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Today we can the incessant technical analysis and turn to an issue that is
fundamentally critical in trying to determine our future investment positions.
Peter Schiff's article entitled More
Consumption Less Production inspired some interesting responses on Safehaven.com's "Talk
Back" feature. Interesting to me anyway, given my long time participation
in the US manufacturing sector. From Mr. Schiff's article:
December's larger than expected jump in non-farm payrolls is predictably
being touted as evidence of a more vibrant U.S. economy. Unfortunately,
the data does not support this conclusion. The bloated service sector added
178,000 jobs, while manufacturing shed another 12,000 jobs. What this means
is that 178,000 more workers will be consuming goods while 12,000 fewer
will be making them. The result will be larger trade deficits that merely
compound already stretched global imbalances and exacerbate America's inevitable
day of reckoning.
A service sector can only exist so long as it is supported by a vibrant
manufacturing sector. The reason is simple. People employed in the service
sector consume goods but do not actually produce any of them. Therefore
they must rely on others, who presumably benefit from their services, to
produce goods in their stead.
"Talk Back" commentators correctly point out the linkage between automation,
productivity and declining manufacturing employment. For reference I will trot
out an old Biiwii.com nugget, Deflation:
A Manufacturer's View, where the many benefits of automation and the drive
toward ever-increased productivity has truly been a "good thing". My concern
was then, and remains today one of proportions. In reference to Schiff's
concerns noted above, it is not the decline in manufacturing jobs that bothers
me. Not at all. That is natural, expected and highly efficient and progressive.
Where I continue to have concern is of course with the "bloated service sector" and
the consumer economy that continues to float ever higher on an ill wind of
helium (some elements of which are derivatives leverage, the US Fed and its
easy credit policies, BOJ and an entrenched culture of speculation that these
stimuli have promoted) filled expectation.
I saw a headline this week that President Bush plans to balance the budget
going forward. Unfortunately, given the full time job of running a business
with the added part time job (yes, I think I am productive :-)) of running
a website, I do not get much time to read fully the main-stream media. So,
all I got was a sound bite, where Mr. Bush is attempting to counteract sentiment
aimed at rolling back his tax cuts. Believe me, I am all for lower taxes, but
again, the proportion of the massive and growing consumer and services elephant
(in the room) vs. the puny but ever more productive manufacturing sector is
what concerns me. I will have to look into his plans more closely at some point
and see if there is anything in there resembling actually productivity as opposed
to ever-more debt leverage.
But I have come to realize that if perma-bullishness and levered speculation
are a major industry, the packaging and selling of negativity and doomsday
scenarios is at least a cottage industry. Moving away from manufacturing and
the headline hyperbole about "outsourcing of American jobs" for a moment, a
look at the various technology sectors shows awesome progress toward a better,
or at least more efficient modern world. Examples include the high speed connection
I am about to upload this article through to an entire world of potential readers,
remote surgery where the doctor sits at a console across the room (or across
the continent or world?) from the patient (see ISRG,
a former customer of ours), the fact that instead of getting in our petroleum
fueled vehicle and driving to a big box store and buying our petroleum based
plastic packaged software, we can simply download our software at the click
of a mouse... these are important trends. I do not see them presented often
enough in the doomsday cottage media.
But Biiwii.com has presented nightmare scenarios repeatedly in the 2.5 years
of its existence among trillions of other data bits floating around out there.
That is because it is difficult to rationalize the excesses and assumptions
we all see every day, which seem to outweigh the progressive and wonderful
impulses of productivity and efficiency on the scale of the previously mentioned
bloated elephant vs. let's say, a hamster or perhaps a small dog. Those who
have followed the website over time have seen a penchant for a favorable view
of technology (in the real economy if not always as a stock market investment)
and realize we are always on the lookout for signs that we are missing the "big
picture". Given the proportions of the negatives vs. the positives, I must
still come down on the side that Mr. Schiff is trying to present, although
his "Talk Back" critics make some strong points that resonate with yours' truly.
There is hype everywhere; bullish and bearish. American manufacturing
workers are most definitely feeling a strain on the whole. As a manufacturing
employer I can tell you that I have felt the strain many times myself (just
this past week I found out that a large customer had attempted an "outsource" to
China on a critical medical component that we have produced as a sole source
for the last five years. Well, "China" screwed it up and we remain on firm
footing - for now. But these are the ever-present potential hazards in the
minefield known as the global economy. We take the challenge seriously and
are committed to winning. What other choice is there?
I suppose the main point I am trying to make is that investors should attempt
to meet each new day with an open mind and a serious attitude. Nobody, but
nobody knows what will happen or where we are going. There is a spectrum
encompassing everything from technological nirvana and global productivity
to the fear of the dreaded "Amero" (memo to global elitists if you exist: that
is a really tacky name, how about something like the "Monopo") and it is the
job of investors, if they are serious, to approach it all with balance and
thoughtfulness. My personal stance remains one in which I actively and optimistically
participate in the real economy with hopes for the best, but also with extreme
awareness as to the size of that elephant.
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