Wednesday , 24 April 2024

U.S. Economy: Reduce Spending (Future Depression) OR Keep Spending (Future Hyperinflation) – +5K Views

The U.S. government is in what is known as a “debt death spiral”. They must borrowdeath-spiral1images money to repay prior debts. It is as if they are using their Visa Card to make an American Express payment. The rate of new debt additions dwarf any rate of growth the economy can possibly achieve. The end is certain, only its timing is unknown, and, once interest rates begin to rise, and they will, it’s game over. 

So writes Monty Pelerin (www.economicnoise.com) in edited excerpts from his original article* entitled Smoke And Mirrors Running Out — Depression to Follow.

[The following article is presented by  Lorimer Wilson, editor of www.munKNEE.com and may have been edited ([ ]), abridged (…) and/or reformatted (some sub-titles and bold/italics emphases) for the sake of clarity and brevity to ensure a fast and easy read. This paragraph must be included in any article re-posting to avoid copyright infringement.]

Pelerin goes on to say in further edited excerpts:

Our economy is spent, exhausted and filled with misallocations and distortions… There is no recovery, nor will there be one, until a massive purge (usually referred to as a depression) occurs which will result in bankruptcies that release scarce, misallocated physical capital from unproductive and unwanted areas to places where it is needed and can be utilized efficiently.

Rather than allow this pre-condition to an economic recovery and a growing, efficient economy, politicians want to prevent it. They use smoke, mirrors and propaganda (lies) to hide the reality of our sick economy. Their obfuscations continue, but the effective life is limited.

What politicians do to the country beyond their term in office means nothing to them. Their concern is only for themselves and the short-term that exists between elections. As a result they rob from the future to hide the true conditions of the present. Those still unborn will be paying for their criminal economic charade.

Economic Conditions

So how bad is the economy? To impress upon you the seriousness of the situation and to encourage you to read a post by Karl Denniger entitled A SEVERE Storm Warning: Purchasing Power Collapses at 10% Annually, I quote below some of his points:

“… we’re doing the same thing that led to the 2008 blowup — we’ve learned exactly nothing.  In real terms our GDP is in fact contracting by about $500 billion a quarter. After adjusting for debt expansion — that’s $2 trillion a year, more or less.

In terms of debt and inflation, Denniger determined that:

“… we’re contracting in purchasing power adjusted for new debt at more than 10% over the last four quarters“.

The debt to GDP ratio reached the highest in history just before the 2008 collapse. It remains in this record territory and is just as unsustainable now as it was in 2008:

“… the absolute level of debt to GDP, however, refuses to go under 350%; it has now started rising again but is entirely coming from two sectors — business credit and the Federal Government.”

Consumers reduced their debt levels, although probably not enough. They are still strapped with more debt than many can properly service. Consumption, as a result, has dampened as more income goes to debt service and less debt is added. That appears to be a condition that should prevail for several more years.

Remember, the announced reason for the loose Fed policy was to drive consumption. As Denniger observed:

“… this so-called “expansion” driven by ZIRP and deficits has a use-by date that has expired and we are now trying to evade the fact that the fish is well into the “stinks up the joint” stage.”

Obviously, it has not worked. (Read Denniger’s article to view most of his observations in chart format.)

Desperate Government

Government continues to borrow and spend in an effort to hide the truly rotten condition of the economy. This action was begun under the guise of stimulating a recovery. It is obvious that it has not worked. It was obvious to some that it could never work.

Despite its obvious failure, theft from future generations continues.

There are two main reasons for this, in my opinion:

  1. To hide from the people how desperate the economic situation truly is.
  2. To enable government to continue its current level of spending which cannot be funded via tax revenues or real market Treasury sales (certainly not at current interest rates; perhaps at no reasonable  interest rate).

Government has exhausted its faux solutions. Nothing they do, except reduce spending, can help the economy. Reducing spending means another Great Depression and the exposure of the economic scam they have been running. Thus, spending will likely continue as will the Federal Reserve enabling, euphemistically called quantitative easing.

A Fly In The Ointment

There is a limit on how long the fraud continues. The government is in what is known as a “debt death spiral”. They must borrow money to repay prior debts. It is as if they are using their Visa Card to make an American Express payment. The rate of new debt additions dwarf any rate of growth the economy can possibly achieve. The end is certain, only its timing is unknown.

Once interest rates begin to rise, and they will, it is game over. Short-term Treasury interest rates are normally 3% with no inflation. In an inflationary environment, a premium for expected inflation is tacked on to that 3%.

Under today’s conditions, ST Treasuries could easily rise to 6 – 9%. The low end of the range represents a rise in rates of more than 5.5%. If the debt outstanding, most of which is short-term, is $17 Trillion, that would…[represent] a rise in interest expense of close to $1 Trillion annually. That would be added to deficits which are expected to be around a Trillion dollars per year.  The high end of the range would produce a deficit in excess of $2.5 Trillion per year.

At the low end of the interest rate range, deficits would exceed more than 10% of GDP, putting us right up there with the sick European countries. At the high end, we would be like Greece without its glorious history and climate.

It gets worse than the above numbers convey. When interest rates rise, the economy will contract and probably severely. Then cries for more stimulus would be heard. An additional Trillion dollars or so would likely be added to the deficit, although many would want multiples of that. In either case, we become Greece on steroids.

Another Fly In The Ointment

There are those who say the U.S. government cannot go broke because it has a printing press. They argue that the level of deficits don’t matter because the U.S. can just print more money. Monetary fraud, which this is, also has a limit.

Only paper and ink limit the amount of currency the government can print. However, government does not control the value of the money which is determined by the public.  Printing money depreciates the value of money (otherwise known as inflation). Market forces (economic actors) determine what this value is via supply and demand interaction.

When money is expected to buy less tomorrow than it does today, people will spend it sooner. This drives inflation even higher. Ludwig von Mises described this end phase as a crack-up boom:

“Credit expansion can bring about a temporary boom but such a fictitious prosperity must end in a general depression of trade, a slump.

The boom produces impoverishment. But still more disastrous are its moral ravages. It makes people despondent and dispirited. The more optimistic they were under the illusory prosperity of the boom, the greater is their despair and their feeling of frustration.”

Mises spent much of his life studying money, the business cycle and inflation. He correctly identified the choice that now stands before our political class…:

“There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit (debt) expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit (debt) expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”

In the event of the total catastrophe, savings and fixed income become worthless. The middle class of a country is wiped out in terms of wealth. Poverty abounds except at the top where those with large wealth and insider information are able to protect themselves and enhance their real wealth. Inflation does not destroy wealth; it merely redistributes it.

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How Does It End?

Neither ending is attractive, but opportunities for one or the other have been squandered. Sadly, the decision as to which route is taken is in the hands of our criminal political class. Their behavior suggests that they will do whatever it takes to continue the charade. They want to maintain their scam for as long as they can.. If they are successful, a crack-up boom is coming. History shows this ending in most all countries in our condition.

[Editor’s Note: The author’s views and conclusions in the above article are unaltered and no personal comments have been included to maintain the integrity of the original post. Furthermore, the views, conclusions and any recommendations offered in this article are not to be construed as an endorsement of such by the editor.]

*http://www.economicnoise.com/2013/06/10/smoke-and-mirrors-running-out-depression-to-follow/

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One comment

  1. Great article!

    While Seniors on Social security cannot get to refinance because they don’t have income the Ultra rich can get almost ZERO interest loans, something even those going to College cannot qualify for! I bet Senator Warren and sanders don’t know this….

    More pipe dreams from the FED, what are they smoking?

    How will things start getting better when over 100 MILLION are unemployed and the Big Banks decline to give loans to all to those on fixed incomes like Seniors who now cannot refinance because they don’t have income!

    If you believe things will get better then you must be one of the Ultra Wealthy who can do what they want, when they want…

    GOP supports Big Banks, Not Most Americans:
    http://bigstory.ap.org/article/us-banks-report-record-earnings-403b-q1