direction for the next half a century. It is only sometime after 2050 that the federal budget deficits finally stop.

    Any solution that doesn’t pay off until we’re all dead is no solution at all. It’s a way of avoiding a solution…which is what Congress desperately wants to do. A real solution will come. But not from Congress. Instead, it will come unbidden. And unwelcome. Like the plague.

    At least, that’s our reading of history. Once the system tips out of control it stays out of control until it finally blows itself up.

    It would be fairly easy to get the budget under control…that is, if there were no political system to prevent you. The US government shouldn’t be in the business of giving out drugs or regulating heart transplants. It also shouldn’t be in the business of telling the rest of the world what to do. The solution is simple: abandon the imperial agenda…let people take care of themselves, both at home and abroad…and downsize the federal government.

    But that is not going to happen. We may be on the road to ruin…but too many people are enjoying the ride. We’re not going to stop any time soon. More than 40 million people on food stamps…thousands of military contractors…millions of government employees… People who want the government (other citizens) to pay for their gall bladder operations. People who pay no taxes. GM executives. AIG bondholders. University administrators. Lobbyists.

    It is a wholly rational and completely foreseeable trend. People always seek to improve their wealth and status in the easiest way possible. What’s the easiest way? Take wealth from someone else. That’s why criminals are still in business…after thousands of years of trying to stop them.

    But common criminals lack status – except in the ghetto. So, the smarter, better connected and better educated of their ilk go into government. Or they use government for their own ends. That way, they get other peoples’ money. But they also get respectability…even an elevated social status.

    Congress is supposed to confront the problems of the nation…and solve them. But with more people getting something from the government than supporting it, Congress is not likely to change course. It responds to the perverse will of the people…and to its own corrupt predilections. We are all victims of democracy now…

    The government grows…deficits become unstoppable…and the empire sinks under the weight of so many parasites.

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Feds are Getting Plenty of Taxpayer Support

    Remember our Daily Reckoning Dictum:

    Anyone can make a mistake, but to really make a mess of things you need taxpayer support. Well, now the feds are getting plenty of it…

    Over the last decade, federal spending in the US has gone from less than 35% of GDP to well over 40%. In Britain, the increase has been even more dramatic, from about 36% of GDP to nearly 55%.

    Not only are the feds taking up a bigger percentage of GDP, they’re also becoming bossier. During the Bush years the federal register recorded 7,000 more pages of new rules.

    And, of course…they’re making a monumental mess of things. They’re spending money they don’t have on things no one in his right mind would pay for with his own money.

    Want an example? Go to Jonestown, Pennsylvania. They’ve got an airport there that is the envy of travelers everywhere. Lots of airport, in other words…few passengers. That’s because John Murtha – when he was still among the quick – used his power in Congress to build an airport that would be convenient for him…and reward local contractors and unions who had supported him over the years.

    Few politicians dug more deeply into the pork barrel than John Murtha. But almost all stick their hands in it. Why else would you bother with the trials and tribulations of ‘public service?’ There’s got to be a payoff that makes it worthwhile, right? Of course, there are a few – like our friend Ron Paul – who are just trying to do the right thing. But for every Ron Paul there must be dozens of Congressmen and federal employees who are in it for the power, the money – or both. (Neither Stalin nor Hitler squeezed much personal wealth from the taxpayer tube. Mao Tse-tung, on the other hand, knew how to live – with plenty of palaces and young women. Most government employees are probably more like Mao than Adolph. That is, they are motivated by money as well as power.)

    Have you wondered why the costs of running for public office have soared? That’s obvious too – because the stakes are higher. As the federal budget grows so does the pork that each member of congress can pull out of the barrel.

    The number of congressmen is more or less constant (though it grows with population…after a 10-year lag for the census). But the amount of money given out increases…making each congressional seat more lucrative. You can do the math yourself, but the point is – crime pays. At least, for a while…

    The trouble with crime is that it only makes the criminals rich. Everyone else gets poorer. That’s the problem in places such as Nigeria and Haiti. Crime pays. Nothing else does. Economists have done studies of this…and, of course, they’ve discovered the obvious. In “high trust” societies, people are wealthier. No wonder; when people know they won’t be ripped off, they accumulate more money.

    A high trust society is one where property rights are respected…and where the rules of the game are known…and change very slowly. A change in tax rates, for example, discourages wealth – especially if it comes unexpectedly. So does a change in monetary policy. When people don’t know what to expect from the currency they become reluctant to invest for a long-term payoff. Instead, they invest in lobbying.

    For the most part, tax rates haven’t gone up. Instead of taxes, government gets its money from borrowing. The immediate effect is much the same; resources are absorbed out of other sectors of the economy and into the public sector. Once in government service, they are used inefficiently or completely squandered. Result: John Murtha gets an airport…a kid in Brooklyn doesn’t get a bicycle… The long-term effect is unknown…but will almost certainly be unwelcome. The government will eventually be unable to borrow at low rates…and unable to finance its deficits. This will result in default…or hyperinflation…or both. In anticipation, trust in the future will go down…and so will America’s wealth.

    That’s why the shift to politics is the FINAL stage of an economy… It is inherently wealth-destroying. In politics the rewards are distributed according to who you know or who you are. What you know and what you can do scarcely matters. Trust declines…because the rules change as wealth is taken away from some and given to others. The incentive to produce new wealth declines. Investments in new capital, new businesses, new innovations and so forth go down. Investments in lobbying go up. The insiders get rich. The rest get poor. And the nation’s wealth declines…along with its economy and its power. This will continue until the political sector blows itself up – either in default, bankruptcy, hyperinflation, revolution or defeat by a foreign power. Then, the cycle can begin again.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • The Big Shift in the US Economy

    No lobbyist left behind!

    That’s the new motto of the whole Washington establishment. Every spending bill has something in it for everybody.

    Today is a holiday in America. It’s “Presidents Day,” a day set aside for Americans to honor those who rule over them. Most Americans think of Washington, Lincoln and Roosevelt…but here at The Daily Reckoning we honor America’s truly great presidents – William Henry Harrison, Chester Arthur and Warren Harding – those who didn’t make things worse.

    But look on…ye dead chiefs…at what your country has become:

    Europe has only 1,800 registered lobbyists. There are 15,000 of them in the US. Most of them probably live in our new neighborhood…getting in our way as we drive around the Beltway…taking our parking places…hogging the tables at Starbucks… The parasites!

    The Financial Times reports that companies spent more on lobbying in 2009 than they had the year before. Investment in new plants and equipment fell dramatically. But investment in lobbying rose by 5%.

    You don’t need a Ph.D. in political science or economics to figure out why. Returns from lobbying were higher. That is the big shift in the US economy…the final shift.

    We’ll come back to this theme in a minute. First, let’s look at what happened on Friday. Just to set the stage…we’re trying to figure out whether the stock market has entered a declining phase. At the beginning of last week, we thought so…by the end of it we weren’t so sure. And on Friday, the evidence was mixed. The Dow fell 46 points, but still ended up for the week. Gold dropped $4.

    As to the economy, the evidence was mixed too. Consumer spending rose in January…but consumers are still reluctant to spend. And they don’t have any money to spend anyway…

    So let’s return to our Presidents Day theme…

    The US economy began as a frontier economy on the tidewater area of the East Coast…with a few big planters, but mostly small farmers, merchants and artisans.

    Then came the entrepreneurs with their mills and factories.

    Then, a few of the entrepreneurs grew to be captains of industry – the Vanderbilts, Carnegies, and Rockefellers.

    When the inventors, founders and innovators died off, their businesses were taken over by corporate managers.

    And then the leading corporations shifted their focus, from making things to marketing them. This shift corresponded roughly with the ascendancy of New York over Chicago…and, then after 1980, the focus shifted again – to financing. Wall Street grew rich. Motown – Detroit’s automotive industry – fell into decline. For a while, even the auto businesses made more money financing cars than they made building them.

    Finance blew itself up in 2007-2009. Now, there’s a new shift underway…from the private economy to the government. Mommas in the ’20s and ’30s wanted their babies to grow up and go into manufacturing. In the middle of the century, marketing was more rewarding – Madison Avenue was the best address in America. And by the end of the century, the best and the brightest were headed to finance.

    Where should bright young grads go now? Well, follow the money…! Where’s the money now? Not in manufacturing…at least not in US-based manufacturing. And not in marketing either – gone are the days of selling soap to big families with big pay raises. How about finance? Forget it. The boom in credit lasted more than 50 years. But who can borrow now? Only the feds. Sure a few big banks will make money by helping the feds raise cash. But the big expansion in consumer credit is over.

    Now, government is about the only major industry that is expanding. The feds have the money now. They’re even handing it out. Get in line!

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Will Bailing Out the Greeks Really Make American Businesses More Profitable?

    Well…blue skies…and almost clear highways.

    Things are getting back to normal in the Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area…or, at least back to the way they were before the big storm.

    There’s nothing really ever ‘normal’ about what goes on here. It’s a government town…the capitol city of a great nation…the citadel of a great empire…

    ..which only makes us wonder. Shouldn’t great nations and great empires have great leaders? And yet, we look around. What do we see? Hacks. Glad-handers. Shills. Suits. Wonks. And of course…imbeciles.

    That’s the problem with living in the country you come from. Your own people disappoint you. Or at least, those running your government. Living overseas is a pleasure. The imbeciles are fun to watch. But here…we cringe when we hear the news. We turn green when we read the paper. And TV? Can’t bear it. These are our people. Our race. Our countrymen. Ay yi yi…

    More on that below…

    Let’s look at the financial news. Wassup?

    Well, the Greek story was big this week. ‘The Big Fat Greek Meltdown,’ as Justice Litle calls it. It pushed stocks and bonds down early in the week. By the end of the week it was pushing them up.

    What happened in the meantime? Well, the euro-feds made it appear that they were going to do the same dumb things our own feds did. They said they were going to fix the situation. Just like the US fixed Fannie Mae and AIG!

    There are 27 different nations in the European Union. And guess how many languages? Two-hundred and thirty. That surprised us too. Spain alone has 6 official languages.

    But without doing any real research on the subject, we have discovered one word which is common to all these languages: bailout. Yes, dear reader, it was ‘bailout’…spoken in hundreds of different languages and dialects…that lit a fire under the financial markets late this week. The embers were still hot yesterday; the Dow rose 106 points. Gold had it best day in weeks – up 18 bucks.

    But doth a single bailout a real boom make?

    Let us rephrase that. Will bailing out the spendthrift Greeks really make American businesses more profitable?

    You know the answer. It won’t. In fact, it will make them less profitable. What it does is allow the Greeks to continue spending in the style to which they’ve become accustomed. And if the Greeks are going to do that you can bet that the Irish aren’t going to want cut back. Or the Portuguese. To say nothing of the Italians. And what about the English?

    Bailing out the Greeks is a big mistake. But it’s a mistake everyone seems to want to make. There’s probably a Latin dictum for this sort of thing. But since we don’t know what it is, we’ll have to coin the phrase ourselves: Imbecility begets imbecility; especially when the bankers come out ahead.

    What did you think? Who do you think the Greeks owe money to? That’s right, the big banks are behind this. They’ve got hundreds of billions at stake in Greece. If the Greeks can’t pay, the banks take a hit. Since no one wants the bankers to take a loss – except for us – once again, the feds are coming to the rescue.

    Oh…why does this make US businesses LESS profitable? Well, it’s a marginal thing. But what we’re witnessing is a shift of economic power away from the private sector towards the public sector. Private businesses no longer borrow like they used to. Now, the feds do the borrowing and the spending. That leaves less capital…and less spending power…in private hands. Ergo, businesses will find it harder to make money.

    They’ll also find it harder to make money because interest rates will rise. Instead of letting the bad credit risks default, the feds weaken all credit. They’re giving debt a bad name, in other words. The risk of default for the particular country goes down; the risk of default of the entire system increases. After all, the debt doesn’t disappear. It has to be paid by someone. Sooner or later. Guess who that will be?

    ********************

    We were snowed in Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. By Thursday, essential supplies were running short. All we had left was two cases of red wine. Would that be enough to last until Friday? We had our doubts…

    Cabin fever had set in. In desperation, we read the paper. Big mistake. The papers in Washington take themselves seriously. They tell us about congressmen, senators, agency heads, lobbyists, crooks, perverts and other politicos. One man has held up a liquor store. Another has waylaid an entire nation. These are the people who could be called the “power elite.” They are at the head of our government…they are leading and directing our great empire. Which only makes us wonder about the whole thing. Maybe a country isn’t so great after all…but just an accident…one that happens in spite of the dumbbells running it? And maybe an empire comes about not because of the drive and vision of the imperialists, but of its internal momentum…and on its own schedule…no matter what the nincompoops think.

    This may seem like a trivial thought to you but it has its roots in a respectable intellectual tradition. Is it men who make history…or history that makes men?

    Probably a little of both. But if we’re counting on the men (and by that we also refer to the distaff half of the population) in Washington to guide this empire on to greater glory…we’re going to be deeply disappointed. They aren’t capable of it.

    Take the wars in Iraq and Iran…please! Everyone who’s ever cracked a history book knows that you don’t fight expensive wars in distant places with your own troops and your own money when you have nothing to gain from it. Especially not when you have to borrow the money! You get someone else to fight the war…at his own expense.

    But our beat here at The Daily Reckoning is money…not war. Still, our opinions are the same about them both. America is overstretched…overextended…and overdue for a serious correction. Her wages are too high. Her debts are too heavy. Her expenses are too great. And her leaders have no idea what is going on.

    As to most of the foregoing list, our opinions are probably no better than anyone else’s. But as to the last item, we speak with authority. We are connoisseurs of imbecility. We have watched it for decades. It amuses us. It fascinates us. It intrigues and perplexes us. How come people can drive down the highway at 70mph…making thousands of precise calculations with mortal stakes, but then ask them a question about economic policy or foreign policy or no-shirt, no-service policy…and psssht…their good sense goes out the window? We’ve studied this question for many years….

    In other words, we know an imbecile when we see one. And when we see Ben Bernanke or Tim Geithner our eyes light up. Our nostrils flare. And our chest expands. Before us is a specimen we know very well. Boobus Americanus Economistica. It is a variety of imbecile that has gotten far too little attention from the academic world. Too little research has been done on them, in our opinion. That’s why it is left to us amateur imbecile-spotters to keep track of them.

    Mr. Bernanke is a standout example. The former head of the Princeton University economics department knows all there is to know about a depression – except the important part. He doesn’t understand what causes them. And he completely misunderstands what the role of government should be in dealing with them. But we have already explained all this to you, dear reader, so we won’t repeat ourselves here…except to say that any truck driver and hair stylist knows you can’t spend your way out of debt. Mr. Bernanke doesn’t believe it. That’s the very definition of Boobus Americanus Economistica; he has educated himself out of his common sense.

    Mr. Geithner, meanwhile, tries to make up for what he lacks in scholarly gravity with one heckuva nice wardrobe and a spiffy haircut. It’s definitely a plus to have such a sartorial crackerjack at the head of the Treasury Department, but it would be nice if he had some dim notion of how the bond market works too.

    Moody’s warned that the US would lose its triple-A rating if it continues borrowing money at the present rate. Our old friend Marc Faber was on TV this week explaining what the consequences would ultimately be: the US will default on its debt, he said.

    Mr. Geithner did not even bother with the idea of default. It was beyond his imaginative powers. As to losing the three As, he said that would “never” happen. Which is what set us to thinking about the quality of US leadership. Of course, the US will lose its bond rating…and will default. There is no question about it. No nation has ever existed, except for present company…whose histories have yet to be completed…that didn’t default, renege, collapse, go bankrupt, disappear, disintegrate, capitulate, or otherwise fall over and die. The only questions are when and how.

    Until next time,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Trichet Should Tell Greeks to Drop Dead

    Gerald Ford had the right idea.

    The year was 1975. New York City was in financial trouble. It had to borrow to pay its operating expenses. And lenders were getting tough. So Mayor Abe Beame turned to Washington, begging for a bailout. But America still had a vestigial sense of financial integrity back then. The Big Apple was lucky; America’s president told Beame to “drop dead.” With no other option available, New York’s politicians had to do the right thing – they cut expenses and the city flourished.

    Greece is not New York City. And the US is not Europe. America is united from sea to shining sea – at least it has been ever since Lincoln crushed the Confederacy in 1865. A united Europe, on the other hand, has always been cyclical and tentative. Togetherness was usually imposed by conquest. The Romans…the Holy Roman Empire…Napoleon…Hitler… All held it together, but only for a while.

    Last week, Europe’s stock was selling off. The euro sank to $1.36 – an 8-month low against the dollar. Short interest against the euro rose to a record high – with $8 billion betting that the European money would go down more.

    The immediate problem was in Europe’s soft underbelly. The Greeks are in a jam – similar to New York’s problem in the ’70s. The Hellenic deficit has risen to 12.7% of GDP, sending the cost of funding to nearly 7% for a 10-year loan. As the cost of money rose, so did Greece’s troubles. Each additional basis point of borrowing cost pushed the budget further out of balance.

    Greek finance minister Papaconstantinou promised spending cuts that would reduce the deficit down to the allowable 3% level within 2 years. But could he deliver?

    During the late 19th century, William Jennings Bryan was the champion of the agrarian debtor class in what is now known as America’s ‘flyover states.’ The Midwestern farmers had gone deeply into debt during the boom years. They wanted more money in circulation to make it easier for them to pay their debts. Bryan whined for bi-metallism…using silver as well as gold as a monetary reserve, thus increasing the supply of money. In one of the greatest speeches of all time, he thundered that debtors were being “crucified on a cross of gold.” America told him to drop dead.

    But today’s money is backed by neither silver nor gold. No one will be crucified by paper money; instead, as the bailouts mount up, they will be buried under it. The quantity of government-issued paper is exploding. Public debt in the developed countries rose 50% in the last three years. This year alone, Europe is scheduled to borrow $2.2 trillion more.

    Of the leading brands of paper money, America’s is the most reliable. It has been around for two centuries. And it enjoys the full faith and credit of the United States of America. The euro, on the hand, is a recent innovation. It is paper money backed by more paper – the Treaty of Lisbon, from which member states may withdraw when they feel like it. This has led many observers to think Europe’s money is inherently weak and unnatural. Nor does the euro enjoy the kind of dynamic, can-do management that the dollar gets. You can imagine Ben Bernanke turning up at the office at 7AM. Jean-Claude Trichet probably arrives at 11 and leaves after lunch. But which is worse – a currency that is controlled by people who are only marginally interested in keeping it up or one that is backed by people fully determined to make it go down?

    Last week, the aforementioned Mr. Trichet seemed hardly inclined to bail out the Greeks. Instead, he lectured them…

    “…belonging to the euro area, you…have an easy means of financing your current account deficit. You share a currency that is credible, so that you have a quality of financing that corresponds to that of a credible currency.”

    He let it be known that the European Union could do just fine without them. Greece’s GDP represents only 3% of the Eurozone (about the same as New York City’s portion of US GDP). It is 3% the rest of Europe could live comfortably without, he seemed to say.

    But by Tuesday, there was hope that Mr. Trichet’s heart may have softened. Or maybe it was his head. He was flying back from Australia early. German lawmakers were being told that they had ‘more flexibility’ to deal with the crisis than they had previously thought. After vague assurances on Thursday, investors were betting that a bailout deal would be forthcoming.

    Instead, Mr. Trichet should tell the Greeks to drop dead.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Man Still a Slave to Human Nature

    Not much action in the financial markets yesterday. The Dow fell 20 points…completely inconclusive. We don’t know whether the final stage has begun or not. We think it has…but we’re not sure.

    The big action was in the bond market, where the US government tied its all-time record by borrowing $25 billion worth of 10-year notes. All in all, the sale went well…but yields rose slightly…to 3.69%. At some point, bond yields will rise decisively to the upside. But whether that has begun or not…we don’t know yet.

    Ben Bernanke says he will raise the discount rate “before long.” The inflation numbers are coming in higher than expected. At some point, Mr. Bernanke will have to raise rates to stop inflation. But we suspect that that will not happen any time soon. We have a depression to live through first.

    But we strongly suspect that Mr. Bernanke has no idea what he is doing.

    In short, we don’t know what will happen or when it will happen. But we’re pretty sure that Mr. Bernanke understands even less than we do. (For reasons we elaborate below…) Still, we’re counting on him to guide us. We just watch what he does…and listen to what he says…and head in the opposite direction!

    In the meantime, we are snowed in tight…at least three feet of snow is outside our door.

    Washington went from panic to desperation yesterday. The snow came down lightly…but then the wind whipped it up. Local officials ceased road clearing operations when it became ‘too dangerous’ for them to operate. They couldn’t see where they were going or what they were doing.

    Local motorists were told to get off the road. This seemed unnecessary, from our point of view, since it was impossible to get on the road…or even to tell where the road was. Still, we were warned to stay off so that emergency vehicles could get by.

    Wind gusts up to 60 mph were reported. Power went out for thousands of homes. Then, the power company stopped trying to fix the downed wires. They judged it too dangerous to continue working.

    Then, the police too, announced that they could not respond to calls. They might as well have sent out an invitation to criminals: Rob a liquor store; please.

    Fortunately, the miscreants were holed up too. Nobody wanted to go out. And those that did risked their lives…at least, that was how the authorities made it sound:

    “If your car is stuck, remain in your vehicle. Do not attempt to walk to safety. You may become disoriented by the white-out conditions.”

    They were afraid you would fall into a snow bank. Then, when the giant snow-blower came through, your frozen body might damage the machine.

    And so the nation’s capital and surrounding suburbs went quiet. No one moved. No one went to work…because there was no work to go to. No one went shopping because there were no shops open. Schools were closed. Edward – who escaped to a friend’s house before the snow began – has the whole week off.

    This winter is setting records in the Mid-Atlantic region. Fine by us. Our juice works. We have a gas fire in the living room. And we stocked up a supply of wine that would last us through the apocalypse, if necessary.

    We are comfortably snowed in. Warm. Well-fed. Even content.

    Our refuge yesterday was marred only by one thing – our own thoughts.

    “What about the poor people in hospitals and old-age homes?” asked our mother…88 years old. “People can’t get in to work. Who looks after them?”

    “Well, it’s probably time for a little culling,” we joked. “Nature has to assert herself from time to time.”

    Of course, mankind is always trying to get the upper hand against nature. In matters to do with science and technology, he has clearly succeeded. His efforts, compounded over generations, make it possible for your editor to enjoy one of the fiercest blizzards to hit this part of the world in 100 years. He is able to watch the snow through his double-paned, insulated glass windows…while drinking a glass of wine that came all the way from South America. He is able to check the financial news from all over the world on his laptop computer…and then pass on his own opinions and thoughts to hundreds of thousands of readers all over the planet.

    To nature, man is master. But to human nature he is still a slave.

    Ah…dear reader…that is the kind of thought you get in a blizzard… A thought worth having but one that, on a normal day, would have driven by like a Post Office van. But yesterday, it was stuck in a drift…right in front of the house, impossible to ignore.

    Yes, dear reader…man makes progress in things he can touch and feel…twist and hammer. He can fashion himself a warm house…and a truck to deliver the newspaper.

    But there are many things he can’t get a grip on. Even in the 21st century, despite all the study of domestic relations, he gets along with his spouse no better than Henry VIII got along with his…and he fares no better with his children than Jacob did with his boys.

    But wait… You’re probably thinking that this snow is causing your editor to go a little stir-crazy…right? He has a case of cabin fever, maybe…he’s getting pretty far afield from his Daily Reckoning subject matter, right?

    Well, you are wrong.

    We’ll explain why…below…

    One thing that man cannot get a grip on is central banking. Or, more broadly, economics.

    Wait a minute. If he can send a man to the moon he can certainly make some progress in economics, right?

    Wrong again!

    Economics is not a hard science. It’s a human science. Like psychology or history…it’s an observational science. A decent historian observes what happens and does his best to tell the story faithfully. He is a fool if he thinks he can control it or make it turn out differently. An honest psychologist, also, can sometimes help people understand what they are doing. At the margin, he can even change human behavior – perhaps. But he cannot really change the way people think or feel. Because he cannot change human nature.

    Likewise, an economist with a residual trace of dignity and integrity admits that he is only half-capable of describing how people get along in their economic undertakings. At best, he has a dim, vague idea of what is going on. He may even be able to give some good Dutch-uncle advice from time to time. ‘Don’t spend more than you earn,’ he might tell his nephew. Or, ‘a penny saved is a penny earned.’ Or, ‘don’t put all your eggs into one basket.’ That kind of thing. At the margin, this advice might even be helpful.

    But never in his wildest delusions does he imagine that he can improve or control an entire economy. In a theoretical sense, this would mean improving human nature…and he knows this is impossible.

    Human nature expresses itself in an infinite variety of ways. One man wants to work hard. One wants to spend every penny. One likes gaudy automobiles. Another is afraid it will be a cold winter…he spends all his money stocking up on food and firewood. Who’s right? They all are expressing their own fears, desires, and ideas – through the markets and the economy. Any action an economist takes to improve things necessarily means bending these people away from what THEY want towards what HE thinks they should have. And since prosperity makes no sense outside of the voluntary choices of the people themselves, the meddling economist inevitably makes them poorer. Because his interference shifts time and resources away from what people really want.

    The economist is human too. As such, he is prone to human error…and a prisoner of human nature.

    What do all these people in Washington do?

    Well, we got a copy of the free local paper – The Politico. Want to get a job in the capitol? Just look in the paper. There are dozens of jobs on offer.

    “Energy Analyst,” says one. They ask for a “proven analyst,” whatever that is.

    Another ‘trade group’ advertises for a “Director, Policy and Research…to guide its policy/research initiatives…”

    Still another wants a “Vice President for Government Affairs.” What is that? “Lobby experience” required, it explains.

    How about this: “Legislative Assistant.” Senator Bob Corker is looking for someone to handle “energy and natural resources” issues for him. What kind of government is this, dear reader? The people’s elected representative knows nothing; so he hires a policy wonk.

    Gosh…there a dozens of jobs on offer. And none of them seem to require any real skill…except a talent for BS: Congressional Relations…Federal Relations…Director of Public Policy…Government Affairs Director…

    If none of these people ever came to work again, would the Republic be worse off?

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Tackling Economic Clouds

    Yes, dear reader, your editor is snowed in. Not for the first time this winter.

    And we’re not the only ones. The US government is shut down too. No matter. They weren’t doing anything but making things worse.

    But wait…what’s this?

    The Washington Post: “Blizzard or not, top Treasury staff is snowed in – with work.”

    Uh oh. The folks who run the economy for us are still on the job.

    “Geithner, aides skip day off to tackle economic clouds.”

    We have to confess; we’ve never seen a US Treasury official tackle a cloud. We can’t quite imagine it. But it’s in the paper, so it must be true.

    Of course, there are plenty of economic clouds around. Heck there are plenty of real clouds, too, dumping snow on the Washington area. Politicians and bureaucrats can’t really do anything about either type of cloud. But it must be a comfort to the woodenheads to think they are on the job. We’d rather they took the day off – and tomorrow too. And the next day!

    What a godsend this snow is! Think of all the people it puts to work. Kids shovel out driveways and earn a little spending money. Snow-blower sales must be going through the roof. Four-wheel-drive vehicles are sliding out of lots and showrooms…work crews keep busy night and day – with huge overtime earnings, no doubt.

    And think of all the missed work…and school…that will have to be made up.

    You’re probably thinking…now, wait a minute. There’s something wrong with this picture. How could something as destructive and expensive as a blizzard be good for the economy?

    Well, you’re just not thinking like an economist. You have to learn to stand on your head. Then, things are turned upside down.

    Of course, a storm is not really good at all. But simpleton economists believe that anything that puts people to work is a good thing for the economy – even a world war.

    What really happens in a storm…a blizzard…a flood…or a war is that real wealth is lost. Things break down or are destroyed or used up. And then a lot of resources must be put to work to make repairs. Putting these resources to work in a concerted way makes it look like progress…but you’re really only getting back to where you were in the first place.

    Besides, the resources must be taken away from other things. The demand for snow-blowers displaces the demand for motorcycles or jet-skis. Workers who move snow might otherwise be making pizzas or delivering newspapers. And the fuel that goes into the salt trucks and loaders…that too, would have been used for something else – something people wanted to do, not something they had to do.

    The early French economist, Frederic Bastiat, figured this out a long time ago. He called it the ‘broken window fallacy.’ Even then, some lazy economists thought that breaking a window actually boosted economic activity. Of course, it was nonsense…

    If you could really improve an economy by breaking windows…or having a tornado pass through down…why not just blow up a whole city?

    And this…a message from our Dear Reader in the South Pacific:

    “Ok, you posed an interesting question… Why would someone – me, for instance – living on a private island in the middle of the South Pacific concern myself with the insane world of macroeconomics? Good question. I think I have a good answer.

    “First, islands are very expensive. Somewhat like a boat, buying them is just the beginning. Second, if you are a highly motivated individual brought up in the Western world, money is like meat to a tiger. It’s what you like, it’s what you are used to, it’s what you understand. I don’t want my rooms to be rat-infested, insect-ridden places like they would be without money. I want something fantastic; the island is fantastic. I want the rooms to match.

    “As you know, one of the ways I’ve made money is by buying gold from the people that pan it out of rivers. The gold business is why I started reading the DR in the first place. I was reading lots and lots of interesting information about money and gold, and then I read The Daily Reckoning. That changed me. It did two things for me. One, it made me laugh; two it made me the smartest person in the room. Yeah, it’s true, I was hanging out in some places where that wasn’t all that difficult, still, even the local bankers still talk about me calling the financial crisis before it happened. Bill, you of course tipped me off, but being human, I took full credit.

    “Now I’m bone tired as I write this. I did something today that Indiana Jones would have been impressed by. I just took my corpulent, over indulged, out of shape, one glass of wine too many, sorry ass up a mountain to visit a group of men, women and children living in the most difficult circumstances that you could possibly imagine. These people were…absolutely real! You would have loved the eyes of the women with their corn cob pipes. I would rather spend ten minutes with any one of them than have an opulent lunch with Ben Bernanke. I guess Ben and Tim and Henry or any one of those fat cats on Wall Street would faint at the very idea of living the way I just saw these people living. They hike up this trail that would kill a camel and they live with almost nothing. When they want to come to town they start at 2 in the morning and walk for 8 hours on a nearly impossible path knee deep in mud. They work hard getting the little flecks of gold out of the river. They have only kitchen pans, and an old spring from a truck is their only tool for moving the big rocks. They may deserve it but nobody gives them a bonus.

    “I took a local doctor with me, along with my great crew, and we all struggled to make it up the mountain to their village, this after the worst 2-hour drive on the planet; it could not be classified as a road, more like a muddy river we attempted to drive up.

    “I am not a do-gooder. I don’t like do-gooders and probably never will, but I have to admit that today it felt good to alleviate a little human suffering. We treated the fungal infections that are just rife in the village. People whose skin is covered with a itchy scale akin to ring worm that just makes their lives miserable. You could not look at little children whose entire bodies were a mass of sores and not feel for them! For the equivalent of 20 US dollars each, we could dramatically improve their lives.

    “So in a long-winded way, I’m trying to say that money matters, that macroeconomics matter, no matter where you are on this planet. We are all connected in one way or another and when one group thinks that it’s got a special place in the world, a place where they don’t even want to know how most people on the planet live, well, I’m not so sure that makes it special or just blind. I think these blind people have weaseled their way into positions of power, where they make decisions that affect a lot of people. People who don’t know anything about and apparently don’t want to know.

    “In one of your pieces you wrote something I have never forgotten. You said you were not really an economist, but more of a philosopher who uses economy as a platform. I loved that idea, Bill. Any of us that are fortunate enough to have time not spent struggling to stay alive, have an obligation to think about the whole, not just our own little world where we think nothing of pushing buttons to get what we want.

    “If you stand back and look at the macro of life, (sweat dripping of your chin clears things up!) we are all part of the whole, and when we lose that perspective, we lose more than money. Somehow I think that is really what this financial crisis is about. Loss of perspective. Just look at who they’ve put in charge of important things!

    “I will sign off with a saying I heard as a child… This is for good old Ben: ‘Those that can, do. Those that can’t, teach.’”

    -Pamela

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • It’s the Little Economies that Have Trouble

    The Dow rose 150 points yesterday. We’re not sure what to make of it. Does it mean we were wrong about the beginning of the end? Are we still in the middle? Or is our whole theory wrong?

    Hold your horses, dear reader. We’ll have to wait to find out.

    The papers attributed the big upward thrust in share prices to news from Europe. The specific fact that caused the swing to profit had to do with Jean-Claude Trichet’s travel plans. He was in Australia for one meeting; now he’s coming back to Europe early so he can partake of another.

    What has caused him to call his travel agent is a problem centered in Greece. The Greeks are in a jam. They spent too much money in the bubble years. Then, they saw their tax revenues disappear in the bust.

    Sound familiar? It should, because the same could be said of most of the US states…and most of the world’s countries, emerging markets excepted. They all spend too much. Almost all run deficits. And almost all their deficits are getting bigger and bigger.

    So far, the big economies don’t have a problem. Lenders think they are good for the money. Almost miraculously…or supernaturally…the USA – the world’s biggest borrower – is able to obtain financing for 10 years at less than 4% interest. Since the official inflation rate is 2.7%, that means lenders give up their money for a real rate of return of just a little over 1%.

    It’s the little economies that have trouble. They don’t have printing presses of their own. Like California or New York, ultimately, they have to balance their budgets. They can’t inflate their way out of trouble. So, when their backs are to the wall they either get tough and cut expenses rudely. Or they go broke…default…and then have the cuts forced upon them.

    The focus of this week’s discussion is the PIIGS – Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain. Together they’ve got about $2 trillion worth of debt. And lenders are making it more expensive for them to borrow more. If this continues, they’ll default. And then, say the financial authorities, terrible calamities will happen. The whole European financial system could come falling down. It would be the end of the world as we have known it.

    Does this sound familiar too? It should. It’s the same scare tactic used after Lehman was allowed to go under. AIG had to be saved. And Fannie and Freddie. And GM.

    Now, that lame argument is probably going to lead to the bailout of Greece…and by extension, all the other insolvent nations along the periphery of Europe. The debts will be collectivized…just like those of Fannie and Freddie. Instead of being allowed to fail on their own merits, in other words, European nations are locking arms…they are all going to fail together!

    Germany’s politicians are already talking about a program of support in a “broad sense” for Greece and other problem economies. Soon, in Europe, the English word ‘bailout’ will be as common as “hamburger” or “coke.”

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Here Comes More Snow!

    Snowmageddon has paralyzed the nation’s capitol. Once again, the feds announced that only ’emergency workers’ had to report to work. And once again, we wondered about all the rest. As near as we could tell, the pumps still worked when we went to fill up our pick-up truck. The coffee tasted the same. Plumbers still plumbed. Bakers still baked. Economists still pretended to know what they were talking about.

    All the things that mattered continued…without the intrusion of federal employees.

    And here comes more snow! No kidding. Now we have a storm warning for this afternoon. Ten to twenty inches of new snow are forecast.

    The highway crews are beaten. They’ve been piling up snow since Friday. Many have worked around the clock. This new weather forecast must be depressing to them. They must feel like Custer’s troops when scouts reported that more Sioux warriors had arrived.

    We spent the weekend digging out our driveway. We had only begun when a young man with a heavy Spanish accent came up to us.

    “You want some help?”

    “How much would you charge?”

    “One hundred dollars.”

    “Hmmm….well, thanks…but I’ll do it myself.”

    Actually, we didn’t do it ourselves. Daughter Sophia and son Edward lent a hand. Between the three of us, we did the work in about 3 hours. It was fun. Besides, what else did we have to do? We were snowed in.

    As we were working, we noticed other Latin Americans walking up and down the street with snow shovels on their shoulders. After 3 hours, your editor felt his muscles ache. These guys must have done it all day long…Saturday and Sunday.

    In this area, the Latinos seem to do all the housework, the roadwork, gardening, landscaping and much of the construction. They truck, they bus, they tote and lift. They’re everywhere. They don’t seem to mind hard work. And they are enterprising – like real Americans! This weekend, they hustled. And each one of them probably made $500 to $1,000. In cash.

    By 6PM yesterday, Baltimore had an eerie feeling to it. The sky was clear. The park in front of our office was covered with snow. No car moved. No human being either.

    What had happened? There was something unearthly about it… So quiet. So dead. Had zombies taken over?

    Life imitates art. There are so many movies about zombies. Maybe now, zombies really are taking over. They don’t foam at the mouth. They don’t eat human flesh in public. But many of our fellow Americans are exhibiting some very strange behavior.

    Mr. Timothy Geithner, for example. We’re not saying he’s a zombie. We’re not accusing him. We just don’t know. All we know is that he’s saying remarkable things. For example, he told the nation that the US bond rating was safe. The Wall Street Journal went on to report that he said we would ‘never’ lose it.

    Huh? Of course, US bonds will lose their triple-A rating. The only serious question is when.

    Zombies will say the damndest things, won’t they?

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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