By Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar, Norway
"Madness is rare in individuals - but in groups, political parties, nations, and
eras it's the rule." (Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche)
And no madness is worst than greed. Every so often people assume that somehow
they can make money out of the thin air. The most famous one was the Tulip mania
of 1636-1637 in Netherland and the most recent one was the "dotcom" bubble of
1995-2001 (on March 10th, 2000 the NASDAQ peaked at 5132.52). Today we are
witnessing the beginning of the end of the real estate bubble.
In every case, the madness begins with those who have high tolerance for
financial risk. That is to say they are rich and can afford greater financial
loss than others. They speculate and make money, lots of money. Soon the less
wealthy see this and join the crowd and before you know it the whole country is
involved.
When President Bush entered office he gave one trillion dollars (tax cut) to the
wealthy. In effect he increased the tolerance for financial risk of the wealthy
individuals and companies even further. Later, he started the Iraq war, pouring
billions of dollars into the economy. One should not forget that when the US
government spends about $2 billion a week in Iraq, most of that money finds its
way back into the US economy (salaries, armament, etc). But all these monies
were borrowed money (deficit spending), and all the growth and feeling of well
being was illusory.
The money pumped into the economy had to find some channel for investment. So
banks and financial institutions began to push money in hope of getting
incredible returns. Easy credit was the solution. You want to buy a house? No
problem, we finance 90% of it. You want to have a new car? No problem, we give
you a loan. This push suddenly made it possible for millions of people to buy
houses, putting pressure on the housing market. House prices sky-rocketed,
increasing the illusion of increasing wealth, which in turn allowed people to
borrow more money. All the time, banks and credit institutions were jubilant at
the sight of extraordinary returns on their investments. A normal credit company
charges around 18% to 23% on the dollar while they borrow the same money for 8%
to 9%. It is a great business. The banks also had a good time. Cheap money was
lent to people backed by assets that were appreciating in value. The risks were
spread by selling mortgages to other banks and institutions. Before you knew it
every bank, insurance company and god knows who else were rushing in to take
their piece of the action.
Growth in housing construction represents a substantial part of general US
economic growth. So with easy credit and continuing increase in housing prices,
US showed a good growth rate, giving the illusion of well-being.
But as with Tulips and DotComs manias, there comes a time when there is no more
room for illusory growth and demand. The bubble bursts and asset prices crash.
The banks are left with depreciating asset guarantees for their loans and before
you know it the whole financial system is in trouble. Usually when this happens,
it takes a few years for the companies and individuals involved to go bankrupt,
after which the cycle starts anew. Hopefully with lessons learnt.
But this time it is different. When a recession starts, the government has a few
tools at its disposal to deal with the economic downturn: Interest rate, the
budget and war. It reduces interest rates to stimulate economic growth. It can
also start large infrastructure projects such road building, constructing
bridges etc, to reduce unemployment and stimulate the economy
(deficit-spending). There is another sure way of kick starting the economy and
that is WAR. Wars are good for businesses and reduce unemployment and stimulate
(for US) important parts of the economy.
However, all three tools have been already used prior to the recent recession.
US has huge trade deficit and is involved in two wars (Afghanistan and Iraq). It
has also reduced its tax revenues by giving huge tax-cuts to the rich. Large
trade deficit, low tax revenue, tremendous debt, wars and low interest rates
make it extremely difficult for the government to do much to help the economy.
If this was not enough its currency "the mighty dollar" is losing its position
as the preferred international reserve and trading currency. The Federal
Reserves keeps pumping dollars into the market, while at the same time keep
reducing interest rates. This means only two things, a devaluation of dollar and
an increasing inflation. Countries such as China, Japan, oil producing countries
and others keep their reserves in dollar. These reserves are in the order of
trillions of dollars. Imagine a 15% decline in value of dollar will translate to
$150 billion dollar loss for the Chinese government alone. How long will these
countries tolerate this loss is anyone's guess, but surely there comes a time
when these countries will react and begin to switch to other currencies. It is
then that we will see the real collapse of the US economy.
There is already some ominous sign of this. A few days ago, Venezuela declared
that it will no longer sell its oil in dollars. Currently there are Iran,
Venezuela, and Russia that have decided to trade their oil and gas in other
currencies. In addition, some Arab countries have started to de-peg their
currencies from dollar. For these countries peg to dollar has meant importing
inflation and they are trying to stabilise their economy. As dollar decreases in
value and more and more raw-material producers switch away from dollar, this
de-pegging will only increase.
Let us look at why this happens. China buys oil in Euro from Iran. It then
produces gadgets and sells it in dollar. Naturally the dollar prices of Chinese
goods increase. The US and others that use dollar or are pegged to dollar will
see an increase in prices of their imports which is passed to the consumers.
This means importing inflation. The countries that have pegged their currencies
to the dollar naturally do not wish to import inflation and cut their loss.
(Please note: raw materials in general are increasing in value, regardless of
the currency. There is not enough space here to discuss this matter in detail)
This will put further pressure on the dollar contributing to its decline. This,
of course is not good for the US consumers. When times were good (illusory) US
kept its inflation in check by importing goods from countries such as China,
India, and other places; where imports were paid with dollars. Now some stuff
has to be paid for in Yen and Euro both of which are appreciating in value
against the dollar. At the same time oil and gas prices have increased
tremendously, not only in dollar term but also in other currencies. All these
things mean that US has to pay many more dollars for the goods that it imports.
In simple terms, US' inflation is rising rapidly. In my opinion, the US
government is not telling the American people the real truth, fearing further
collapse in confidence.
The outlook for the US economy
When recession hits, the government usually starts deficit spending to increase
employment. At the same time the interest rates are reduced to stimulate
economic growth. United States is now in an unenviable position of entering
recession with very low interest rates, huge deficit and declining dollar.
Already in August 2006 I warned about the coming financial crisis (please read
"U.S. and The Coming Financial Crisis"). The following is an excerpt from that
article: "The current account deficit of over 7 per cent has long passed its
danger levels of 4-5 per cent. In 2005 the U.S. government paid $325 billion
dollars only in interest payments alone. Then there are the future obligations
such as Medicare, Social Security and government pensions. These obligations
amount to $54 trillion dollars. This huge problem worried the former Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan. He told congress: "As a nation, we may have
already made promises to coming generations of retirees that we will be unable
to fulfil"
As can be seen the government has not the ability to meet its existing financial
obligations to the American people, let alone starting infrastructure projects
to reduce unemployment or help the economy.
With regards to the interest rates, the Federal Reserves has very little room
for manoeuvre. Already the real interest rates are in negative territory (lower
than inflation), although the government and the experts say otherwise. Further
interest rate cuts will only increase inflation and devalues the shaky dollar
even further. But this is exactly what the Federal Reserves is doing. This is
most likely to rescue big financial institutions, the very institutions that
were earning huge profits from unsuspecting American consumers. In effect, the
Fed is abandoning the poor and helping the rich. If the government was serious
in helping the working American, it would have paid the money directly to the
people, so that they could pay their debt. Instead it is pouring hundreds of
billions of dollars into the banks. If you count the monies that have been
poured into the financial markets, you'll see that $160-$200 billion dollar tax
rebate to the people was only mere peanuts as compared to what banks and others
have received.
All in all, one can say that this recession, if it doesn't turn into a
depression, will be severe and will last at least 2 to 4 years. Now you must
realise that I am talking about the effects of the recession and not technical
recession. The recent technical recessions that we have seen is listed below:
·
January-July 1980: 6 months (worst quarter GDP Growth -7.8% )
·
July 1981-November 1982: 16 months (worst quarter GDP Growth -6.4%)
·
July 1990-March 1991: 8 months (worst quarter GDP Growth -3.0%)
·
March 2001-November 2001: 8 months (worst quarter GDP Growth -1.4%)
Technically a recession may last one year, but the effect of that recession on
families may last a decade. Some lose their homes, some their jobs, some
families will break-up and so on and so forth. The human misery of technical
recession lasts much longer than the recession itself. Anyway, if the price of
the houses is dropped by 40% in two years, how many years of growth will it take
to retake that 40%? Usually much longer than people think.
I wrote an article in September 2006 titled "Who Will Pay the US Debt". In this
article I explained who will be most affected by the coming financial crisis.
This is the direct excerpt from that article:
"The truth is that at the end of the day it is the American people that have to
pay. This will be in the form of higher taxes and reduced governmental services.
In other words lower living standards. The poor and the working poor do not have
anything to give. Their contribution will be in form of statistics. The number
of people living below poverty line will increase. They will suffer because they
rely on many services that will be cut or reduced. The rich will always find
some loop-hole to avoid paying the major part of their share. Even if their
wealth is reduced by 10%, they will see no hardship. This leaves us with the
Middle class. This group will be hit the hardest. They will see their taxes and
expenses increase simultaneously. A good portion will have to live on far less
than they are used to. Many will work longer hours just to stay solvent. Many
may also join the working poor. It all may sound rather apocalyptic but the
numbers do not lie. Politicians may avoid this problem for now, but sooner or
later someone has to pay the piper."
The World Economy
It is said that when the US sneezes the world catches cold. This was true before
but the world has started to think that it can decouple itself from the US
economy. Here the umbilical cord is the US dollar; once that is cut, slowly but
surely the decoupling will take place; with dire consequences for the US. As I
mentioned before, already some important oil producing nations have decided to
abandon the dollar. Others have decided to de-peg their currencies. Others such
as China have started thinking about reducing their reserves in dollars. Once
others begin to do the same the dollar will cease to be the international
reserve and trade currency of choice. Meanwhile, major trading partners have to
just bite the bullet and accept the consequences of holding to the dollar.
You know the saying that if you owe the bank one hundred thousand dollars you
are in trouble, but if you owe the bank one hundred million dollars, the bank is
in trouble. Currently US owes foreigners over two trillion dollars. In addition
many trillions of dollars are also held in foreign central banks. These
countries are in trouble and they will try hard to stabilise the US economy, if
only for saving their own money.
But they don't do this out of love. They just need stability to reduce their
dollar holdings gradually and hence save as much of their reserves as possible.
If they mention this openly, the dollar will collapse over-night and they lose.
So the long-term plan would be to reduce their exposure to the dollar as
gradually and as quietly as possible. This of course doesn't mean that the value
of dollar will not fluctuate; it simply means that over time dollar will become
just like any other currencies and will be treated similarly. The Federal
Reserves will no longer be able to just print money and refuse to publish the M3
statistics.
US will also need to begin building reserves in other currencies. Today US
dollar has no backing. People accept dollar on faith alone. Imagine if that
faith suddenly disappears. Will you exchange 1 kg of green paper for 1000
Microwaves? I doubt it.
But meanwhile the world's economy will experience the negative effects from the
US economic downturn. The most affected areas will be China and other Asian
"emerging" economies and European Union.
The case for the European Union is straight forward. A flight from dollar to
Euro makes the EU's export much more expensive, just when one of its biggest
trading partners "US" goes into recession. European Union will also feel the
pains of financial crisis of the US. Many EU financial institutions had invested
in US and now they will have to accept the losses. So we will see a down ward
trend in Europe, but not as severe as the one in US. In addition European
Central Bank has still a lot of room for manoeuvre. It can reduce interest rates
substantially. EU also has smaller total deficit than US. Most importantly, most
of the EU countries have solid social security nets in place which will dampen
the effects on their citizens.
China on the other hand lacks this social security net, but has large foreign
reserves. Most of this reserve has been the result of its exports. Last year its
trade surplus with US was over $200 billion. This surplus will diminish
substantially over the coming year, unless of course the US continues to spend
the money that it doesn't have. But in general, a recession in US and a slowing
economy in EU will impact China negatively. Its exports will decline and its
unemployment will increase, something that the Chinese government is very
sensitive to. China suffers from double digit unemployment rate, something that
the Chinese government is reluctant to discuss openly. For example in 2004 the
RAND estimated the actual Chinese unemployment to be 23%. Things haven't
improved that much since then. Even if the unemployment rate was down to 15%, it
still presents a very large number.
So China will most likely embark on large infrastructure projects to keep
unemployment levels stable. The government will also try to improve its social
security programs and pay more attention to the interior of the country, where
the benefits of double digit growth has not reached yet. The economic growth
will also be reduced to single digits, relieving some pressure off the oil
prices.
India will fare worse than China simply because its population growth is higher
than China while it lacks the Chinese reserves and resources. According to the
Indian government forecast, India needs to create 10 million new jobs per year
to keep its unemployment rate steady. But others put that figure at 15 million.
An Indian national report on employment situation has warned that nearly 30% of
the country's 716 million-strong workforce will be without jobs by 2020. This of
course is a conservative estimate based on continued solid economic growth;
something that, at least with the current economic outlook, is highly unlikely.
Stock-market: The Near Term-outlook
The outlook as you have guessed is not good. I have been waiting for this crash
since mid 2006 and what kept it from happening was what Greenspan called the
"irrational exuberance" of the investors. The market, especially the US markets,
will plunge further. I see Dow Jones below 11500 and Nasdaq at 1900. The full
picture of financial crisis is still hidden and full cost of the coming bailouts
will not be known till autumn.
Of course this is not written in stone. The US government may come to its senses
and decides to act responsibly and allow many companies and banks to go under.
It may try to support dollar. It may try to cut the budget deficit or the trade
deficit. It may even decide that its war in Iraq was not and is not such a good
idea and withdraw its troops. It may even try to get friendly with Venezuela and
Iran, thereby reduce both the price of oil and pressure on the dollar. The truth
is that it is the US president that can do these things and not the Federal
Reserves. We just have to wait for the elections and see who is elected as the
next president.
It is my opinion that no other US president has ever damaged United States as
much as George Bush, and he will be remembered by both the Americans and others
as one of the most unpopular US presidents ever. But he is at the end of his
second term and has only a year to destroy the rest of the economy. Let us hope
that he will be busy with other things and doesn't do more damage. Let us also
hope that the American people will not fall for promises of further tax cuts and
glories in battle fields abroad. Neither brings peace and prosperity.
About the author:
Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar lives in Norway. He is a management consultant and a
contributing writer for many online journals. He can be contacted by e-mail at:Bakhtiarspace-articles@yahoo.no
Copyright Abbas Bakhtiar, all rights reserved.
... Payvand News - 03/17/08 ... --