Updated April 2014
In light of the fact that we are now facing yet another debt ceiling brouhaha and with the Fed grappling with its own tapering issues at the same time, I thought that a few quotes from David Stockman's "The Great Deformation" are particularly pertinent. Given that the mainstream media is playing up the political divisions over this issue rather than the practical problems that ever-mounting debt will place on the economy and that it is wonderful that the stock market is reacting positively to the continuation, however brief, of QE, we are being distracted from the real and very serious issues that are looming.
In light of the fact that we are now facing yet another debt ceiling brouhaha and with the Fed grappling with its own tapering issues at the same time, I thought that a few quotes from David Stockman's "The Great Deformation" are particularly pertinent. Given that the mainstream media is playing up the political divisions over this issue rather than the practical problems that ever-mounting debt will place on the economy and that it is wonderful that the stock market is reacting positively to the continuation, however brief, of QE, we are being distracted from the real and very serious issues that are looming.
For those of you who aren't aware,
David Stockman was the former Director of the Office of Management and Budget
under the Reagan Administration from 1981 to 1985. He was very
controversial in Washington, resigning in August 1985 over his views that
government should be smaller and that government spending growth should be
reduced in line with decreases in taxation.
Let's open with some excerpts from
an interview on Mises.
In that interview, Mr. Stockman notes that the Federal Reserve, under the
guidance of both Mr. Greenspan and Mr. Bernanke have turned America's central
bank into "a machine for fine-tuning every aspect of the economy"
through an acceleration of the money supply as we can see here:
...and here:
In its original form, the Federal
Reserve was to function as the "bankers' bank" rather than
functioning as an organization that manipulates everything from mortgage rates
to employment levels to economic growth as it does under its current Chairman and his predecessor. Mr. Stockman claims that the financial crisis of 2008 - 2009 was, in
large part, the product of the Fed's bubble policy. He refers to the
panic of September 2008 as the "Blackberry Panic" where Washington
policy makers watched the value of Wall Street stocks plummet on their
smartphones. In reality, the impact of those falling prices had little to
do with Main Street America, rather, it impacted the one percent. Here's
a quote from his Mises interview:
"The
panic and bailouts that followed were really about protecting the bonuses and
incomes of very wealthy and politically well-connected managers at banks and
other heavily leveraged businesses that were eventually deemed too big to fail.
What followed was a massive transfer of wealth from the taxpayers and
middle-class savers, in the form of bailouts and zero interest rates on bank
deposits imposed by the Fed, to the so-called One Percent.
As I show
in my book, none of this was necessary to save the larger economy, since the
losses that would have taken place as a result of the collapse would have been
largely limited to Wall Street. What the bailouts did was preserve the wealth
of wealthy and powerful Wall Street players. Meanwhile, we’ve seen no real
economic recovery in the rest of the economy.
This
transfer of wealth continues, by the way, in the form of relentlessly low
interest rates, and an ongoing war by the Fed on safe and stable investment
tools such as savings accounts and low-risk bonds. Indeed, this is a deliberate
policy to get people away from these safer investments, and to get them
investing in more volatile and higher yield investments. The idea is that the
Fed can somehow force bigger returns on these riskier investments, and this
will lead to a wealth effect. People will then think they’re richer, and we can
then spend ourselves into a recovery. This is a terrible doctrine, but that’s
what rules Washington right now. It actively works against middle-class people
who want to work and save and invest their money responsibly and
conservatively."
Now, what
does Mr. Stockman have to say about the looming debt ceiling issue. Here
is a quote from his book:
"The proximate cause of
this recession waiting to happen is the federal government’s unfolding
encounter with Peak Debt. The latter is not a magical statistical point such as
a federal debt ratio of 100 percent of GDP, but a condition of permanent
crisis. From the failed election of 2012 forward, every dollar of additional
borrowing will induce new political and financial pressures while every dollar
of spending cuts and tax increases will further impair the rate of GDP growth.
The mainstream notion
that there is a choice between fiscal austerity and fiscal stimulus is wishful
thinking. It does not recognize that owing to the triumph of crony capitalism
and printing-press money America has become a failed state fiscally. Deficits
and debt have now reached the point where they are too large and too embedded
in social, economic, and political realities to be resolved. Accordingly, what
passes for fiscal governance will become a political gong show that will make
the New Deal contretemps pale by comparison.
What lies ahead is a
continuous, mad-cap cycling back and forth—virtually on an odd-even day
basis—between deficit cutting and fiscal stimulus to the GDP. Thus, deficit
cutting will be in play every twelve months or so in order to purchase enough
“conservative” votes to raise the federal debt ceiling by another trillion
dollars or so. Yet every upward increment will become harder to pass in the
House and Senate, ever the more so as the debt ceiling soon breaks above the
$20 trillion mark and begins to soar well above 100 percent of GDP.
The fact is, the great
unwashed masses on Main Street know full well that Washington is trifling with
national bankruptcy, so the debt ceiling votes have become the one clarifying
legislative moment in which they can demand a halt to the madness. Accordingly,
the template from the August 2011 debt ceiling crisis will become the recurring
framework of fiscal governance: in return for more debt ceiling, the reluctant
House and Senate majorities which are finally assembled will get a new package
of fiscal restraint in the form of targets, promises, and processes to develop
plans to implement budget savings.
Before the ink is even
dry on these deficit reduction packages, however, they will become part of the
permanent, rolling “fiscal cliff”; that is, a recurrent series of pending tax
and spending shocks that would cause negative GDP prints and adverse job
reports if implemented. In effect, the Main Street economy will appear to be
continuously confronted by the prospect of a “fiscal recession” or a dip in
activity because it will be viewed as too weak to absorb the tax increases and
spending cuts needed to close the nation’s yawning and unshakeable budget gap."
In large part, the
Fed's near-zero interest rate policies have allowed Washington to borrow as
though there is no tomorrow. Here is a graph showing the average interest rates on United States
federal debt between 2000 and 2013, using the month of October since it is the
end of the fiscal year (except 2013 when August was used):
Congress is living in
a low interest rate fantasy world, being lulled into a false sense of reality thanks
to the Fed's long-term bailout of Wall Street and the nation's banking sector.
Even a small overall interest rate rise of 1 percentage point would, at
the current debt level, add $167 billion in interest payments owing annually on
the current stock of debt.
You will note that Mr.
Stockman uses the term "Peak Debt" and notes that it is not a
"magical number" like 100 percent of GDP. Rather, he
suggests that it is a permanent crisis brought on as every dollar of additional
federal borrowing for stimulus creates pressures at the same time as cuts to
spending and tax increases are a necessity created by the mounting debt levels.
Stimulus measures will consume what little debt ceiling headroom there is
and deficit reduction packages will result in both lower economic growth and
dismal jobs reports. At the same time, households may become increasingly
concerned about their own futures in this uncertain economic environment and,
out of fear for their futures and the future of the social safety net, may push
the savings rate back back up to the double digit levels seen in the 1980s as
shown here:
This will put
additional pressure on economic growth. If the savings rate rises to its
8.5 percent historical average from its current level, approximately $600
billion annually will be removed from disposable personal income, adding to the
problem.
Thanks to the Fed and
Washington, it certainly appears like we are on the threshold of the Peak Debt
Twilight Zone where one economic policy interacts synergistically with another,
creating an even worse crisis than one would normally expect.
You continue to impress me with one great post after another, you are spot on. We have kicked this can down the road for a very long time and sooner or later the false financial system we have created will collapse under the weight of this debt. One of the reasons that we are so complacent is that these concerns and fears have been voiced for decades. In his book "A Time For Action" written in 1980 William Simon the former Secretary of the Treasury beat this same drum.
ReplyDeletehttp://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2012/09/a-time-for-action-1980.html
The math behind our massive government deficits is downright ugly. Sadly this and new dept is the only thing propelling the economy forward. This is not sustainable. More on a simple look at the actual math in the post below,
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/01/ugly-math-made-simple.html