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Apart from the obvious financial distress that the current economic crisis
has inflicted on most Americans, perhaps one of the more irksome byproducts
of the meltdown has been the inescapability of clueless economic blather. It's
bad enough when so-called economists serve up the same Keynesian nonsense that
has led us down the current cul-de-sac in the first place. At least those people
have some incidental knowledge, however deeply flawed, of basic economic concepts.
It's far worse when political pundits, whose understanding of economics typically
comes from Treasury Department talking points, hold forth as if they really
know what is going on.
Last weekend I happened to watch the McLaughlin Group, a mainstay of Sunday
morning political programs, which included a discussion that typified the lack
of economic common sense that is so pervasive in our country. The program's
anchor John McLaughlin, undoubtedly an expert in political maneuvering and
Washington horse-trading, offered viewers his assessment of the global economic
landscape. McLaughlin identified China, Germany, and Japan as being prime offenders
in the global economic meltdown. Their "offense" was that they ran persistent
trade surpluses, had savings rates that were "far too high" and consumption
rates that were "far too low". McLaughlin identified these sins as responsible
for the global economic imbalances. He urged the governments of those countries
to adopt policies that would encourage their consumers to borrow and spend
more. Exactly which school of economic thought informed his assessment is not
entirely clear.
In the first place, if the creditor nations of the world actually follow Mr.
McLaughlin's advice and become borrowers themselves, from just where does Mr.
McLaughlin believe the money will come? These countries already lend to America.
Does he think that they also have enough leftover to lend to themselves? Does
he believe that America, which is tens of trillions of dollars in debt, has
enough excess savings to lend? Perhaps he's eyeing the Martians' accumulated
savings? The point is: the entire world cannot borrow at the same time. Someone
has to do the lending. The only reason Americans are able to borrow so much
is that those "offending nations" are loaning us the money.
Mr. McLaughlin apparently believes that if those countries simply adopted
policies to encourage more consumption, America would then be able to export
more products. Just what American-made products does he expect the Chinese
to buy? If China did spend more, which they ultimately will, they would simply
buy more of their own products that they currently ship to us. After all, if
Americans are not buying American-made products, why would the Chinese? In
most cases, it's not that consumers do not want to buy American products it's
just that there are so few American-made products that are competitive in the
global marketplace.
One guest on the panel did try to correct Mr. McLaughlin by suggesting that
Americans needed to save more and spend less, but he was quickly shot down.
Why should we spend less, McLaughlin snapped, when they could shoulder some
of the burden by spending more? The inference here is that we are doing our
part by lugging home shopping carts full of consumer goods, while they are
getting off easy by spending their days in muggy factories making the goods!
What he fails to understand is that nothing can be bought that is not first
produced. We cannot all just decide to spend our troubles away. It is only
because the "offending nations" are producing surplus goods (meaning more
goods than they are themselves consuming) that those goods are available to
Americans. In McLaughlin's America, and indeed Obama's, we would all be standing
around empty shelves with wheelbarrows full of worthless cash.
If the creditor countries are indeed the offenders, it is only in the sense
that they have enabled us to live beyond our means and have facilitated the
growth of our phony economy. However if they do as Mr. McLaughlin suggests,
the immediate impact on the American economy will be much different than what
he expects: the dollar will collapse, both consumer prices and interest rates
will rise sharply, and the current recession will deepen. Rather than holding
us back, foreign creditors have actually been propping us up. As for Mr. McLaughlin,
he should stick to his strong suit: the dissection of political posturing.
To presume a level of economic understanding by listening to self-interested
politicians and academics is to invite catastrophe.
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they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar, read my just released book "The
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