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FEATURE ARTICLE |
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How Far to the Wall?
Terry Coxon Date: 04-18-2012 Subject: Casey Research Articles Decades of manipulation by the Federal Reserve (through its creation
of paper money) and by Congress (through its taxing and spending) have
pushed the US economy into a circumstance that can't be sustained but
from which there is no graceful exit. With few exceptions, all of
the noble souls who chose a career in "public service" and who've
advanced to be voting members of Congress are committed to chronic
deficits, though they deny it. For political purposes, deficits work.
The people whose wishes come true through the spending side of the
deficit are happy and vote to reelect. The people on the borrowing side
of the deficit aren't complaining, since they willingly buy the Treasury
bonds and Treasury bills that fund the deficit. And taxpayers generally
tolerate deficits as a lesser evil than a tax hike. Deficits are
politically convenient for a second reason. They can take a little of
the sting out of a recession. That effect is transient, and it's not
strong â€" more like weak tea than Red Bull. But it can be enough to help a
struggling politician get past the next election. Yes, sometimes
there's a big turnover in the personnel, such as with the 2010 election,
when a platoon of self-styled anti-deficit commandoes parachuted into
Congress. As soon as they had taken their seats, they began offering
proposals to deal with the government's trillion-dollar revenue
shortfall. But none of the proposals were serious. They were merely
tokens intended to make politicians wearing anti-deficit uniforms look
less ridiculous. Cut a ginormous $2 billion out of this program and a
great big $500 million out of that program. Reduce spending by half a
trillion dollars... over ten years. Balance the budget to the penny, but
later. No one proposed anything close to dealing with the deficit now. So
stay up as late as you like on election night to see who wins, but the
deficits aren't going to stop anytime soon. The debt mountain will keep
growing. The part of it the government acknowledges is now approaching
$16 trillion, which is more than the country's gross domestic product
for a year. Obviously, the debt can't keep growing faster than the
economy forever, but the people in charge do seem determined to find out
just how far they can push things. Inflation as Savior At
some point, personal and institutional portfolios will be glutted with
Treasury securities, and the government will be forced to pay higher and
higher rates to induce investors to take more of the paper â€" and the
accelerating interest cost will make the deficits that much bigger. When
that happens, the problem will be feeding on itself. The only way for
the politicians to buy time will be through price inflation, to reduce
the real burden of the debt, and whether they admit it or not, inflation
is what they will be praying for. The Federal Reserve will hear
their prayer. It is 100% committed to protecting the value of the
dollar, except when it is debasing the dollar in an effort to cure a
recession or prevent a depression. It's been doing that important work
since 1971, when the dollar slipped the leash of the gold standard. With
every downturn in the economy, the Fed speeds up the creation of new
cash. Each time, the economy does seem to recover, but the economic
distortions that caused the recession are allowed to linger to one
degree or another. They accumulate like the grotesqueries in the picture
of Dorian Gray and predispose the economy to further and deeper
slowdowns. For the last three years, the Fed has been performing
an additional service to help keep the system going. Whether or not you
believe that suppressing interest rates with newly conjured dollars
stimulates the economy in a healthy way, the practice certainly makes it
easier for the Treasury to sell bonds to cover its deficit. And as
total debt grows, the Fed will be biased more and more toward printing
in order to retard any rise in interest rates. In short, the cost of
postponing the bankruptcy of a government engaged in nonstop deficit
spending will be progressively higher rates of inflation. There is no
inherent stopping point in the process short of hyperinflation and the
destruction of the currency. Will it actually go that far? My
guess is that it won't, but that's a guess about politics, not about
economics. At some point, perhaps at an inflation rate of 30% or 40%,
the turmoil that comes with runaway inflation will become so painful
that the public will accept, and the politicians will find it wise to
deliver, a balanced budget and a return to a stable currency. But even a
year or two of such high inflation rates, while not a Weimar
experience, would be a calamity. Most people's savings would be
destroyed. Most businesses would be badly damaged, and most investment
portfolios would be ruined. It would be like the economy hitting a wall. But
when will the economy reach the wall toward which it is headed? Not
soon, I believe, but in the meantime there will be plenty of excitement. The
twin motors driving the economy toward the wall are deficits and money
printing. Let's take them in turn and try to foresee their pace. Danger Zone When
federal debt recently overtook a year's worth of gross domestic
product, the US government crossed over into the zone at which, by
historical experience, governments can get caught in a debt trap. High
debt raises doubt about creditworthiness; doubt raises borrowing costs;
higher borrowing costs add to deficits and day by day to the total debt
burden; growing debt increases doubt about credit worthiness. Once in
the cycle, it is hard to escape. But Debt = GDP is not a formula
for certain doom. It's possible to spend some time in a bad neighborhood
without getting shot. Japan's ratio of government debt to GDP, to cite
an extreme example, is over 230%. Perhaps the Japanese government is
living on borrowed time as well as on borrowed money, but it is still
able to find buyers for its debt at low yields. The US may outdo
Japan's ratio before hitting the wall. The capital markets will tolerate
an especially high debt-to-GDP ratio for the US for a simple reason â€"
it's safer than most other places. It doesn't get invaded, it doesn't
get blown up in wars, it doesn't have revolutions and it hasn't
destroyed its currency recently. Still, there is a limit to what the
capital markets will tolerate. How rapidly the US ratio of debt to
GDP will grow depends on a list of barely-guessables, including how
long the recovery from the recent recession drags on, the time elapsed
until the next recession and the level of the public's actual tolerance
for deficits. Assuming that the recent level of deficits continues
indefinitely, it would take on the order of ten years for the US
debt-to-GDP ratio to get where Japan's is now, which would bring us near
2022. After that, the safety factor still should buy the government a
few years more. That adds up to a long time to wait for the end of
the world. Fortunately for the impatient, there is the Federal Reserve,
and what the Fed will be doing, what the effects will be and when they
will be felt all can be anticipated with a bit more clarity than the
doings of Congress, although it remains guesswork. Approaching the Wall The
M1 money supply has grown by 52% since the Federal Reserve opened the
spigot in October of 2008. That alone is reason to believe that the
current recovery, though painfully slow, is real. It has been held to a
snail's pace by the fear of deflation that so many people learned in
2009. Fear of deflation is a reason to hold on to cash, but as 2009
becomes more distant, that fear is waning, and the holders of that 52%
are becoming more and more disposed to think of it as excess cash that
should be spent on something. That feeds the recovery. Given the
slow pace, it should be perhaps two years until the economy seems more
or less normal, but the excess cash will still be at work. Give it one
more year, and price inflation will emerge as a noticeable complaint.
Then the Federal Reserve will let interest rates rise, but only slowly
at first. By the time it tightens in earnest, price inflation will be
approaching double-digit rates. It will look like the 1970s. And despite
all the statistics it publishes, the Fed will only be feeling its way
in the dark, since there is no reliable, real-time indicator of how much
excess cash there is in the system. So inflation will keep rising, and
the Fed will keep tightening until it produces a rerun of 2008-2009,
with crashing investment markets announcing a new recession. But there will be two important differences vis-Ã -vis 2008-2009. First, it will be happening with the US government far
deeper in debt than it was when the last recession began. In the
tightening phase, the government's interest expense will move above $1
trillion per year, and the budget deficit will jump to new record highs.
Second, it will be happening with the rate of price inflation already
at a troubling level. Another round of the monetary therapy the Fed
applied to cure the last recession would push price inflation to levels
beyond those reached in the 1970s. They'll do it anyway. This gets
us to 2016 or 2017 with the system in turmoil but still functioning. No
wall yet, and there will be room for at least one more cycle of
reflation. But it will be a fast cycle, since in an environment of
already high inflation, people will be quick to spend the newly created
cash. That means a quick recovery from the 2017 recession and a catapult
into the 20% plus range for price inflation. Then the wall may be in
sight. In the Meantime Did you hear about
the 60-meter-wide rock? Asteroid 2012 DA14, with the kinetic energy of a
thermonuclear bomb, is headed toward us. In February of next year, its
approach path, as recently estimated, will bring it to within 17,000
miles of the Earth. What I haven't seen mentioned in any of the reports
is that the closer an orbiting body is expected to get to the Earth, the
less precise and reliable the estimates of its path become. Its path
may veer this way or veer that way. And in astronomical terms, 17,000
miles is very, very close â€" closer than most man-made satellites. So
it's not just the economy we need to anticipate. [Anticipating
cultural and economic changes can be the difference between outsized
profit and staggering loss for an investor. Right now â€" until midnight EDT tonight â€" you have an opportunity to put some of the best minds in the business to work for you in a steal of a deal.] |