"The
crisis from which we are now suffering is also the outcome of a credit expansion.
The present crisis is the unavoidable sequel to a boom. Such a crisis necessarily
follows every boom generated by the attempt to reduce the 'natural rate of
interest.'" - Analyst X
Do you have a troubled friend or relative whose misguided attempts to solve
their problems only make the situation worse? As human beings, it is hard to
see our own short-comings. But to ever truly solve our problems, we must strive
to understand them.
As the financial crisis in America grows, politicians and pundits are proposing
a variety of solutions, but have we arrived at a consensus on the problem?
To some, the problem is Iraq. We are spending too much money there. To others,
the problem is China and the competition from foreign labor. To others still,
the problem is a shortage of oil, health care, or education. These issues are
indeed problematic.
However, every modern financial crisis (Iceland today, Asia in the 1990s,
the Nordic countries in the 1990s, Japan in 1989, etc., etc. etc.) has a striking
similarity: a swift and dramatic rise in system-wide debt relative to GDP.
Our own crisis is perhaps different only in its magnitude.

Source: U.S. Federal Reserve, Commerce Department

Source: U.S. Federal Reserve, Commerce Department
"It
is not real prosperity. It is illusory prosperity. It did not
develop from an increase in economic wealth. Rather, it arose because the
credit expansion created the illusion of such an increase. Sooner or later
it must become apparent that this economic situation is built on sand." -
Analyst X

Source: U.S. Federal Reserve, Commerce Department
Considering that GDP (non-inflation-adjusted) grew 582% over the last 30 years,
it is quite amazing that financial debt grew 584% relative to GDP. In nominal
terms, domestic financial debt was $337.8 billion in 1977. By 2007, it was
$15,751 billion. That is a gain of 4563%. Total domestic debt grew 1384%. Mortgage
debt grew 1643%.
Throughout the years, the Fed has put forth many arguments to rationalize
the growth of debt: excess liquidity is a result of Asian savings; financial
innovations have allowed for more debt and faster GDP growth; asset growth
has outpaced debt growth. While it may be appropriate for such arguments to
be made by the private sector as it seeks to encourage more debt assumption,
the fact that these arguments were being put forth by the Fed indicates a flaw
in the current system. If the Fed was the institution justifying greater leverage,
if the Fed was encouraging Americans to take on adjustable rate mortgages,
if the Fed was its own apologist, what force in our society is the responsible
counterbalance, the voice of reason encouraging a more sound financial sector,
higher interest rates, and more savings with less debt?
There
are those that believe our modern economy is so evolved that concerns about
debt levels are irrelevant. Their argument centers on the idea that "it's different
this time." While "it's different this time" is comforting, a similar rational
was used to justify the dot-com bubble and the housing bubble. Do we really
want to bet the stability of our financial system and our economy on a similar
conjecture? Are we 100% sure that we have broken the bounds of historical macroeconomic
constraints? Some simple questions cast doubt on the "it's different" argument.
For example, if our economy can support more debt, then why are homeowners
across the board having to dip into the equity of their homes to keep the momentum
going? In the 1980s, homeowner equity represented nearly 70% of the value of
a home. By the end of 2007, it was only 47.9%. If our economy can support more
debt, why does it seem to slow dramatically every time the Fed tries to raise
interest rates? If there is so much solidity behind the economy, why is the
Fed being forced to invoke Depression-era rules to bailout a broker/dealer
that it fears could bring down the entire system?
Others claim "Yeah, I've been hearing this since the 1980s and we're still
moving forward." However, it is clear our debt levels are starting to catch
up with us. All one has to do is look at the performance of the stock market
relative to commodities over the last 10 years. Companies like Microsoft and
Intel are still trading lower than they were in the 90s. Even Warren Buffett's
stocks have not done well. But gold is up over 4 times and oil has gone up
nearly 9 times. The only reason we're "still moving forward" is because of
the massive stimulus that the government and the Fed have been injecting into
the economy for nearly a decade now, but even that hasn't been enough to help
the stock market! Imagine what the true market price of stocks would have been
without this stimulus!

Some Fed apologists may try to characterize the institution as a victim, having
been unable to control the debt being created outside of its purview. While
there is some truth to this line of thinking, it misses the bigger problem:
the Fed has the biggest system-wide tool to encourage savings and to limit
debt. Yet, for the last 20 years, by consistently lowering interest rates,
the Fed has been using this tool to encourage more debt. The Fed has also encouraged
deregulation, changes in CPI calculations, changes in reserve requirements,
and the use of derivatives --- all of which help add more debt and leverage
into the system. In addition, most Fed officials have engaged in actions and
bailouts that fostered moral hazard and created an environment of risky behavior,
as investors openly talked about how the Fed would come to the rescue should
anything go wrong. In the end, it appears these investors were correct in their
estimation.
Many short-term solutions to our current problems will be proposed. Some will
be helpful. Other will only make the long-term problem worse by adding more
debt than GDP. If we are to avoid the problems of the past, any long-term solution
must add checks and balances to the Fed's mandate to ensure appropriate levels
of debt within our financial system. The Fed should be responsible stewards
of the U.S. currency and conservative guarantors of the banking system.
So what does all this mean for our society and for investors?
According to Analyst X, "The sooner the credit expansion policy is brought
to a stop, the less harm will have been done by the misdirection of entrepreneurial
activity, the milder the crisis and the shorter the following period of economic
stagnation."
For our society, it means a rethink of how we deal with our economy. We are
like a steroid user. We keep pumping steroids into the economy to keep it going,
but it continues to damage our long-term health, and it requires more and more
artificial stimulus. To date, the solutions are more of the same: lower interest
rates, more government encouraged debt via Fannie and Freddie and the FHA,
more help for banks and homebuilders. More steroid use will only make the damage
worse. What kind of position do we put ourselves in if the world economy continues
to drive up commodity prices, if inflation creeps into more of the economy,
and the dollar continues to fall? If the game turns from stimulating the economy
to competitive interest rates increases to contain inflation and attract capital,
will the U.S. be able to compete?
Long term, the solution is to return to a market-based economy, wherein the
Fed does not artificially encourage low interest rates via government intervention.
Short term, the solution might be a large, quick bailout given directly to
each U.S. taxpayer, which would be highly inflationary, but would allow debt
to be paid down. This solution seems more just than the piecemeal and special-interest-driven
favors that keep trickling out of Congress. Furthermore, the U.S. taxpayers
could use their money to reduce debt, rather than the steps currently being
proposed that create more debt.
For investors, the solution is more of the same: commodities. As long as the
Fed and Congress continue to use more steroids and encourage more misallocation
of resources into banking and housing and debt, investors need to protect their
wealth and purchasing power through gold, oil, and agriculture commodities.
With stories of food shortages and hoarding springing up across the globe,
agricultural commodities are the best bet. The Rogers Agriculture Total Return
index (Symbol RJA) is a great way for average investors to invest directly
in these commodities.
So why keep Analyst X a mystery? What does he know about a worldwide economic
crisis? Well, a lot, given that he lived through the Great Depression. All
the above quotes are from 1931. His name: Ludwig von Mises. Plus ca change,
plus c'est la meme chose.
Please visit FakeBen.com to learn more
about these problems and the rising threat inflation poses to your wealth.
While the Fed might be hurting the U.S. economy, they don't have to hurt you.
There are many ways to protect your wealth and to prosper.
For those interested, here are some more of Ludwig von Mises' quotes:
"The point of view prevails generally among politicians, business people,
the press and public opinion that reducing the interest rates below those developed
by market conditions is a worthy goal for economic policy, and that the simplest
way to reach this goal is through expanding bank credit. Under the influence
of this view, the attempt is undertaken, again and again, to spark an economic
upswing through granting additional loans. At first, to be sure, the result
of such credit expansion comes up to expectations. Business is revived. An
upswing develops. However, the stimulating effect emanating from the credit
expansion cannot continue forever. Sooner or later, a business boom created
in this way must collapse."
The current economic system "is rejected unanimously today by all political
parties and governments. No similar agreement may be found with respect to
what economic system should replace it in the future."
"All attempts to emerge from the crisis by new interventionist measures are
completely misguided. There is only one way out of the crisis: Forego
every attempt to prevent the impact of market prices on production. Give up
the pursuit of policies which seek to establish interest rates, wage rates
and commodity prices different from those the market indicates. This may contradict
the prevailing view. It certainly is not popular. Today all governments and
political parties have full confidence in interventionism and it is not likely
that they will abandon their program. However, it is perhaps not too optimistic
to assume that those governments and parties whose policies have led to this
crisis will some day disappear from the stage and make way for men whose economic
program leads, not to destruction and chaos, but to economic development and
progress."