Ron Paul Revolution: Taking on Ben Bernanke’s Rate Cut at the Washington Post

 

MONEY FOR NOTHING

Is Bailing Out Reckless Investors Wise? Don’t Bank on It.

By William R. Bonner and Lila Rajiva

Sunday, October 28, 2007; Page B04

Last summer, the bill started to come due on our debt-fueled economy. We should have let it — and let reckless speculators, subprime lenders and banks finally get what they had coming. But instead, the financial authorities let them off the hook. Rather than simply letting markets be markets, they bailed out both the fools and the knaves. We’ll all live to regret it.

At the moment of truth, the Federal Reserve cut the overnight cost of money in the United States (known as the Fed funds rate) by 0.5 percent. Meanwhile, the governor of the Bank of England also succumbed to temptation, infusing ¿10 billion into the British banking system. Next, the Fed let Citigroup and Bank of America increase the quantity of funds that federally insured banks could lend to their affiliates, many of which held risky mortgage debts. When investors, spooked by the subprime lending crisis, stampeded out, the affiliates ran short of cash. Then, just this month, Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. announced the creation of yet another fund, guaranteed by three major banks — a piece of folly that was no more than a bailout of the cash-strapped affiliates.

But bad investments do not become good ones just because a central bank lends more money to the investors who made the rash choices. Problems caused by too much credit do not disappear when you hand out even more credit. And the syndrome that such moves create only makes our economic woes worse.

Mervyn King, the head of the Bank of England, told Parliament that he had been initially reluctant to intervene in Britain‘s credit market because he feared the ” moral hazard” that might ensue. Moral hazard is the idea that eliminating all potential risks from an action encourages people to take excessive risks. King worried that when speculators think that they’ll be bailed out, they tend to take bigger chances. After all, why not go for broke when you’ve got the central bank behind you?

The same thought should have troubled Fed chief Ben S. Bernanke, but somehow America’s central bankers didn’t seem to share even the nascent qualms of the governor of the British bank. Instead, they blithely reversed four years of policy by lowering the Fed funds rate to 4.75 percent. Just a few weeks earlier, Bernanke had called inflation Public Enemy No. 1. Now, by cutting the cost of money (something he looks set to do again next week), he was inviting it to dinner. And by encouraging risky behavior, he was asking for trouble — and he’ll probably get it.

If people always behaved sensibly, they would borrow only what they could pay back. The economy would boom only when it was producing jobs, and not because it was awash in easy money. Industries would not glut their markets, and investors would not make daft decisions out of greed.

But people do make bad calls. They foul up. When the price of money rises and the economy contracts, their errors get corrected. That’s the good news. The bad news is that there are always enough people to argue that it’s the Fed’s job to ease the pain of such contractions. Those arguments have usually carried the day. Since World War II, the practice has been to use monetary policy to smooth the downside of the business cycle — lowering interest rates to make money easier to borrow.

What the economy faces now, however, is a far cry from what it has faced in the past. In the first 25 years after World War II, the average ratio in the U.S. economy of periods of growth to periods of recession was only about 5 to 1. Over the next 25 years, the downturns got softer and even less frequent. And now, we seem to have rollicked our way through an expansion longer than any in the preceding era. Either we are suddenly moving toward the perfection of mankind, or there’s a large batch of errors we’ve yet to clean up.

And the batch grows by the day. Never before have so many people owed so much money in so many different ways.

When you make a mistake with your own money, you may go broke, you may despair, you may even kill yourself. Not to sound callous, but the damage rarely goes much further than that. Make a mistake with borrowed money, on the other hand, and it sets off a chain reaction of losses. You lose money, the lender loses money, savers lose money and the investors who bought shaky financial instruments tied up with the original debt lose money.

This is where central banks are supposed to come in. At first, Mervyn King judged that adding a few more straws might break the British economy’s back. Then, under pressure, he decided to load on a whole other bale. He had called it right the first time.

In theory, a central bank is set up to keep economic order. But in practice, when central bankers intervene in the economy, it is a bit like intervening in a street brawl: Results can vary. Central banking is a pretty imprecise science. At best, it is marginally and occasionally effective; at worst, it is a disastrous fraud.

It’s easier to yield to temptation than to resist it. Paul Volcker, the Fed chief from 1979 to 1987, was the last one who could stomach a recession. Determined to correct the macroeconomic blunders of the 1970s, he jacked nominal interest rates up to 20 percent. Politicians were outraged, and the public was horrified. Volcker’s effigy was burned on the steps of the Capitol. But his forced correction worked: Inflation fell from 12 percent to 4 percent. After the smoke cleared, the U.S. economy was ready for its biggest boom ever.

But since Volcker left the Fed, interest rates have generally gone down, and American consumers have taken advantage of it to borrow and spend. In the process, they have become addicted to cheap money. Now total credit has grown from 150 percent of gross domestic product to 340 percent. In fact, Americans carry so much debt that if Bernanke were to raise interest rates even to 10 percent, as he clearly should, they’d probably scorch him for real.

There was a time not so long ago when it looked as though central planning might actually work. The figures coming out of the Soviet Union showed remarkable — almost unbelievable — progress. Later, it became clear that the numbers were rigged.

Looking at how cheap money is these days, one wonders: Are we following in the Russians’ footsteps? For although almost all economists now admit that markets do better than government bureaucrats at setting prices and allocating resources, central banks continue to rig the most important price of all: the price of money.

In the real world, you can’t create something out of nothing, and debts must always be paid — although not necessarily by the people who incurred them.

When the Bernankes of the world set the price of money too low, they set off an explosion of error. People build houses for buyers who can’t afford them, they add capacity for customers who don’t exist, they speculate on trends that are sure to end.

Don’t take our word for it; just open your eyes. What we see in the U.S. economy today is largely the consequence of the Fed’s wimpy decision to keep rates low after the micro-correction of 2000-01. The economy had walked backward for only a single quarter — not even enough to qualify as an official recession. Still, the Fed panicked, yanking rates down to an emergency low of 1 percent for more than a year. The result? The biggest housing boom in U.S. history, accompanied by more bad decisions than a joint session of Congress. Lenders over-lent. Consumers over-borrowed. Builders over-built. And the dollar crashed to its lowest level ever.

Instead of wiping out bad decisions, the Fed’s rate cuts keep the cheap money flowing, letting errors compound and spread. Instead of sticking the losses to the people who deserve them, it redistributes even bigger losses to bystanders: innocent savers, hapless householders and dollar-holding, dollar-earning chumps everywhere. That’s the problem with meddling in markets: Once you get started, it’s hard to stop.

William Bonner and Lila Rajiva are the co-authors of

“Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets.”

 

Econ-job: Could there be foreign exchange controls in store for the US?

“If an accelerating outflow of funds now held by foreigners inside the US were to start, it is a near certainty that at some point in this accelerating outflow, the US would act to institute a version of FOREIGN EXCHANGE CONTROLS. In effect, these would prohibit funds owned by foreigners from leaving the US. For all those who had lent to the US, that would be a global catastrophe.

The recent freeze-up in the global interbank payments system would be small potatoes in comparison because the flow of money across the world’s borders would also start to freeze up. Many smaller nations in this bind would promptly institute their own national versions of foreign exchange controls and some of them would simply seize American assets inside their borders and sell them in their own local markets, using the proceeds from the sale to compensate their nationals from the losses they had suffered from having their money blocked by the US. International trade and air travel would come to a shuddering halt. Factories beyond number would be standing still because required foreign components would not be arriving. Economically, most nations would be thrown backwards to function upon the productive means presently existing inside their own borders. Deep recessions and outright depressions would follow.”

More by Bill Buckler on the US dollar showdown here.

Econ-job: The Good Debt Trap…

Hunted this up from a year back — I guess I was feeling a bit prescient about the present debt crisis. Penny was declared persona non grata by the powers that be and banished to the Baltimore Chronicle from whence I reproduce it as my contribution to the succour of the indigent middle-class.

The Good Debt Trap No one Talks About

by Penny Whys

In America today, it would be hard to find even a borderline member of the human species who had not slapped up hard against the phenomenon of home-as-honey-pot.

In our last little chat, I talked about the addiction that drives consumers to spend in America, an addiction driven by a desperate loss of control over their financial future. No longer is a house, an education, or good health care a genteel burden your average upstanding citizen can shoulder on his own. Instead, it has become debt bondage….life-long servitude. And the enslaved ones yank at their chains in the only way they know—by recklessly throwing away money on consumer goods they hope will compensate them for their slavery. They buy to fill the queasy emptiness unsettling the pit of their stomachs. But salvation by stuff is not in any gospel that Penny ever read. King Solomon—he of the supernumerary wives—had plenty of stuff too. But didn´t he sigh wearily that it was all vanity? Or was that the preacher in Ecclesiastes? Twenty years out of school, these things can get foggy.

The point is, the urge to look outside yourself for solutions to problems that stem within yourself is the source of addictive behavior. And buying stuff you don´t need is the definition of looking outside your self for solutions.

But Penny realizes that not all stuff is stuff you don´t need. In fact, the largest part of the modern consumer´s debt in the United States and the source of her perpetual anxiety is necessary debt, “good debt.” The kind that she feels proud to own up to, the kind that she staggers under for the natural term of her adult life with the game smile of a Christian being escorted into the catacombs. All for a good cause, it says, before it sets into rigor mortis.

Now, anyone who has picked up a newspaper or even switched on his TV has surely absorbed every nuance of the first of the “good debt” traps lying in wait for the unwary—the great housing hustle of the early twenty-first century. Actually, in America today it would be hard to find even a borderline member of the human species who had not slapped up hard against the phenomenon of home-as-honey-pot. And we also haven’t lacked for warnings about the advanced state of deterioration of another “good debt” trap—our health care system—since überwench Hillary decided to play Nurse Ratched with it in the boisterous days of William Jefferson’s regnum.

But the third “good debt” trap—the gargantuan price tag of education, lower, higher, and all sizes in between—seems to have slipped through our fiscal early-warning system, no doubt because a mega-tsunami of debt suddenly becomes manageable, worthy, and indeed downright righteous when it’s driven not just by vulgar splurging on run-of-the-mill consumer junk but by the sweat-and-blood payments of the solid citizenry on something so rarefied (and thus obviously much too elevated for us plebes to debate) as education.

Well—time to debate.

First, college costs rise faster than inflation and have done so for the last ten years. According to the report, “Trends in College Pricing 2005,” of the College Board, a non-profit association of 4,500 schools, colleges and universities, tuition costs at four-year private colleges grew at about the same rate as in 2004—5.9 percent—to $21,235.

The rate fell at four-year public universities to 7.1 percent (from 10.5), but the actual costs still increased by $5,491.

Second, Kal Chaney, author of Paying for College Without Going Broke, forecasts that “For the foreseeable future, college cost increases are going to exceed inflation…”

Add room and board to tuition, and the cost of a private college averages out to $29,026 per year, and at a four-year public college to $12,127. Over four years, that works out to the price of a modest bungalow and condominium. At least in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

But of course, it’s completely worthwhile delivering this samurai chop to the family piggy bank because when Junior grows up to be a hair-transplant surgeon, bankruptcy lawyer, used car salesman, or—better yet—beltway lobbyist, it pays off big time. That’s the theory, anyway. But what the theory overlooks is that counting on a professional in the family means doubling the bill to fit in professional school fees. Three years of education at one of the nation’s tonier law schools, for instance, and you rack up at least a hundred twenty grand on the ..er..bar tab. So now we’re looking at something over two hundred grand for the whole business.

But so what? Aren’t we all worth it? Don’t we all deserve the very best? Don’t we love us enough to do this for us?

Apparently, vast numbers of college-intoxicated adults think so. But Penny—who has eyeballed more ivy halls than she cares to admit to—is here to tell you otherwise. No. Don´t do it. Think again. Need to get a job? There are much quicker ways. Need to make more money? Take that college fund and buy an education franchise…or a gas station. Need to get an education? Just remember it was Mark Twain who said he never let his schooling get in the way of his education. And he wasn´t kidding. Twain, Jack London, Benjamin Franklin, George Gershwin, Galileo…just a few of the geniuses who never finished college…and never needed to.

There is no longer any need to accept debt—even respectable debt—as a badge of honor of your socio-economic aspirations. From now on, the highest mark for smarts will go to those who avoid any kind of debt.

And even if you insist on going, there is no reason whatsoever for contracting a terminal case of insolvency.. Penny knows several ways you can get yourself a college degree for substantially less than the going rate, and do it with a lot less effort.

The point is from now on, the highest mark for smarts will go to those who avoid any kind of debt.

Next time: How to get an education without getting into debt….or even into your car.

Until then,
Penny, giving you the whys of thrift, not just the hows.


Penny Whys is a column of personal finance written by Lila Rajiva, a political journalist and writer for the Daily Reckoning, a libertarian financial magazine headquartered in Baltimore.

Econ-job: Should Big Ben strike….and strike…and strike again?

Pimco’s Bill Gross takes the minority position that Bernanke is right to side with US home-gambling and risk a run on the dollar:

“PIMCO’s view is that a U.S. Fed easing cycle historically has required a destination of 1% real short rates or lower. Under a conservative assumption of 2½% inflation, that implies Fed Funds at 3¾% or so over the next 6-12 months. Actually that’s only two, 50 basis point reductions, something that could, but probably won’t, be accomplished by year-end. Don Kohn’s asymmetric elevator will likely be interrupted by false hopes of a housing bottom, fears of a dollar crisis, or misinterpreted one month’s signs of employment gains and faux economic strength. The downward path of home prices, however, will dominate Fed policy over the next several years as will the lingering unwind of related financial structures and derivatives that have yet to be discovered by the public, and marked to market by their conduit holders.Know nothing? Perhaps they now know more than I or Jim Cramer gave them credit for on that raucous day in August. If they do, however, their options are limited by Republican political orthodoxy, the receding willingness of the private sector to extend credit, and a still exuberant global economy. What do they know? I suspect at the very least they know they’re in a pickle, and a sour one at that.

Your betting we get below 3.75% analyst,

 

Breaking up is hard..er…easy…to do

WASHINGTON (CNN) — Sen. Joe Biden has something to gloat about at Wednesday night’s New Hampshire presidential debate.

The Deleware Democrat’s amendment to the Defense Authorization Bill calling for a fundamental change of policy in Iraq passed the Senate overwhelmingly Wednesday, 75-23.

The non-binding resolution is based on Biden’s long-talked about plan to divide Iraq into three regions based on its ethnic makeup — Sunni, Shia, and Kurd….”

Comment:

The British empire went in and made a fake state out of three rival groups in the Middle East. Now the US empire goes in and breaks that all up. Iraqis, of course, had nothing to do with it either time. They didn’t like it then, and they won’t like it now.

As an admirer of small states (the smaller the better), I am all for breaking up multiethnic empires, along whatever lines people want. Only, I would rather it happened voluntarily and peacefully and not through civil war — as in the former Yugoslavia — or through implosion – as in the ex- USSR. Peacefully, let them all break up — including India.

So, the question I want to put to Biden is only this. When is he going to start working on breaking up the United States?

Then we’d go back to being what we were supposed to be —  a federation of states….

Marc Faber: beat inflation with gold (outside the US) and rural real estate

“His [Marc Faber’s] thesis is simple. As the Fed reneges on its traditional duty of domestic price stability, Faber reckons the US central bank is becoming ever more a standard bearer for Wall Street and for key indices such as the Dow and the S&P500.

If they ever look like falling, the Fed will simply accelerate the operations of the printing presses. When too much money is chasing too few assets, prices rise. However, in real terms, there is little point in buying US assets, points out Faber, who estimates that in Euro terms US growth has been anaemic, if not negative, since the late 1990s. “Investors have to look for assets which cannot multiply as fast as the pace at which the Fed prints money,” he says.

Consequently, gold is a great bet, along with other precious metals. Faber recommends actually holding physical gold in gold-friendly countries such as Hong Kong, India and Switzerland. He counsels against holding gold in the US for fear that it might be nationalised by the government. He is still bullish on other commodities in the face of global shortages and booming Asian economies. He’s also bullish, as it were, on war. “Rising commodity prices often trigger wars – which in turn cause commodity prices to go ballistic.”

One thing seemed to be clear from Faber’s speech. If things continue along the current trajectory, the argument that Western financial and information technology expertise is a substitute for Asian R&D, a high savings rate and engineering expertise will have been comprehensively discredited….”

More here.

My Comment:

Faber is a leading financial guru, but I would say this is advice for people who know what they are doing…

You can lose money trading in and out of gold even in a gold bull market if you don’t.

It’s also worth noting that many people (and I take their side) think gold will go down before it goes up and that over the next year, if (and this is a big if, of course), the Fed does not embark on a reckless rate cutting course, gold will probably go down as a commodity in a general deflation, before eventually rising as big-time inflation sets in. But that’s simply one estimate.

Jim Rogers elsewhere suggests selling dollars and bonds immediately and getting into agricultural commodities (except wheat), Chinese renminbi and even Japanese yen. Again, I don’t know what time- frame is meant in that advice.

The long and short of it is that the government is fleecing middle- class (and lower middle-class) savers to service the improvident rich.

That is the official hall mark of a third-world country (and I should know, shouldn’t I?).

Of course, the average broker, banker, and stock tout will tell you differently. But ask yourself, who do you think knows better? The world’s leading investment experts or salesmen in the financial industry, who probably haven’t paid off their homes yet and may be writhing under as much debt as the poorest sub-prime holder?

Econ-job: Bill Anderson on recession and the Golden Calf of Keynsianism

“One of the continuing debates throughout modern economic history (modern meaning the past 300 years or so) has been that of the relationship between production and consumption, the source of what we call Say’s Law. [Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406): “When tax assessments and imposts upon the subjects are low, the latter have the energy and desire to do things. Cultural enterprises grow and increase, because the low taxes bring satisfaction. When cultural enterprises grow, the number of individual imposts and asssessments mounts. In consequence, the tax revenue, which is the sum total of (the individual assessments), increases].

This is what separated Say and his allies from Thomas Malthus and the Classical economists from Marx and his followers. The debate went on into the 20th Century, with the Austrians taking one side, and the Keynesians the other.

The basics of the debate are this: One side (Say and those who followed him) says that consumption and production are directly related, and that consumption flows from production, or “supply creates its own demand.” The source of one’s consumption, they argue, is one’s production. On larger scales, economies that produce much also are going to be societies that engage in the most consumption of goods…..”

More on why the party really is over, from a look at the historical evidence, presented at the Mises site by Bill Anderson.

And at the art houses, according to Rick Ackerman,

the festivities are also slowing down:

“Ms. Sharp may be right about the emetic effect a shakeout would have on all of the second-rate stuff being snapped up these days by collectors with bigger money and pretensions than taste. However, we think she may be grossly underestimating how very bloated prices are for Picassos and Warhols. Indeed, at $50 million to $70 million a pop, the best works have quite a bit of room to fall, especially if the global financial bubble pops. Will the owners of such works feel as passionate about them if they decline in value by 50 percent or more? We may get a hint in the coming weeks, since an unusual number of works are headed to auction. Our guess is that if prices merely fail to rise, let alone drop, the smell of fear will become as pungent in the art world as it already is in the bond houses…..”

And, finally, we know it’s closing time from the writing on the wall…er…house...at Bloomberg.

“Sales of previously owned U.S. homes fell in August to a five-year low, extending a slump that threatens to stall economic growth.

Purchases declined 4.3 percent, less than forecast, to an annual rate of 5.5 million, the National Association of Realtors said in Washington. Sales dropped 13 percent compared with a year earlier and median home prices rose 0.2 percent to $224,500.”

Predictably, the dollar slumped toward 78 on the index.

Econ-job: planning your finances will get harder…

“There are two fundamental problems with long-term financial planning under the regime of irredeemable currency. First, and most obvious, it is impossible to forecast the future purchasing power of money. Irredeemable currencies don’t float, they sink. At what rate, though, is unknowable. Second, and less well understood, is the systemic reliance on intermediaries. Hold financial assets, for instance, and you are beholden to the leveraged broker or dealer with which you have an account. Eliminating risk means eliminating the middleman, but this has become increasingly impractical by design. An individual’s future financial well-being depends to a large extent on dealing with these two problems successfully….”

More by Stephen La Chance.

And here is Jim Rogers on where you need to be — in agricultural commodities (except for wheat) 

Wanted: Alan-on for people who enable credit binging….

And then wash their hands off the matter when the drunk

needs hospitalization:

Former Federal Reserve chairman, Alan Greenspan, aka “the Maestro” tells all from his debt-bed…..but all too late:

“• Fingers complex credit instruments and the ratings agencies that recommended them as among the main culprits for the mayhem.

• Admits he may have cut interest rates too low.

• Forecasts the dollar will continue to decline because of the size of America’s current account deficit.

• Defends himself for commenting on the economy on numerous occasions since stepping down at the Fed.

Mr Greenspan argues that inflation has been under control for the past decade and a half because of the rise of countries such as China, which have pumped cheap imports into the West. However, he warns that this effect will soon peter out.

“Markets are going to start turning round and inflationary pressures are going to start to build.”

More at the Daily Telegraph.

On a more positive note, vote for those who actually stood for free market principles at the Free Market Hall of Fame.

“Where members of the freedom movement will have the opportunity to vote on individuals contributing most to the success and advancement of free markets and free people around the globe. The categories will include the following:

1. Academic economists
2. Journalists and writers
3. Business leaders
4. Legislators and government officials
5. Think tanks

More at the freedomfest site.