News & Analysis
Desperate to Get US Economy Moving
Quarterbacks Get Out 'Hail Mary' Economy Passes ... July's dismal jobs report poses a dangerous dilemma for the country's officials. The government has exhausted traditional measures to get the economy growing more briskly, having already cut interest rates to near zero and committed to more than $800 billion in fiscal stimulus. ... But new spending would spark an outcry in the face of trillion- dollar budget deficits and no plan in place to reduce them. Republicans prefer tax cuts— permanent ones—but they also face deficit constraints. Laura Tyson, a professor at University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business who served as President Bill Clinton's chief economic adviser, favors a big, long-term investment program funded through Build America bonds, federally subsidized taxable municipal bonds, and a national infrastructure bank, something President Barack Obama (left) has proposed. The government would put in capital and the bank would raise its own debt to fund projects, sometimes partnering with private businesses. The catch: This also adds to government debt. – WSJournal Online
Dominant Social Theme: The wise people in government are determined to find something that works.
Free-Market Analysis: It is getting toward desperation time for the Obama Administration. While there is nothing much the public sector can ever do to "create" jobs or to make an economy more prosperous, the public sector in this day and age can surely make things worse. The dominant social theme being proposed by this Wall Street Journal article is that "the US executive branch is pulling out all the stops to get things moving again. Maybe it will happen, maybe it won't." We're betting on "won't."
And what is the administration mulling? The Obama braintrust would like to push another large spending bill through Congress, with the idea of creating a kind of government partnership with the private sector to try to produce more jobs on a regular basis. Only the money has to come from somewhere. Even if it is merely printed and made available by the Federal Reserve, it becomes a tax of sorts, eventually, as further spending will generate price inflation. And actually the jobs that will be generated will not be "real" jobs created by the economy but "make work" jobs.
For free-market thinkers, there is no doubt about it. Nothing government does can make things better though there is much that can make things worse. Of course one can point out that cutting taxes and spending are positive moves that can revivify an economy but in fact from our point of view these efforts merely rectify previous mistakes. Anyway, the Obama administration is not thinking along these lines. They want more big government spending programs, which will only mire the economy further in debt.
And unfortunately, the flurry of potential activity is not limited to the Obama administration. The Federal Reserve is being urged to do something (anything?) as well. The Fed has lowered interest rates and reserve rates and funneled trillions in the market to no avail. Now the Fed is mulling action in the mortgage market:
Fed ponders next recovery move on economy ... A disappointing jobs report Friday has intensified speculation that the Federal Reserve could take steps this week to stimulate the faltering recovery. The Fed's most dramatic move would be to purchase new mortgage-backed securities or Treasury bonds to lower interest rates, but such an initiative is staunchly opposed by inflation hawks on the Federal Open Markets Committee. Far more likely, many economists say, is that the central bank will take a middle-ground, largely symbolic approach at its meeting Tuesday and prevent its vast holdings of securities from shrinking, to keep interest rates from rising slightly.
There even have been reports that the Obama administration is contemplating its own mortgage-oriented effort, which might involve a one-time reset on mortgages of those who "are under water" – their mortgages being worth more currently than the underlying real estate. What it comes down to is that the powers-that-be cannot rest. They are hyperactive right now, and we know why. The economy is not getting better either in the United States or Europe.
Yes, the crack-up boom has arrived, just as Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises said it would. It was in our opinion 100 years in the making and it will be as virulent as predicted, in part because it has been so long coming. Western central banking regimes have so distorted the economy with their excessive money printing that it is now impossible to tell a viable business from a bankrupt one.
Ordinarily, this would not be so difficult; a bankrupt one would eventually go out of business. But here, too, there are complications. Western governments have made things very difficult by providing additional funds to ruined businesses, thus keeping them limping along. This happened in Japan as well, resulting in what is called the "lost decade" – which as one Bell feedbacker recently pointed out might be called the "lost quarter-century."
Japan has a terrible unemployment problem as a result of sustaining its "zombie" businesses and banks. The US will soon follow in its footsteps as the economic structures and policies are similar. If the US (and Europe) wanted to take action to make things better, the leaders of these vast entities would stop the eternal money stimulation and market distorting bailouts and let their respective tortured economies begin to respond to the marketplace.
But that is not likely going to happen. One way or another various different programs will be launched that will further distort Western economies. In Europe, stringent measures are being taken to cut public services and employment, but taxes are going up at the same time. America is even messier from a fiscal and monetary perspective. It is the victim of one botched stimulus package and the overhang of money with which the Fed has stuffed banks presages virulent price inflation.
Conclusion: As arguments rage over who is to blame for the current economic crisis, and how it happened, we wonder if there is still a larger issue to be debated eventually. We would predict that questions about the "debt" that countries face – money that countries owe international banks – will become more pressing before these global financial difficulties fade. Money structure was not a big issue in the 20th century, but we wonder if it will become the seminal issue of the 21st. It's one reason the power elite struggled so hard to retain control of the media and its messaging. The Internet is a critical reason why they have lost it.
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Posted by Mike on 08/11/10 11:19 PM
These lands are barely managed while all of the sawmills in the region are forced to hunt for tiny "scraps" of timber on the few forested acreages that are still in private hands to the south or the privately held, hacked over, abused timber investment lands to the north.
Meanwhile the incompetents in the USFS trip all over themselves to put out a few measly timber sales per year and when they do the private sector bids the value of the timber to the moon. And this situation pertains to only one tiny New England state " one can only imagine how it is playing out across the other 49 states.
Again when will Leviathian be forced to liquidate its landholdings?
Reply from The Daily Bell
When pigs fly?
Posted by Weeble on 08/11/10 02:43 PM
There's no business like snow business!
Now I feel better.
Posted by Bobby on 08/11/10 03:00 AM
Posted by Gunter on 08/10/10 03:31 PM
Professor Fekete elaborates on the point you have made. (since 9 years that is)
Click to view link
Posted by Bill Ross on 08/10/10 02:22 PM
Click to view link
TRUTH survives scrutiny from ALL factual perspectives. Lies stand by a very limited number of FALSE perspectives.
Posted by Ingo Bischoff on 08/10/10 09:40 AM
An Obama administration filled with "economic experts", whose very ideas are the ones which fueled the entire central banking scheme in the first place, will never be able to convince private businesses to "start producing" again. There goes the economy.....
Banks and their cousins, the real estate interests, are trying desperately to arrest the precipitous drop in real estate values. To shore up the real estate assets on the books of the banks and on the books of Fannie and Freddie, the FED must periodically lower the interest rates. This invites the bond speculators to front run the FED, and they always do. They buy ahead of the interest rate drop, and there after they sell on capital appreciation. The transaction is risk-free.
Monetizing government debt through the FED will not produce stabil real estate prices, nor will it drive up commodity prices. Why would speculators risk money in the real estate and commodity markets when risk-free profits can be had in the bond market....???
My suggestion is to give a blanket amnesty to the whole central banking crowd and their buddies, if they promise to leave the scene and settle down somewhere on some Pacific Island where internet and satallite communication is strictly controlled.
Posted by Dustov on 08/10/10 08:24 AM
Posted by John Acord on 08/10/10 07:22 AM
Posted by Grekko on 08/10/10 04:29 AM
Posted by AmanfromMars on 08/10/10 12:57 AM
Click to view link " .... Posted by TMoore on 8/9/2010 12:40:06 PM
And it seems as if they are addicted to that particularly perverse trick which is as effective as a band aid on a catastrophic amputation ..... Click to view link
Launch the titanic life rafts, women and children first please.
FFS, Uncle Sam, aint you got Anything Valuable to Offer Anyone?
Posted by John Danforth on 08/09/10 09:50 PM
Posted by Rolland Carpenter on 08/09/10 06:31 PM
What to do? Extend the tax cuts, continue or expand wars, let Wall Street Billionaires keep their "too big to fail" loot, increase Social Secuity retirement age to 70. Democrats want new jobs bills, extended unemployment benefits, aid to California which can't raise taxes there to pay their teachers, subsidize "clean energy" meaning only wind and solar. The leadership of Ron Paul is the only hope, and obviously a slim one.
Posted by Lila Rajiva on 08/09/10 06:05 PM
No harm done, if it was natural causes.
Apologies, DB, for the controversial material.
Posted by Lila Rajiva on 08/09/10 04:41 PM
Posted by Lila Rajiva on 08/09/10 04:38 PM
shoot. I'll just paste it
ROCKLAND, Maine, Aug. 9 /PRNewswire/ -- Matthew R. Simmons, founder of the Ocean Energy Research Institute in Rockland, Maine, passed away suddenly on Sunday. He is survived by his wife, Ellen, and their five daughters. Mr. Simmons was also former chairman of Simmons & Company International. Details of services are pending. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the Ocean Energy Research Institute.
Posted by Lila Rajiva on 08/09/10 04:35 PM
we were just talking about matt simmons and wondering if he was the source for Lindsay Williams...and then comes this
Click to view link
Poor man.
Reply from The Daily Bell
May he rest in peace.
Posted by TMoore on 08/09/10 02:09 PM
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Posted by Zenbillionaire on 08/09/10 01:24 PM
Does this mean that someone is finally becoming aware that selling more Treasuries at is bound to drive up the rates on existing debt? I'd say so. But rather than control themselves their going to re-brand and "Hope". Desperation indeed. Next year I expect they'll try renaming the country.
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