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In 1980, when the U.S. economy was last in serious trouble, Ronald Reagan
offered the correct diagnoses that government was the problem and not the solution.
His message resonated with voters, propelling him into the White House to implement
an agenda of lowering marginal tax rates, reducing government spending and
business regulations, restoring sound money, abolishing entire government departments,
and basically allowing free market vibrancy to unshackle an economy burdened
by big government. Though in practice much of the Reagan revolution never materialized,
at least in theory his basic premise was sound.
In contrast, the country has now hitched its wagon to the views of Barack
Obama. We don't know much about what he truly believes about economics, but
the little that we do know is not encouraging. Obama has repeatedly heaped
the blame for the current crisis on the excesses of unregulated capitalism
and the greed of the wealthy. For him, the free market is the problem and government
is the solution.
The President-elect has promised to cage the destructive forces of capitalism,
impose more regulation, raise marginal tax rates, increase government spending,
and restore prosperity by redistributing wealth from those who earned it to
those considered to be more deserving. Like most of his generation, Obama believes
that economic growth results from consumer spending, primarily from the middle
class. Any policy that keeps the consumers headed to the mall will be promoted.
Unfortunately, while Reagan had a hard time getting his full agenda through
Congress, Obama will likely be much more successful. The effort to concentrate
more power in Washington will be far more appealing to Congress then Reagan's
idea of restoring it to the people.
This sharp contrast in philosophy should not be taken lightly. Reagan looked
to unleash the pent-up free market forces that had been smothered by a generation
of Great Society reforms and uninterrupted Democratic control of Congress.
Today, the public is looking for the Obama Administration to create the growth
that the free market has apparently destroyed. The hope that our economy will
grow as a result of government spending and micro-management is the most seminal
shift in political philosophy since the New Deal.
Despite the absence of Reagan's promised spending cuts, the economy generally
did well during his presidency (The growth would have been more genuine if
the cuts had been delivered). However, Obama's policies will immediately make
the current situation worse and the nation will suffer severely as a result.
Rather than a sharp recession at the beginning of his term followed by a significant
expansion, the recession that Obama inherits will be far worse when his first
term ends.
What nearly all politicians, on both sides of the aisle, fail to understand
is that the current contraction and credit crunch is necessary to restore order
to an economy that is horribly out of balance. Years of misguided fiscal and
monetary policy and market-distorting regulations have resulted in reckless
borrowing and spending on Main Street, pervasive gambling on Wall Street, and
rampant fraud and corruption at every intersection. America's borrow and spend
economy, and the bloated service sector that evolved around it, must be allowed
to topple, so that a more sustainable economy grounded in savings and production
can rise in its place. Any government efforts to delay the adjustment and spare
us the pain will backfire, turning this recession into an inflationary depression.
Of broader concern however is the sharp turn in ideology, and what it means
for the future of our nation. If this is a permanent shift, then America will
lose any resemblance to the economic titan of the 20th Century. Our standard
of living will decline sharply, our economy will be ravaged by inflation, tens
of millions will be unemployed, more individual liberties will be surrendered,
and rugged individualism will be supplanted by the nanny state. In short, Latin
America may extend north to the Canadian border.
However, if this shift proves temporary and Obama's reign either ends in one
term or if he can summon the intelligence and courage to reverse course once
the situation deteriorates, then perhaps one day there will be light at the
end of a very long tunnel.
While all of us can certainly hope for the best, prudence suggests that we
had better prepare for the worst. Not only does that mean divesting our portfolios
of U.S. dollar denominated investments but preparing for the possibility of
emigration. With economic conditions at home becoming increasingly intolerable,
the call of freer economies and greater prosperity abroad may be too tempting
to resist.
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
my just released book "The Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets." Click here to
order your copy now.
For an updated look at my investment strategy order a copy of my new 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
to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com.
Download my free Special Report, "The Powerful Case for Investing in Foreign
Securities" at www.researchreportone.com.
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