February 02, 2010 The Crisis Is Not Over
Readers ask if the financial crisis is over, if the
recovery is for real and, if not, what are Americans’
prospects. The short answer is that the financial crisis
is not over, the recovery is not real, and the U.S.
faces a far worse crisis than the financial one. Here is
the situation as I understand it:
The global crisis is understood as a banking crisis
brought on by the mindless deregulation of the U.S.
financial arena. Investment banks leveraged assets to
highly irresponsible levels, issued questionable
financial instruments with fraudulent investment grade
ratings, and issued the instruments through direct sales
to customers rather than through markets.
The crisis was initiated when the U.S. allowed
Lehman Brothers to fail, thus threatening money market funds everywhere. The
crisis was used by the investment banks, which
controlled U.S. economic policy, to secure massive
subsidies to their profits from a taxpayer bailout and
from the Federal Reserve. How much of the crisis was
real and how much was hype is not known at this time.
As most of the derivative instruments had never been
priced in the market, and as their exact composition
between good and bad loans was unknown (the instruments
are based on
packages of securitized loans), the mark-to-market rule drove the values very low,
thus threatening the solvency of many financial
institutions. Also, the rule prohibiting continuous
shorting had been removed, making it possible for hedge
funds and speculators to destroy the market
capitalization of targeted firms by driving down their
share prices.
The obvious solution was to suspend the mark-to-market
rule until some better idea of the values of the
derivative instruments could be established and to
prevent the abuse of shorting that was destroying market
capitalization. Instead, the Goldman Sachs people in
charge of the U.S. Treasury and, perhaps, the Federal
Reserve as well, used the crisis to secure subsidies for
the banks from U.S. taxpayers and from the Federal
Reserve. It looks like a manipulated crisis as well as a
real one due to greed unleashed by financial
deregulation.
The crisis will not be over until financial regulation
is restored, but
Wall Street has been able to block re-regulation. Moreover, the response to the
crisis has planted seeds for new crises. Government
budget deficits have exploded. In the U.S. the fiscal
year 2009 federal budget deficit was $1.4 trillion,
three times higher than the 2008 deficit. President
Obama’s budget deficits for 2010 and 2011, according to
the latest report, will total $2.9 trillion, and this
estimate is based on the assumption that the Great
Recession is over. Where is the U.S. Treasury to borrow
$4.3 trillion in three years?
This sum greatly exceeds the combined trade surpluses
of America’s trading partners, the recycling of which
has financed past U.S. budget deficits, and perhaps
exceeds total world savings.
It is unclear how the 2009 budget deficit was financed.
A likely source was the bank reserves created for
financial institutions by the Federal Reserve when it
purchased their toxic financial instruments. These
reserves were then used to purchase the new Treasury
debt. In other words, the budget deficit was financed by
deterioration in the balance sheet of the Federal
Reserve. How long can such an exchange of assets
continue before the Federal Reserve has to finance the
government’s deficit by creating new money?
Similar deficits and financing problems have affected
the EU, particularly its financially weaker members. To
conclude: the initial crisis has planted seeds for two
new crises: rising government debt and inflation.
A third crisis is also in place. This crisis will occur
when confidence is lost in the U.S. dollar as world
reserve currency. This crisis will disrupt the
international payments mechanism. It will be especially
difficult for the U.S. as the country will lose the
ability to pay for its imports with its own currency.
U.S. living standards will decline as the ability to
import declines.
The financial crisis is essentially a U.S. crisis,
spread abroad by the sale of toxic financial
instruments. The rest of the world got into trouble by
trusting Wall Street. The real American crisis is much
worse than the financial crisis. The real American
crisis is the
offshoring
of U.S. manufacturing, industrial, and professional
service jobs such as software engineering and
information technology.
Jobs offshoring was initiated by Wall Street pressures
on corporations for higher earnings and by
performance-related bonuses becoming the main form of
managerial compensation. Corporate executives increased
profits and obtained bonuses by substituting cheaper
foreign labor for U.S. labor in the production of goods
and services marketed in the U.S.
Jobs offshoring is destroying the ladders of upward
mobility that made the U.S. an opportunity society and
eroding the value of a university education. For the
first decade of the 21st century, the U.S. economy has
been able to create net new jobs only in
domestic
nontradable services, such as waitresses, bartenders, sales, health and
social assistance and, prior to the real estate
collapse, construction. These jobs are lower paid than
the jobs were that have been offshored, and these jobs
do not produce goods and services for export.
Jobs offshoring has increased the U.S. trade deficit,
putting more pressure on the dollar’s role as reserve
currency. When offshored goods and services return to
the U.S., they add to imports, thus worsening the trade
imbalance.
The policy of jobs offshoring is insane. It is shifting
U.S. GDP growth to the offshored locations, such as
China, thus halting growth in U.S. consumer incomes. For the
past decade, U.S. households substituted an increase in
indebtedness for the lack of growth in income in order
to continue increasing their consumption. With their
home equity refinanced and spent, real estate values
down, and credit card debt at unsustainable levels, it
is no longer possible for the U.S. economy to base its
growth on a rise in consumer debt. This fact is a brake
on U.S. economic recovery.
Stimulus packages cannot substitute for the growth in
real income. As so many high value-added, high
productivity U.S. jobs have been offshored, there is no
way to achieve real growth in U.S. personal incomes.
Stimulus spending simply adds to government debt and
pressure on the dollar, and sows seeds for high
inflation.
The U.S. dollar survives as reserve currency because
there is no apparent substitute. The euro has its own
problems. Moreover, the
euro
is the currency of a non-existent political entity.
National sovereignty continues despite the existence of
a common currency on the continent (but not in Great
Britain). If the dollar is abandoned, then the result is
likely to be bilateral settlements in countries’ own
currencies, as Brazil and China now are doing.
Alternatively, John Maynard Keynes’
bancor scheme could be implemented, as it does not require a reserve currency country.
Keynes’ plan is designed to maintain a country’s trade
balance. Only a reserve currency country can get its
trade and budget deficits so out of balance as the U.S.
has done. The prospect of U.S. default and/or inflation
and decline in the dollar’s exchange value is a threat
to the reserve system.
The threats to the U.S. economy are extreme. Yet,
neither the Obama administration, the Republican
opposition, economists, Wall Street, nor the media show
any awareness. Instead, the public is provided with spin
about recovery and with higher spending on pointless
wars that are hastening America’s economic and financial
ruin. Paul Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s
first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies,
Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow,
Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded
the Legion of Honor by French President Francois
Mitterrand. He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author
with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.
His latest book, How The Economy Was Lost |