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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: This Sucker Is Going Down. Again. This Sucker Is Going Down. Again. By David Stockman David StockmanIn the aftermath of the Lehman bankruptcy filing, George Bush famously told a group of Congressional leaders that unless they immediately passed an open-ended Wall Street bailout, this sucker is going down. They blindly complied. Yet for awhile it seemed of no avail. By the post-crisis bottom in the first quarter of 2009, household net worth had plunged from $68 trillion to $55 trillion or by nearly 20%. That reflected a 60% collapse in the stock averages and a 35% meltdown of housing prices. For a fleeting moment it appeared that economic truth had come home to roost. Namely, that permanent gains in wealth and living standards cannot be achieved by the kind of rampant speculation and debt-fueled financialization that had generated the phony boom of the Greenspan era. But that didnt reckon with the greatest and most unfortunate accident of modern financial history. The White House advisors who counseled George Bush in September 2008 to violate the free market in order to save it had long ago proved their cluelessness about economic matters. They had advised him to appoint Ben Bernanke to the Fed in 2002, and then to promote him to the post of Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors in 2005 and finally to become head of the Fed in January 2006. But heres the thing. Bernanke was an academic hybrid of the two worst economic influences of the 20th century -- the out and out statism of John Maynard Keynes and the backdoor statism of Milton Friedmans central bank based monetarism. Both of these grand theoreticians got the causes of the Great Depression wrong, and Bernanke did doubly so. You can reduce all of his vaunted expertise about the 1930s to a single proposition. To wit, the Fed should have bought up the entire $17 billion of government bonds outstanding at the time in order to liquefy the banking system and thereby arrest the plunge in economic output. To wit, the Fed should have bought up the entire $17 billion of government bonds outstanding at the time in order to liquefy the banking system and thereby arrest the plunge in economic output. I have refuted that hoary tale in detail in my book, The Great Deformation. The short of it is that the banking system collapsed because it was insolvent after the 15-year, debt-fueled boom of World War I and the Roaring Twenties, not because it was parched for liquidity or because the Fed had been too stingy in the provision of reserves. In fact, money market interest rates barely exceeded 1% during the 1930-1932 period when Friedman and Bernanke claim the Fed was too tight; and excess (i.e. idle) reserves in the banking system soared by 15 times. There is no evidence that any solvent bank that was a member of the Federal Reserve System was denied discount loans or that solvent main street business that wanted more credit couldnt get it. Instead, what happened was that the reckless expansion of bank credit during the years prior to the 1929 crash was liquidated because it couldnt be serviced or repaid. Total loans outstanding had grown from $15 billion to $40 billion during the proceeding decade and one-half, but much of it had gone into margin loans on Wall Street, real estate speculation and massive over-investment in U.S. export and capital goods industries that collapsed once Wall Street financing of foreign customers dried up after the crash. So the money supply measured as M1 shrunk by about 30% during the three years after the crash because bad loans were being liquidated and bank deposits extinguished. There was no disappearance of that Keynesian ether called aggregate demand. Rather, it was that the phony wealth of the prior credit boom which inexorably evaporated. Needless to say, the events in the fall of 2008 had nothing to do with what actually occurred after the 1929 crash. Back then the U.S. was the worlds powerhouse exporter and creditor, but like in China today the apparent prosperity of the times depended upon vendor finance. That is, with the help of the Federal Reserve, the US banking system and bond market had advanced the equivalent of $2 trillion in todays economic scale to foreign customers of US farmers and manufacturers. When the stock market bubble collapsed in October 1929, however, the Wall Street market in foreign debt went stone cold, triggering a cascade of worldwide defaults. By early 1933, the booming foreign debt market of the 1920s had become the subprime mortgage market of its day, with debt prices sinking to less than ten cents on the dollar. In short order, Warren Buffetts famous metaphor about naked swimmers being exposed when the tide goes out was well demonstrated; it transpired that U.S. export customers had been borrowing new money in order to pay interest on their accumulating debts, but without access to new credits they had no option but to drastically curtail new orders. Accordingly, U.S. exports collapsed by 80% during the three years after the 1929 peak, leaving U.S. industry stranded in excess capacity and overloaded with working inventories of raw materials, intermediate goods and finished products. The latter, for example, dropped from $40 billion to $18 billion and capital spending dropped by 75% during 1930-1933. Likewise, with the collapse of the stock market and the easy credit boom, sales of durable goods like autos, washing machines and radios dropped by upwards of 70%. In short, the Great Depression was not an avoidable mistake of the Fed during 1930-1933 as Bernanke falsely claimed when he Xeroxed Milton Friedmans erroneous history of the 1930s; it was the economic consequence of the unsustainable 1916-1929 credit and financial bubble that had been fostered by the Fed. In short, the Great Depression was not an avoidable mistake of the Fed during 1930-1933 as Bernanke falsely claimed when he Xeroxed Milton Friedmans erroneous history of the 1930s; it was the economic consequence of the unsustainable 1916-1929 credit and financial bubble that had been fostered by the Fed. So Bernanke had it upside-down as a historical matter, and way out in left field as a contemporary policy matter. That is, as he ran around Washington in the fall of 2008 yelling that Great Depression 2.0 was at hand he was preaching groundless hysteria. The fact is, at the time of the housing and mortgage bust the U.S. economy did not resemble that of 1929 in the slightest; and there was not even a remote risk of the kind of industrial depression that had occurred in the early 1930s. Thats because after 20 years of Greenspan-Bernanke money printing, and its replication by China and the rest of the emerging market (EM) export mercantilist central banks, the U.S. economy had been essentially de-industrialized. There was no risk whatsoever that the kind of capital spending reduction and inventory liquidation that had occurred in the early 1930s would be replicated. Indeed, for a short period of time the brunt of the industrial production adjustment occurred in China and the EM. In effect, China and its supply chain had become the exporter/creditors of the present era. Thus, the post-crash Hoovervilles this time around were in the Chinese interior as 100 million migrant workers streamed home after suddenly being thrown out of work when world trade collapsed in the fall/winter of 2008-2009. By the same token, spending by U.S. households after the 2008 crisis was bolstered by a surge of automatic income transfer payments for unemployment insurance, food stamps, Medicaid/Medicare and other safety net programs; and by employment in the vast domestic service sector that as an inherent structural matter does not shut down to liquidate inventories because it has none. During a spending recession service businesses shrink incrementally, not radically. Pilates instructors book less hours but their studios do not go dark like overstocked factories. Needless to say, the global debtor, massive importer, service-based de-industrialized welfare state that the US had become by September 2008 was the polar opposite of the 1930s economy that Bernanke so badly misunderstood in the first place. And for that reason, a classic industrial depression was never in the cards. To take one example, inventory liquidation during the Great Depression amounted to a 20% shrinkage of GDP, but only a 2% reduction during the Great Recession. In fact, as I also demonstrated in The Great Deformation, the moderate liquidation of the excess inventories and payrolls that had built-up during the Feds unsustainable housing and credit boom was over and done by mid-2009. Indeed, the recession had cured itself even before the $800 billion Obama stimulus program or the Feds massive QE maneuver had any measurable impact on the US economy. So Bernankes lunatic money printing spree which took the Feds balance sheet from $900 billion on the eve of the crisis to $4.5 trillion did not prevent any semblance whatsoever of a Great Depression 2.0. What it did, instead, was inflate the mother of all financial bubbles. Now I believe that bubble is going to collapse -- maybe as soon as next Wednesday, December 16th. In fact, Im so confident about whats going to happen in the coming months that on Monday, Ill be holding a free live event for you with Addison Wiggin and Peter Coyne. Click here now to see the details. Its free to attend, but, after discussion, weve decided to limit the amount of spots. I hope to speak with you then. Warm regards, David Stockman for The Daily Reckoning P.S. Next Monday, Im holding a free but very urgent live event. Youre invited, and Id like for you to attend. Ive put all of the details on this Web page. Please click here now and RSVP right away. For reasons I explain, we need to limit available spots. Poster Comment: December 16th just might be a day of reckoning. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
I believe that they'll keep printing as long as is possible.
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
Not only did the FED do a Trillion dollar stealth QE, but Europe also did a Trillion Euro stealth QE. They are running the presses like there is no tomorrow. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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