"So what next? It seems obvious us that the U.S.
middle class needs to reverse course. Stop spending so much, stop
working so many hours, focus on quality of output and quality of life.
In a word: downsize."
by
Bill Bonner
Today's another
big day. The 12 members of the Fed's Open Market Committee will get
together in New York and decide what to do. As of this morning, we don't
know what they will do. Our bet is that they don't either.
Instead, they
will do what we do; they will look out the window. Outside the Fed's
meeting room, the war between inflation and deflation continues. As
expected, inflation's gains are so far narrowly focused - on gold and
certain global commodities,
such as oil. Gold fell back $2 yesterday…but it is at record
prices…and beginning to attract wider attention. Even The Wall Street
Journal, for example, talks of a "gold rush," in its headline - quickly
warning readers away from it!
Deflation,
meanwhile, is advancing on a broad front.
Comes word this
morning that the "loss at Countrywide is worse than feared…as sinking
house market caused more borrowers to fall behind on payments." Reuters
reports that the mortgage lender posted a loss for the fourth quarter of
$421 million.
House prices are
still falling in Britain and America, where they have just registered
another drop for the eleventh month in a row. It's a "historic bust,"
says Robert Shiller.
The CEO of the
Ryland Group (NYSE:RYL)
says it's the "worst housing market in 30 years." His competitor over at
Lennar (NYSE:LEN)
reported its biggest quarterly loss in its history, losing $201 million
in the fourth quarter of last year.
And the Financial
Times says U.S. builders "face a growing bankruptcy threat."
Ben Bernanke
allowed himself a little understatement this week, saying that housing
"may be a drag on growth for a good part of this year." We would say
that it will definitely be a drag on growth, and not merely for this
year, but for the rest of this decade, if not longer. You can correct
the stock market…or the soybeans market…in a couple days. But
housing takes time. Houses that were being planned and financed
before the housing bubble blew up are still coming on the market today.
They are added to already swollen inventories of unsold and foreclosed
houses. It will take years to work this inventory down…and years to
bring prices down to levels where ordinary buyers can afford ordinary
houses.
On that point,
former Labor Secretary Robert Reich writes, "America's middle classes
are no longer coping." He notes that the fixes proposed by Bernanke and
Bush will not help much, because the middle classes have run out of
"coping mechanisms." The short version of the story is that the typical
man earns less, in real terms, than he did 37 years ago. "The income of
a young man in his 30s is now 12 per cent below that of a man his age
three decades ago." Families have struggled to increase their standards
of living, first by putting women to work…second, by working longer
hours…third, by turning to credit. The workplace is now dominated by
over-indebted women who work night and day.
"The typical
American now works two weeks more each year than 30 years ago," says
Reich. "Compared with any other advanced nation we are veritable
workaholics, putting in 350 more hours a year than the average European,
more even than the notoriously industrious Japanese." And when Americans
ran out of time and out of money, they began to borrow with the same
vigor that they worked.
"We began to
borrow, big time," says Reich. "With housing prices rising briskly
through the 1990s and even faster between 2002 and 2006, we turned our
homes into piggy banks through home equity loans. Americans got nearly
$250bn worth of home equity every quarter in second mortgages and
refinancings. That is nearly 10 per cent of disposable income. With
credit cards raining down like manna, we bought plasma television sets,
new appliances, vacations.
"With dollars
artificially high because foreigners continued to hold them even as the
nation sank deeper into debt, we summoned inexpensive goods and services
from the rest of the world."
That final
'coping mechanism' has now played itself out. Houses are going down in
price. Lenders are wary of credit risks. And
foreigners are becoming chary of the dollar too.
So what next? It
seems obvious us that the U.S. middle class needs to reverse course.
Stop spending so much, stop working so many hours, focus on quality of
output and quality of life. In a word: downsize.
Not that people
will want to do it at first. But they will have no choice. They need to
save for rainy days and retirement. And America needs savings to build
factories…and savings to help people learn new trades and new tricks.
Yes, dear reader, the light bulbs are finally going on in
Debt
Nation: you can't really get rich by borrowing and spending…or even
by working day and night parking hedge fund managers' cars. You get rich
by saving, learning and investing. There is no other way.
What this means
is a decline in spending…and a decline in Americans' standards of
living. It means a recession too - probably a deep, long recession which
the feds will fight every step of the way.
But it is not a
battle the feds can win. They cannot really make the situation better
with more of their phony cash and credit. That is what caused the
problem in the first place. They need to reverse course too…and
encourage savings.
Who wants to save
when the going rate of return on savings is no higher than the inflation
rate? Who wants to buy a U.S. 30-year Treasury bond at 4.28% yield…when
the current consumer price inflation level is rising at 4.4% per year?
So here we offer
some free advice to the Fed's Open Market Committee: Don't cut rates
today, raise them. Let the stock market crash. Let the economy retreat.
Let the banks go belly-up. Liquidate Wall Street. Liquidate the housing
sector. Liquidate bad debts everywhere. Get it over with, so the U.S.
middle class can begin building again…after 37 years…on a solid
foundation.
We don't expect
any thanks for that advice.
Editor’s Note: Bill Bonner is
the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning. He is also the author,
with Addison Wiggin, of the national best sellers Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century
and Empire of Debt: The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis.
Bill’s latest book,
Mobs, Messiahs and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance
and Politics is available now.
"If I had to name just one book investors should
read, this is the one I would select…" Dr. Marc Faber, editor of the
maverick Gloom Boom & Doom Report and Amazon best-seller Tomorrow's Gold:
Asia's Age of Discovery
“Entertainingly and irreverently investigates
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