YOUR MONEY Sept. 14, 2012
Recession, depression and fools – pay
the piper
Today, North
American financial analysts and stock market investors – read speculators – are
overjoyed
as Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke announced that the U.S. Federal Reserve, will ‘pump’ the
economy with ‘quantitative easing” aimed at the housing market, and keep
interest rates at around 1% prime into 2015. Spectacularly, he promises to buy
up to $40 billion in mortgage bonds MONTHLY and INDEFINITELY, until the unemployment
rate and economy improve.
Nice, fancy
words, but in reality, they stand for a sham, a
delusional shell game of printing money, allowing –supposedly – U.S.
home buyers to continue to spend, spend, spend -- while bankrupting pension
plans and the savings and living resources of the elderly.
The problem
of unemployment and slow economic growth is NOT due to a lack of cash flow to and from banks -- to generate new
factories and businesses and construction.
·
It
is due to global outsourcing of jobs
and importing of much cheaper products from China to Turkey to Vietnam – the
names on the labels of much of America’s favorite products and brands – be it
Nike, Hilfinger or Apple. Even exclusive, top end European brands such
as Escada now do this.
·
It
is due to GM and Ford and Chrysler (now fallen to Italy’s Fiat) requiring their
U.S. and Canadian employees in the upcoming round of contract negotiations to again
accept cost cuts in salaries and benefits – to closer match the pay of their
workers in Mexico or Eastern Europe or China. Already back from the financial
brink of 2008 – with massive government bailouts – the Big Three , all
porofitable again, are looking to squeeze out more and more from their
employees; put simply, to lower their standard of living for the goal of increased capitalist profit.
·
It is due to the high cost of gasoline and diesel on
which the U.S.A., Canada and most of the modern world run.
·
It
is due to a ridiculous ‘floating
currency rate’ system, introduced in the 1970’s, that allows currencies
such as the U.S. dollar or Japanese yen or German mark to be held ‘captive’ by
derivative funds, investment banks and super wealthy who can speculate on a fraction of a penny to
earn millions of dollars!
Dollars and marks and yen jump and drop in value by the
minute on world currency exchanges and at least in Canada our dollar has
fluctuated on the last few years between $0.62 U.S. to over $1.12 U.S. --
affecting the purchasing power of consumers and making life almost
impossible for exporters and importers – who need to know their costs and
potential profit margins months in advance.
·
It
is due to computerized stock exchanges
that allow massive speculation and a super-short mindset focusing on instant profit (or loss) -- where holding a share for 2
days seems like an eternity.
Remember the quote from
the movie Wall Street “Greed is good”? .
So how does
throwing more cash, as Bernanke is doing for the third time in less than 4 years help?
It won’t.
It won’t do
a drop of good for the people in distress.
(But it will boost the stock market, price of oil and gold and raw
materials for the next few days as
investors – read speculators – think Valhalla is near!) It will fail and leave no lasting benefits,
like the two previous efforts of Bernanke, or those by the European Central Bank
that has bought into the same ‘prime the pump’ delusion.
But it will
do three things for the long run:
increase government debt; undermine the real value of the U.S. dollar
and other currencies; ultimately trigger stratospheric inflationary; and destroy
pension plans, insurance company annuities and the retired and elderly -- who
have saved for years and now get no interest at the bank.
In brief, it
will perpetuate misery for another
decade.
The so-called
Great Recession that started in 2008 with a financial bubble crisis is not over,
and with this American and European misguided hubris – that central bankers
know best and can sway world economies – the ongoing Depression will last much
longer than need be.
Masaaki Shirakawa, the head of the Bank of
Japan, finally figured it out in 2011. He said NO to more money printing or ‘financial easing’ as the Japanese
central bank and government had done for over 20 years: printing money and
keeping the prime rate well below the ‘emergency’ rate of 1% prime for
20 years to no avail! Japan’s
economy has not bounced up as a result but stagnated -- at the extra cost of
billions of yen in government extra debt, and depleated pensioner savings.
Even the
justified multi-billion dollar rebuilding of northern Japan after the horrible
earthquake and tsunami twin blows of 2011 has not made a difference, Shirakawa pointed
out, so why spend – i.e., waste – more money in a futile, fools dream.
·
*
* * * *
So what
should be done? What real hope is there?
If you look
at the bullets above, there is some light at the end of the tunnel.
ü The U.S. and many other oil importing
nations of the world will soon be self-sufficient in oil or natural gas through new extraction techniques– because the planet –
everywhere - is really awash in oil and gas.
So local energy prices will drop
and jobs increased in these resource
areas.
ü Secondly, and most importantly, Globalization
will ultimately -- in the next 10 years -- reach its logical outcome: more
or less parity of labour costs across the world; with wages equalizing upward – and not to the lowest level -- as people in China, India, Vietnam and South
America all buy into the American standard of life and expectations.
The net result will be a return to localization and self-sufficiency in many regions of the
world– in industry and manufacturing to farming. With wage parity, long distance shipping is
not cost effective, so industries and jobs will return home.
These
underlying realities are beyond a Bernanke’s control or spendthrift ways.
They are the
invisible, if long range, hand of capitalism.
So say I, echoing the recent investments and philosophy
of that old “wizard of Omaha”, Warren Buffett.
________________________________________________________________
P.S.:
My stress on seniors, now that I
am 65, is not just personal but a look at the world’s furure. The baby Boomers
are aging and into seniors territory. In Japan, as of 2004, 20% of the
population was seniors and the percentage is rising with low birth rates and
longer life expectancies.
China’s one-child policy is a demographic time bomb that is
now reaching its tipping point.
In the U.S.A., as of 2000, there were 35 million seniors (12%
of the population0 and this is predicted to rise to 17% of the population by
2040.
In that year, 2040, it is expected that there will be 1.3
BILLION seniors worldwide.