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Just yesterday, Henry Paulson's "bailout" bill, with only a few anti-Wall
Street, pro-Main Street fig leaves slapped on by Democrats, appeared ready
to sail through Congress on a bi-partisan tide. But something funny happened
on the way to the printing press. It appears as if some conservative House
Republicans are reluctant to sell their souls and ditch any remaining pretense
towards American-style capitalism.
What's left of the Barry Goldwater wing of the Republican Party, which maintains
its natural tendency to trust the markets and not government, has dug in its
heels. But, Bush, Paulson and the Democrats have argued that our problems are
so dire that free enterprise principles must go out the window. The struggle
is historic, but the Congressmen are fighting a losing battle. Sadly, Americans
now appear willing to abandon their economic heritage at the first sting of
financial pain.
Although passage does seem inevitable, it is nevertheless the wrong thing
to do. Central government planning did not work in the Soviet Union and it
will not work here. Only free market forces are capable of sorting through
the mess. Political meddling will make the problems worse.
In selling the bill to Americans, many are pointing to the Resolution Trust
Corporation as an example of similar intervention that worked in the past.
However, there is no proof that RTC actually helped as we have no way of knowing
what might have happened had the government stayed out.
Missing in this discussion is that the Savings & Loan crisis of the 1980's,
much like the current crisis, was a byproduct of government interference in
the free market. By insuring bank deposits through the FDIC, the government
created a moral hazard that resulted in extreme risk taking among member banks,
whose depositors sought only high yields, without any regard for the risks
that the banks were incurring. Banks that refused to take big risks lost deposits
to those banks that did. Absent FDIC insurance, depositors would have considered
risks as well as rewards, and the S & L crisis never would have happened
in the first place!
The urgency for passing this bailout bill is based on the claim that the American
economy will collapse if nothing is done. If the government were to stay out,
and allow the market to function, there will certainly be a great deal of economic
pain. Companies will go bankrupt, banks will fail, real estate and stock prices
will keep falling, and many people will lose their jobs. However, government
action will not prevent any of this. At best, it will merely delay the inevitable,
but only at the cost of increasing the severity of the underlying problems,
thus making their ultimate resolution that much more painful to endure.
The bottom line is that there is no way to resolve our economic problems without
a severe recession, and our politicians need to level with the public. As a
nation, we gambled on the alluring riches of real estate and we lost. The price
must be paid. Contrary to the Bush Administration rhetoric, the fundamentals
of our economy are not sound. If they were, we would not be in this mess. Recessions
are meant to restore balance, purge excess, and liquidate mal-investments.
On that score we have a lot of work to do.
We are being told that this plan will help the economy by keeping the spigots
of consumer credit flowing. However, to really address the fundamental problems,
those spigots must be tightened. Since we have already borrowed and spent ourselves
into bankruptcy, the last thing we need is for consumers to borrow more.
Our leaders maintain that without this bailout consumers will not be able
to borrow money to buy cars. So what is wrong with that? We already have plenty
of cars, and if we are broke, why do we need to buy more? Instead, we need
drive our old cars longer, pay off our underwater auto loans, and produce more
cars for export. It is also argued that without access to credit parents will
not be able to borrow money to send their kids to school. That's fine by me
as it will force Universities to reduce tuitions to levels families can actually
afford. They will either have to cut out all of that bureaucratic fat, or go
out of business for lack of customers.
In the end it is impossible for the American economy to be rebuilt on a sounder
foundation of savings and production without a lot of economic pain. Government
efforts to reinforce the shaky foundation of borrowing and consuming will result
in the entire structure falling down around us.
For a more in depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers
they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read
Peter Schiff's book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic
Collapse." Click here to
order a copy today.
More importantly, don't wait for reality to set in. Protect your wealth and
preserve your purchasing power before it's too late. Discover the best way
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Subscribe to my free, on-line investment newsletter, "The Global Investor" at http://www.europac.net/newsletter/newsletter.asp.
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