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The other day Bloomberg ran
an article on how all those doomsayers predicting a repeat of the 1970s are
delusional. This paragraph pretty much sums it up:
"Surely the reporters and editors who put out this tripe know the difference
between the U.S. economy of the 1970s and today's 21st-century juggernaut...Do
folks think a case of 2.5 percent real growth and 3 percent inflation -- a
likely scenario for the second quarter -- qualifies as stagflation? If they
do, they need to revisit those wonder years of the 1970s, when the economy
was over-regulated, oil shocks had the ability to paralyze the nation and central
bankers still thought there was a trade-off between growth and inflation."
With yesterday's upward revision of 1st quarter GDP to a gorgeous 5.3%, this
might be a good time to consider the whole "21st century juggernaut" idea.
But where to begin...I guess first it should be pointed out that thanks to
John Williams at Shadow
Government Statistics, we now know that if the government hadn't changed
the way it calculates things like inflation and unemployment, today's economy
would be putting up 1970s style numbers already.
But even if you accept the accuracy of government numbers, the focus on headline
numbers like GDP, employment and inflation misses the point by ignoring the
other side of the ledger. It's not just how many people are working and paying
taxes, for instance, it's how much we have to borrow to create each new job.
Countries, like companies, have to understand their return-on-investment to
know how they're doing.
So let's see how today's America stacks up against the wheezing invalid of
the 1970s. On jobs, for instance, back in the 1970s it took about $370,000
of new debt to create each new position, while in the first half off this decade
it took $2.5 million. Now, you could argue that the first five years of this
decade were deceptive because they contain a recession in which the number
of people working went down for a while. Fair enough, but 1) the 1970s included
a nasty recession of its own, plus two oil shocks, and 2) when you look at
just 2005, when employment was growing at a pretty good rate, the ratio is
still ugly because debt spiked along with jobs. In other words, even when firing
on all cylinders, today's America has to borrow twice as much to create a new
job as it did thirty years ago.

Jobs are just one part of a really big system, so maybe we're getting some
other kind of bang for our borrowed buck. What about housing, maybe the healthiest
industry of the past five years? Nope. In the 1970s our parents borrowed $400,000
(adjusted for inflation) for each new house that was built, while today we're
borrowing more than three times that much. Maybe that's the real source of
the housing bubble: Not home prices, but the amount of money we owe on our
homes.

Or how about business investment, which would bring tech into the discussion,
and which a lot of economists think will pick up the slack created by housing's
soft landing? Sorry, but that's ugly too.

You can run the same kind of analysis on pretty much any seemingly-benign
economic statistic, in the U.S. and most other non-OPEC countries, and get
similar results. We're all borrowing more and more each year to produce those
comforting headline numbers. We're all printing paper currency at whatever
rate it takes to keep the headline writers happy. And we're all, with the U.S.
in the lead, approaching a time when our choices narrow to only two: Borrow
and/or print fresh paper until our currencies enter a death spiral, or refuse
to pay and go bankrupt en mass.
Which takes us -- as pretty much every economic debate does these days --
to the real question: If as a society we only have two ugly, seemingly mutually
exclusive choices, how should investors play it? Hyperinflation means gold
and land; deflationary depression means cash and long-term puts on banks and
homebuilders. A lot of smart people are weighing in on one side or the other,
and I'll summarize their thoughts in a later column. But for now, we should
all be watching for signs of which way the cards will fall. As Sprott Asset
Management's John Embry put it recently "This is THE question, really."
Note: For a more complete look at the U.S. economy's real productivity,
see Michael Hodges' Grandfather
Economic Report.
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John
Rubino
DollarCollapse.com
John Rubino is co-author, with GoldMoneys James Turk,
of The Coming Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit From It (Doubleday,
December 2004), and author of How to Profit from the Coming Real Estate
Bust (Rodale, 2003) and Main Street, Not Wall Street (Morrow, 1998).
After earning a Finance MBA from New York University, he spent the 1980s on
Wall Street, as a Eurodollar trader, equity analyst and junk bond analyst.
During the 1990s he was a featured columnist with TheStreet.com and a frequent
contributor to Individual Investor, Online Investor, and Consumers Digest,
among many other publications. He now writes for Fidelity Magazine, CFA, and
Proto.
Copyright © 2006-2008 John Rubino
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