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We are awash in debt, assert numerous authorities. And they point to the charts
which show debt mounting seemingly to the sky. But not all debt is bad. Some
of it is good. We should save more and spend less. But if we do, there are
consequences that we may not like. What's good for an individual may be a problem
for a global economy. We continue with our series on trade balance and debt,
with the thought going through our minds "Be careful what you wish for."
But before we get into that, let's look at something far more important.
The Lights of Myanmar
For the last two years, I have asked readers to help Knightsbridge International
fund a project to bring solar power to various medical clinics with no electricity
in the villages of the Karen tribe of Myanmar. This is a group of people forgotten
by the world who are persecuted because of their religious beliefs (they are
Christian, for those who want to know). You have responded graciously and generously,
and we were a big part in funding over 20 solar power systems for health clinics.
It has made a difference in the lives and health to a people who are in dire
straits. There are children who are alive because of your generosity.
My good friend, Walt Ratterman, personally, and at his own expense, travels
to Thailand bringing the systems with him. He helps train the doctors and health
workers, and sometimes actually goes into Myanmar to help set up the systems.
This is at no small personal risk, as the Karen tribe is in a zone that has
been under siege for the past several decades. The Burmese (Myanmar) military
has been burning villages, raping women, forcing people into slavery and killing
the indigenous people of the area. There is no local embassy to appeal to for
aid if he is caught inside the country. He wrote me this note last year:
"The project in March went very smoothly. The medics and technicians from
the clinics inside Burma traveled for up to two weeks through the jungle, using
various modes of transportation to get to the training. The distance between
the clinics was about 600 km.
"During the training, each team built and dismantled many times their solar
electric systems. They wanted, and needed, to know how to take them down quickly
in case the Burmese military was spotted heading towards their camp. So, all
of the connections and equipment were designed specially to be disassembled
and reassembled quickly.
"Special power plugs on the system were used immediately to provide power
to the communication equipment so the various forces could stay in touch with
each other. The same power receptacle is used by the medics so they can power
their laptops and receive instructions on various medical procedures they need
to perform.
"During the training, we received a question we have not heard before. We
were asked that if the clinic was under attack, did they have to waste a whole
grenade to destroy the system (if they could not disassemble it quickly enough),
or would one bullet do the trick?
"Since the project began, five of the villages were attacked, and all the
clinics were burned down. But, the medics saw the attacks coming enough in
advance to be able to hide all of the medicine and the solar equipment. After
the attack, they rebuilt the clinic quickly and re-installed the solar equipment,
so they could treat the wounded.
"Some of our students there have been in the camp without being allowed to
leave for over 10 years. One young woman of 20 something was born there. In
this camp - Mae La - where we conducted our class for 50 students, the population
of the "camp" is 50,000 people. This is one of seven camps. (The others are
smaller.) We will be teaching in one or two more camps this coming February.
"We have asked the manager of the medical clinics in Burma what he needs most
for this February training and equipment installation program. Besides the
additional systems that he needs for the clinics in Burma, he wants to bring
a group of his medics and technicians to a common central area for additional
training. They are maintaining their systems well, but he thinks that with
more training, and the ability to keep a store of spare parts, they will be
able to do a better job of keeping the lights and systems going in their remote
clinics. We are going to find a good central location to conduct these trainings.
Of course, he neglected to mention the rowboats across the border at midnight
when the guards were asleep and a day time crossing with one team creating
a diversion so the other team can sneak across. Not to mention wading through
streams to hide tracks, jungles, and a host of "minor" problems. If they got
caught, it was lights out, pardon the pun.
The solar power systems allow medics to address nighttime emergencies, have
proper lighting for medical procedures, and use electric medical devices. It
also allows them to power laptops and communication devices so they can get
instructions when they are confronted with a medical situation with which they
are not familiar.
The Karen, with the help of refugee groups in Thailand, have over the years
built up a network of medics and clinics operating inside Burma. There are
now over 28 clinics with a roster of approximately 75 surgeons, medics, and
nurses. The medics treat landmine victims and other casualties of the conflict
as well as patients affected by malaria and other illnesses resulting from
the harsh conditions.
None of the clinics had any electricity until August 2003, when a group from
Knightsbridge International (led by Walt) was able to raise the funds to provide
small solar power systems for two of the clinics. They have added 16 since
then. They desperately need to bring power systems to the rest of them.
You can understand the need when you see a picture of a doctor doing an amputation
holding a flashlight in his mouth. A system can be brought to Thailand and
then on to Myanmar for about $3,000. Walt, a true world class expert on solar
power, will once again be going.
Just a quick word about Knightsbridge. These are the really, really good guys,
but with a twist. They just like to do their good deeds while getting a "small" adrenaline
rush. They were the first group into Afghanistan bringing medical supplies
and a massive truck convoy of food to the Northern Tribes, long before any
of our troops went in. Because they had been in before on other emergency supply
runs, they had the contacts needed. Ed Artis, who led the mission, and Walt
Ratterman also had $50,000 price tags put on their heads by the Taliban, and
had to move very quickly from time to time as the CIA would call on the sat
phone and "suggest" they not work in a particular area. I was talking to Ed
at one point and you could hear the carpet bombing in the background. And they
do this for no salaries, just the love of helping. It also helps to be a little
crazy.
"Going into Rwanda during the mass killing to rescue nuns, parachuting into
Afghanistan, working in areas where terrorists operate in the Philippines,
Zamboanga, Cambodia, Nicaragua, the list of vacation spots they visit is long,
the needs are great and there is never enough money and men.
"You can learn more about Knightsbridge by going to www.kbi.org.
(You can donate using a credit card on the website.) And most importantly,
you can send a check for a tax deductible donation to:
Knightsbridge International
PO Box 4394
West Hills, CA
91308-4394
100% of your money will go to the equipment. No salaries or overhead here.
I know some of you can write big checks, and some of you can find smaller amounts.
Some of you may be on boards or churches looking for ways to help those less
fortunate. If you write a check for $1,000 or more we will make sure you get
an engraved plaque on the solar system with your name, and a picture back to
you! But all donations will be a great help, as every little bit counts. If
you need any more information let me know. Walt or Ed will be glad to talk
with you. I will get you in touch. And yes, I personally know and vouch for
these guys. I am just not crazy enough to do some of the things they do. Bad
back and all, you know? But I can write a check, and you can, too. So, in the
Spirit of Christmas, to help those who simply need a chance to live, get out
your checkbook.
Be Careful What You Wish For
The world of economics is a very complicated space. Far too often we poor
analysts seize upon some fact or trend and extrapolate that trend, suggesting
that something is going to happen in the future because of it. The problem
is that we look at that trend in isolation.
Take the lack of saving in the US. This is generally thought of as largely
negative. Or what about the enormous trade deficit the US is running? How can
it be a good thing that we are living on debt borrowed from the rest of the
world to finance our conspicuous consumption? Something, all seemingly agree,
must be done, or it will come to no good end.
The problem is that we look at the piece of the puzzle in isolation. It is
what I have called the Super-Trend Puzzle. I am a big fan of jig-saw puzzles.
(If you like online jig-saw puzzles, you can go to www.jigzone.com.
There are hundreds of them with varying degrees of difficulty, and it is free.)
But the economic Super-Trend Puzzle is not as easy as the regular kind. In
our economic puzzle, there are pieces which when played change the shape of
the other pieces around them. The nice neat analogy we made, showing you, gentle
reader, the future, now becomes murky and the picture is no longer clear. Things
which "fit" last week now no longer can be forced together.
Peter Bernstein sent me the following paragraphs which he wrote in 2003, which
are even more pertinent today. Peter has a grasp of economic history and investments
that those of us who are merely mortal look upon with awe. At 80 plus and still
writing and going strong, he is the author of numerous books. If you have not
read "Against the Gods, the Remarkable Story of Risk" you are in for a treat.
It is easily in the top 2 or 3 books I recommend for anyone to read. And any
self-respecting gold bug will have "The Power of Gold" on his bookshelf, if
not his desk. (www.amazon.com/gods or www.amazon.com/gold).
Now, let's look at his observations:
"Countless observers complain that the U.S. uses and demands more goods and
services than it produces at home and has to make up the difference from abroad.
Or they say that Americans save too little: we spend too much on consumption
and put aside too little to provide for the future, releasing too few resources
to meet the needs of business investment and home construction. Then Americans
have to cover that shortfall by using the savings of foreigners. Or people
say foreigners have been so eager to put their savings to work in the U.S.
economy that they have driven up the value of the dollar, stimulating the demand
for cheap imports in the U.S. and frustrating our exporters who are priced
out of foreign markets. Or they say the government is the villain of the undersaving
because it spends too much relative to the taxes we remit to it, or, perhaps,
the tax revenues are too small relative to what the politicians want to spend.
Indeed, one could argue that the import surplus deserves the blame for the
budget deficit, because it contributes to the disinflation that results in
the loss of jobs, poor profitability, and an insufficient flow of tax revenue
to the IRS.
"All of these definitions of the American problem are correct - taken together. The
key to the puzzle is that you cannot separate from the whole picture just one
set of imbalances like government spending + taxing or importing + exporting.
Private sector saving, private sector investment, household consumption, government
spending, government revenues, capital flows, and the trade balance all react
upon one another - often in surprising fashion. We live in a complex system:
each piece tends to function as both symptom and cause.
"This inescapable truth makes life very complicated. Efforts to restore balance
in one sector may accomplish no more than to upset the balance in another.
The taxes the Democrats want to restore are likely to cut deeply into household
savings rates, already uncomfortably low. Exhorting households to save more
will mean lower consumption, which means loss of jobs, and dissaving by the
unemployed - to say nothing of lower tax revenues and a widening government
deficit. The permutations are endless.
"It is important to emphasize that the data pouring out unmercifully every
minute of the day and night are only a record of the past. The measured imbalances
between private sector saving and investment, government taxing and spending,
or the deficit on international account are only a reflection of how each sector has reacted
to the ongoing changes in the other sectors, including trading partners outside
the U.S. Any resemblance between the data we see and what people anticipated
at the beginning of any given time period is purely coincidental. The process
is a dynamic one, in which outcomes for each player depend upon decisions made
by all the other players and, as a result, almost all outcomes are a surprise
and provoke responses of their own.
What of it?
"Of one thing we are certain: current trends are not sustainable. The imbalances
are now enormous, far more glaring than at any point in the past. Furthermore,
the linkages of the parts are so tightly knit into the whole that reducing
any one imbalance to zero, or even compressing them all to a more manageable
level, appears to be impossible without a major upheaval. A hitch here or
a tuck there has little chance of success. When it hits, and whichever sector
takes the first blows, the restoration of balance will be a compelling force
roaring through the entire economy - globally in all likelihood. The breeze
will not be gentle. Hurricane may be the more appropriate metaphor." (Emphasis
mine)
I suggest you read that last paragraph again and then let's explore. After
last year's experience with hurricanes, we might all agree that a Katrina like
economic gale would be most difficult.
As an example, today's Wall Street Journal highlights a problem with the trade
deficit with China. We have not only exported manufacturing jobs to China,
we have also exported our economic volatility. If American consumers start
to buy less "stuff," for whatever reason, it is China that would feel the brunt
of the blow. The lay-offs in the factories would be over there and not here.
Slower growth means China uses less oil and energy and commodities. It would
also mean they become more resistant to floating their currency. It could also
mean they simply lower prices in order to be able to keep factories running,
further hurting what manufacturing we do have.
The world economy today depends upon the American consumer being willing to
not save and to borrow if necessary to support their spending habits. It is
a burden for which we seem genetically designed and one at which we clearly
excel. We spend, they produce. They send us all manner of goods and we send
them electronic dollars, which in a twist of irony they have lent to us. It
is sort of the ultimate in vendor financing.
A Stable Disequilibrium
This is a remarkably tenuous set of circumstances. It is what Paul McCulley
calls a stable disequilibrium. We all know that there are any number of unsustainable
trends, which could cause a great deal of disequilibrium. But today these forces
are stable, each balancing the other in a most precarious manner. Paul compares
it to a marriage before divorce. Outwardly, it may appear stable, but there
is clearly a great deal of disequilibrium going on inside.
What if China and Japan decided to stop buying our debt with their excess
dollars? Would that not mean US interest rates rise? That would mean fewer
homes sold and at the very least a dramatic slowing, if not a retreat on home
prices. That would mean there would be much less mortgage refinancings. As
we saw last week, that would drop GDP about 3% or more, pushing us to the edge
of recession.
It would also mean foreign currencies would rise and the dollar fall. That
would mean we would buy less foreign goods, and specifically Chinese, Japanese
and Korean goods. Their economies would slow down, and perhaps move into recession,
thus dropping the value of their currencies and reducing their already razor
thin profit margins. China in recession would not be a very happy dragon. They
need to create 20,000,000 new jobs a year. Hard to do that in a recession.
So, the game continues. They buy our debt. We buy their stuff. They know,
as we saw last week from the quote from the Chinese banking official, they
are going to get screwed (that is a technical economic term) on their dollar
holdings. But what else can they do? They are on a treadmill and have to keep
running just to stay in place.
Ultimately, in the fullness of time, China and the rest of Asia will have
to develop their own consumer spending machines. They are off to a good start,
but no where close to where they will need to be. And the fullness of time
will take at least a decade, if not longer.
(You think the Chinese won't be world class consumers given the chance? Read
the recent Fortune article on the cosmetics market in China.)
Ultimately, the US is going to spend less and save more. I know, doubting
the ability of the US consumer has been a losing call for 50 years, but we
are getting closer to the time when consumer spending on "stuff" is going to
slow. How can I say this?
For several reasons. First, we are going to see spending on health care rise
another 3% in the next 8 years. That is almost $400 billion dollars. It will
still be spent, just not on stuff. We will have to drive the car a year longer,
take a shorter vacation, make do with last year's computer. Health care expenses
trump computers, Ipod's and cell phones. Folks, a shift of 3% in spending preference
is huge. It is a tsunami of change.
Secondly, saving patterns are going to change. When, not if, we see the next
economic slowdown, we will see another drop in the stock market. If we get
a full blown recession, the average drop is 43%. I think boomers will begin
to slowly panic as they watch their retirement dreams drop faster then the
NASDAQ 100. It will be the usual process. Denial, anger, despair and finally
reality hits and they re-set expectations and start a new plan which will mean
more saving and less spending.
The first of the baby boomers reach 62 in 2007. We are looking retirement
in the eye. Old age is way too close. Objects in the mirror may be nearer than
they appear. As boomers start to retire, they are by definition going to spend
less because they will be making less.
Further, a great deal, as much as 3% of GDP growth has come from mortgage
refinancing. This was easy when rates were dropping. You could refinance your
home, take some cash out and still have lower payments. The easy part of that
trade is just about over. We are watching mortgage refinancing applications
slow. This simply has to have an impact on consumer spending.
While this slowdown from boomers will be partially offset by population growth
(primarily from immigration), inflation and other factors, I do not think it
will be enough to offset the effects entirely.
Taken together, what it all means is that growth in consumer spending is going
to slow dramatically over the next 5 years. No sudden fall-off-the-cliff experience,
just a gradual Muddle Through slowdown as the imbalances are into a more stable
equilibrium.
And gradual is what everyone is hoping for. It is the best of all possible
worlds. Asia and China in particular need time to build up their own consumer
classes while we adjust to saving more and a gradually falling dollar. No sudden
shocks, other than the normal ups and downs of the business cycle, is what
governments, central bankers, business, investors and consumers all want to
see happen.
In game theory, the Nash equilibrium (named after John Nash) is a kind
of optimal strategy for games involving two or more players, whereby the players
reach an outcome to mutual advantage. If there is a set of strategies for a
game with the property that no player can benefit by changing his strategy
while (if) the other players keep their strategies unchanged, then that set
of strategies and the corresponding payoffs constitute a Nash equilibrium.
(ohn Nash, the Nobel laureate in mathematics was featured in the movie "A Beautiful
Mind." Highly recommended, by the way.)
While the game can go on for much longer than reason would dictate, there
will be an end to it. Will it be the soft landing with nations agreeing to
work together to find a sort of Nash equilibrium; or, the hard landing where
the "vacuous rhetoric of globalization" (to quote Stephen Roach) masks the
reality of each nation going its own way, in a kind of "devil take the hindmost" world?
Can it happen? Can things go that smoothly? Sadly, probably not. It will probably
be, as Bernstein notes, an economic storm. Something will push somewhere on
the disequilibrium and the stability that we now sees shifts. The world enters
a new Nash equilibrium moment, where all the players begin to adjust and try
to secure their optimum situation.
Sounds scary. And it will be. But most people in the world will not notice.
How much do you remember of the Asian Crisis in 1998? That was a pretty scary
moment for the global economy, yet the world muddled through. It would qualify
as a category 4 economic hurricane. Yet we will make it through this next adjustment
period as well.
But wishing that we could see our savings rate go back to the mid-teens, or
that our trade deficit was zero or any number of seemingly desirable events
will mean that the pieces of the puzzle change shape. Getting what we wish
for too soon may not be something we will actually want.
A Few Thoughts on Consumer Debt
US consumers owe $11 trillion, with 8.2 trillion of it being mortgage debt
(data source: US Federal Reserve). On a graph it looks monstrous, rising over
20 times in the last 30 years. Yet things are not all that bad.
First, mortgage debt is rising because we have a lot more homeowners, both
because of population growth and more people on a percentage basis own homes.
Admittedly, some of them are less than prime mortgages, but I contend that
is a good thing. What kind of elitist prig would say to someone who is trying
to improve their lot in life that they should not buy a home because their
credit is less than pristine? In a free market, you let people make their own
decisions. And if banks are willing to take the risk, hedging their portfolios?
More power to everyone.
Hernando Desoto writes about a 20 year study of the people in a particularly
poor part of Peru. They found out that the single biggest factor for financial
improvement was owning a home. Even if they owned a home in what was essentially
a slum, over time their economic lot in life improved as compared to their
neighbors who did not own a home.
It should be the policy of this country, and it is, to make home ownership
as easy and as affordable as possible. People who own homes have a stake in
the community and the system. And if they make those payments over time they
have an asset.
Further, on a percentage of disposable income basis, the mortgage and consumer
credit debt are not all that out of line with what they were 25 years ago.
In 1980 consumer debt service payments was 5.61% of disposable income. Today
it is 5.85%. Mortgages have risen from 8.13% to 10.76%. Now, there are clearly
a lot of households who are in much worse shape. But as a nation, we are not
all that bad. We have a debt load we can now handle. If only we could get the
government to balance their budgets.
We will conclude this series next week, looking at more of the pressures on
the system and speculate as to how the whole process will play out.
Merry Christmas, Family and Friends,
I love this time of year. All 7 kids and their assorted significant others
(wives, boyfriends, girlfriends, etc.) will be in town for Christmas. I will
be cooking again and this time will try to get the roast right. I overcooked
it at Thanksgiving, much to my chagrin.
And on a personal soapbox, am I missing something? This is supposed to be
a season of peace and joy. If you want to say Happy Holidays or Merry Christmas
or whatever, then just relax and do it. Fighting about the appropriate greeting
just seems to be a little over the top, given the reason for the season to
begin with. If you want to get worked up about something, think of all the
people in less than pleasant circumstances who are just trying to survive,
and figure out how to help them. If not helping the guys at Knightsbridge with
a check, then find your own special group to help.
Tonight is a very special occasion, as Peter and Barbara Bernstein are in
town to see his grandkids and we get to have dinner with them. I have a special
bottle of a 1994 David Bruce Petite Syrah which won best of show out of 1800
wines. For some odd reason, Bruce thought it would be wrong to raise the price
and I bought the last two cases at bargain prices. It is now time to open these
bottles. I have to say it is like liquid velvet. But who better to share it
with than Peter, who is a perfect vintage himself?
Family and friends make life more than Muddle Through. And I consider my Thoughts
from the Frontline readers as part of my larger family. I am grateful you let
me come into your life each week. It is a privilege to be able to share my
musings with you.
Amidst all the hustle and bustle, let's remember that it was a gift of personified
Love that is the reason for our celebration. So let me say Merry Christmas,
and may God Bless Us, Everyone!
Your gonna have to get back on his diet soon analyst,
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