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Now that the Democrats have likely taken control of both houses of Congress,
some on Wall Street are cheering the return of government “gridlock.” The
idea is that in a divided government each party stymies the other, resulting
in no new legislation and no need to reformulate business plans. Companies
and investors feel more comfortable with the devil they know. As legislation
often does more harm then good, gridlock can be seen as being friendly to business
and good for the economy.
However, my fear is that we actually get something far worse: bi-partisan
cooperation. The most likely result of both parties "working together" is Democratic
support of Republican pork, in exchange for Republican support of Democratic
pork, which will wreak further havoc on the country's already dismal balance
sheet. In addition, grandiose and ill conceived pet programs on both sides
have much better chances of actually being passed. The last thing we need is
Democrats and Republicans actually working together.
By 2008 the country will likely be in a deep recession squarely blamed on
the Bush administration. This will set the stage for the Democrats to recapture
the White House with a strong mandate for change and a supportive legislature.
If the "free market" and "laissez-faire" rhetoric of Republicans are discredited,
then the big government Democrats could be perceived as the solution. If so,
look for a potential President Hillary Clinton and Speaker Nancy Pelosi to
summon the ghost of FDR and conjure up another New Deal. Such fiscal activism,
especially coming at a time when our nation can ill afford it, will cause the
recession to be a whole lot deeper and last a whole lot longer than might otherwise
have been the case.
The main problem however, is that the real economic damage has already been
done, under Clinton with the technology/internet bubble and under Bush with
the housing/consumption bubble. As a result, our highly indebted, de-industrialized
economy teeters on the brink of collapse, with nothing but the perceived political
expediency of foreign central bankers temporarily propping it up.
The fact that so many on Wall Street are oblivious to the political storm
brewing on the horizon is yet another example of the head-in-the-sand complacency
that rules the day. However, based on the seemingly benign current economic
statistics, the Republicans should have done much better. Rather than merely
attributing the poor showing to Iraq or to personal scandals, perhaps it is
evidence that the economy really isn't as good as these phony statistics purport
it to be. Of course, it wouldn't actually dawn on anyone on Wall Street to
actually connect these dots.
At least precious metals traders seem to be getting the picture. Gold's sharp
rally today following the news that the Democrats regained control of the Senate
shows that the inflationary implications of rampant government spending are
not lost on everyone. The correction is clearly over, the lows are in, and
a new high in gold is likely sooner than just about anyone thinks.
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