Tags: recession

Revisionist History and the Great Depression – Andy Sutton

Over the past several years, the term ‘Great Depression’ has made a grand re-entry into the American mainstream and has as a consequence become perhaps one of the most misunderstood terms. We are told it was everything that it wasn’t and that it wasn’t everything that it was. Like many important historical events, there is a good bit of revisionist history at work with regards to those dark 12 years in American history when it seemed as though there was nothing but despair and governments tripping over themselves to fix something they didn’t have the tools or the business monkeying with in the first place. Think of it like a butcher going to work on the engine of a ’57 Chevy with baseball bat. The results are predictable.

Unfortunately for us here the United States, there are so few people alive who actually experienced the Depression at a time in their lives when they could remember and understand what was going on. We’ve lost our perspective, and our experience from the patriarchs of the day, and that is a dangerous combination. It means we’ll be pitched to and fro in the breeze and will buy almost anything that comes in a newscast, daily paper, or monthly magazine. It is really time for a thorough, while brief, reset on what the Great Depression was – and wasn’t.

The first really big misunderstanding about the Great Depression is that it happened because the stock market crashed. You can go into a bookstore and pick up countless history and economic texts and nearly all of them promulgate the absolute lie that the stock market crash of 1929 was responsible for the Depression. I don’t think, however, that it is enough to just call this out as a lie. WHY wasn’t the crash responsible for the Depression in and of itself?

Contributory Factors vs. Causes

Many people often confuse contributory factors for causes. It is certainly true that a crashing stock market erodes confidence. This is mostly true because so many people subscribe to another fairy tale – that the stock market is the economy when it has devolved into little more than a momentum casino for banks and hedge funds to shave pennies from each other. Another contributory factor is the idea that a crashing stock market makes people poorer, and thus gives them less discretionary funds with which to spend. Consider this – during the past several years, people have gotten hit with two hammers – a housing crash and a market crash. Yet the spending continues for the most part. People didn’t stop spending so much because of the stock market, but rather because they lost their jobs – an important distinction.

So the ‘official story’ of the Great Depression is that capitalism (in the form of the stock market) collapsed of its own weight and that Hoover, a laissez-faire believer, failed to use the full power of the government to manage the crisis. Later, FDR came in and, in similar fashion to today, wielded the power of government to ‘manage’ the crisis. And where power didn’t exist, it was created – in many cases outside the Constitution. The obvious takeaway here is that capitalism is a failure and only naked socialism can save us from the evils of economic torment. Don’t laugh folks – there are a lot of people who believe this nonsense. And many of them hold important roles in our government.

Multiple Depressions vs. a Single Event?

A reasonable assessment of the facts surrounding the Great Depression points to the fact that there were at least three, and possibly four, actual depression-like events rather than the single event depicted in the ‘official story’.  For the purposes of this paper, I am going to focus on three of these events: a low in the business cycle, global involvement in the US collapse, and the New Deal.

I – The Business Cycle – Monetary Implications

One of the biggest facts left out of the official story of the Depression was that it wasn’t the first. In fact, it takes quite a bit of digging in the history books to find any mention of previous tragic deflagrations of the business cycle. I am not going to outline each of them here in the interests of time, however, I am going to list them: 1819, 1836-37, 1857, 1873, 1893-95, and 1921. I have omitted banking panics such as 1907 since we’re discussing the business cycle. The very interesting fact about all of these sharp downturns of the business cycle is that ALL of them coincided with a complete and utter failure of the management of the money supply by the government. However, as can easily be inferred by the dates of these crises and by closer study of the crises themselves, these were all short-lived events. Most lasted two years with a couple of them lasting 4, but that was the most. The Great one was three times that long. Was this just because of monetary errors? Of course not. It was monetary errors compounded by policy missteps and ill-advised interventions on the part of government. In short, it wasn’t a failure of capitalism that caused the Depression, it was the failure to adhere to the free market that caused it – and then compounded it.

Let’s look at the causality of how monetary policy impacts, and as some would argue, even creates the business cycle. The cycle begins with a bolus of fresh money into the system. This oversupply of money drives down interest rates in the market place and causes businesses to undertake capital spending projects. Many businesses improperly interpret the bolus of fresh money and its effects as an increase in aggregate demand. Thus many of these capital spending projects are foolish in nature. I am sure it won’t take much intellectual gymnastics to figure out what some of today’s foolish endeavors happen to be.  As this move continues, business costs begin to rise due to the oversupply of money. This is further proof that inflation is a monetary event not an economic one. As cost increases persist, the monetary authorities begin to worry about inflation. Remember, their job is to manage inflationary expectations within a fiat system. So they turn off the pump, or even reverse it. As a result the ‘boom’, which was never real to begin with, comes crashing down once the supports are knocked out from under it. The business cycle bottoms and it starts all over again. This sequence of events was precisely played out during the latter part of the 1920’s. Austrian economist Murray Rothbard estimated that the money supply ballooned by around 60% between 1921 and 1929. There is a good deal of evidence that suggests the main reason the USFed kept the heel to the steel so long on monetary expansion in the 1920s was to enable the Bank of England to maintain low post WWI interest rates. Remember the fact that our USFed is beholden to the British by virtue of its owners.

The roaring 20s were just that – roaring. And nobody was paying any attention either. One of the biggest problems with advancements in technology – even then – is that they assist in masking the effects of monetary inflation. As such the 1920s saw a period of relatively stable prices for goods. The inflation made it into rampant asset speculation. Sound familiar??  As has been the case in so many subsequent boom cycles, the USFed has telegraphed its actions with regard to taking the punch bowl out the back door. By 1928, interest rates on the short end had begun to increase. Between January 1928 and August 1929, the discount rate was increased 4 times from 3.5% to 6%. It gets better. For the next three years into the depths of the first leg of the crisis in 1932, the USFed allowed the money supply to shrink by 30%.

Let’s keep score here. In the 1920s the Fed allowed the money supply to rise by over 60%, then allowed it to crash by 30% in the three years following August 1929.

Looking back in history, this has been the pattern of every boom-bust. Overissuance followed by contraction. The sad thing is that ending the USFed probably wouldn’t make too much of a difference – if only in this regard. Our government has shown complete ineptitude and an inclination to corruption as well when it comes to regulating the money supply. The one thing that would result in an ending of the USFed, at least in theory, is greater accountability. As an interesting aside, the St. Louis Fed in its most recent bimonthly ‘Review’ features an article that argues what a great creation the central bank is, and how it is directly accountable to the people. It is so biased as to be almost entertaining.

Friedman and Schwartz argued a ‘seismic incompetence’ by the USFed. It is my humble opinion, however, that these events constitute a self-inflicted wound. Why say such a thing? Look at the results; they are undeniable. A massive consolidation as the elite snapped up paper assets at fire sale prices and the unmistakable intrusion of government into the social and economic fabric of this nation, and a calling in of a fiat money’s only competition are three salient examples. Now take a look at the crisis of 2008 and ask yourself the same questions. Look at what has happened since. Government has gotten larger, and more intertwined with banks and in the regulation of everyone’s business. These are the events and facts. Draw your own conclusions.

II – Global Involvement and Resultant Disintegration

Unlike today, where collapses can happen across the globe in mere hours, the initial shocks of the Great Depression were limited to the United States. Ironically, had policy mistakes not been made at numerous times, the Great Depression would never have been great at all. It would have been just a footnote, like the aforementioned periods of economic duress. I mentioned previously that it is my opinion, based on the preponderance of the evidence, that the USFed precipitated the economic crash intentionally. However, what is certainly open to much speculation is the influence the central bank had on subsequent policy decisions. I am not going to go there since politics is not my field. What I will say in post-mortem fashion is that there were gross gaffes made that took a pinhole in the proverbial dyke and ran a train through it.

First lets look at unemployment. Granted, the methodologies were much different in the 1930s than they are today, but I am quite certain the numbers were much less maligned in those days. 1929 unemployment averaged a mere 3.2%, a figure that rose to a recessionary 8.9% in 1930. Oddly enough, calling 8.9% unemployment  ‘recessionary’ was not my label, but the labeling of the economists of the day. Contrast that with today’s metrics and the outright refusal to admit the continuing contraction in today’s economy.

Unemployment would peak at the now-famous 25% level in 1933. Much of this increase was blamed on the free market and its advocate, Herbert Hoover. However, a more in-depth and complete study of the policies Hoover endorsed and championed demonstrated that he wasn’t the free-market advocate he claimed to be. In fact, Roosevelt’s running mate John Nance Garner asserted that Hoover was ‘leading the country down the path towards socialism!’ Franklin Roosevelt of all people also rang the bell of Hoover’s socialist tendencies – and both were absolutely right. The true irony here is that FDR ended up being the one who would lead America perhaps the furthest down the path to socialism with the myriad programs enacted during his tenure, almost all of which put the destinies of the people in the hands of central planners.

In my opinion, Hoover’s biggest mistake was his enactment of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act. This one is actually in the history books, but it is always portrayed positively, when in fact it was almost singlehandedly responsible for passing the banner from the first phase of the crisis – that of America – to the rest of the world.

Smoot-Hawley was piggybacked right on top of Fordney-McCumber; another tariff act passed in 1922 that had devastated US agriculture. Smooth-Hawley was a protectionist bill at the time when it was least needed and it ended up triggering an international trade war. It essentially closed the border to foreign goods. Tariffs on agricultural goods were raised from an average of 20% to 34% and from 50% to 60% on wool and wool products. 887 tariffs were increased as a result of Smoot-Hawley and the list of dutiable goods increased to over 3,000. The biggest gaffe of Smooth-Hawley is that many of the tariffs were stated as an absolute amount as opposed to being a percentage of the price. As prices cratered as the USFed’s consolidative deflation kicked in, the flow of foreign products nearly stopped, as it no longer made sense for foreigners to export goods to America. Thousands went home jobless from the steel, paint, and clothing industries alone.

It was evident that the thinking behind Smoot-Hawley was to force Americans to buy products made at home, which would stimulate aggregate demand, thereby solving the unemployment problems. Unfortunately, the trade dynamics at the time dictated the other half of that equation. Foreigners with no place to export to won’t have the disposable income to purchase our exports. In a world where countries produce based on competitive and comparative advantages, a healthy trade environment is essential to the success of everyone. Societies that have not designed themselves to be self-sufficient can’t suddenly become so with the stroke of a politician’s pen. And that is what Smooth-Hawley tried to do – and it helped to take an American problem and make it a global one. Put another way, Smoot-Hawley was to the 1930s what the repeal of Glass-Steagall has been to the first part of this new century. Foreigners reacted in predictable fashion; they cut off the United States from the trade picture, refusing to purchase American goods. With trade sufficiently disrupted, the surpluses and shortages of goods around the globe worsened, and the economic calamity that had hit the US became a global problem.

The US agriculture industry in particular was devastated, losing around one-third of its market almost overnight. Food prices collapsed and the dominoes starting falling. 9,000 bank failures, mostly ones that held farm loans, rocked the financial sector between 1930 and 1933. Here is another point where facts diverge from populist historical opinion. The banks failures are today blamed on the stock market crash, and in effect, the failure of capitalism, when it was government intervention that was directly responsible for those failures. The stock market, which at that time was a better reflector of policy and the economy, peaked at DOW 381 in 1929, crashed to 198 in 1930, then rallied up to 294 by April 1930. The DOW would begin to fail again as Smoot-Hawley made its way through the legislative process. The bill would be signed, the bank failures would begin, the economy would tank due to a collapse in aggregate demand (which was exacerbated by a deflationary stance by the USFed), and the DOW would crater at 41 – a 90% loss two years later. As a side note, it would take 25 years for the DOW to reach 381 again. Feeling good about DOW 14,000 again anytime soon?

Many historians accurately point out that it was likely the trade war that started with the signing of Smoot-Hawley that eventually precipitated WWII. I’ll cite the old economic axiom: When goods don’t flow freely across borders, armies will. If you are feeling shivers up and down your spine right now – you should be. The environment in place today is eerily similar to that of the late 1920s and I am not even talking about the stock market. We’re hearing about potential trade wars over currency valuations, we are seeing foolish legislation fly through Congress on a regular basis, and we are seeing the USFed, in the middle of it all, as usual, rigging the system for its owners. Just like 1929, little has changed. Sure, the names, faces, and places have changed, but the song remains the same. Truly, there is nothing new under the sun.

III. The New Deal

Franklin Roosevelt rode into Washington on a political white horse in 1933, capitalizing in a huge way on the mistakes of his predecessor. He rode into town on the platform of reducing government spending by 25%, a balanced Federal budget, and a gold currency that would be defended at all costs. That was the platform. Also on the platform was the removal of the Federal government from all issues that would be better handled by private enterprises and the ending of the disastrous and terribly inefficient Hoover farm subsidies. You can do the research for yourself; this is what FDR promised when he ran for President. It all sounded very good. We got none of it and the mistakes and fiscal folly continued.

FDR’s first act, which would strike fear in the hearts of every American with a dollar to his name, came before his seat in the oval office was warm. On March 6, 1933, FDR declared a bank holiday that would last 9 days. Friedman and Schwartz also argued that the bank holiday was essentially a waste of time since it did nothing to correct the mischief of the USFed or reverse Smoot-Hawley. All the banking holiday did was deprive depositors of their funds and sow the seeds of further distrust – now directed at the new administration. 5,000 of the banks that closed their doors on March 6, 1933 did not re-open nine days later and of those 5,000, 40% of them never opened their doors again. Can you say consolidation?

Later that same year, Congress gave FDR the power to seize private gold and then fix the value thereof. The US was now well on its way to divorcing itself of the gold standard. This is where I must call into question the influence of the USFed and international bankers on US policy. Cui bono is clear in this case: the moneychangers. The Fed should have been abolished for its malfeasance in 1929, yet, essentially, it was handed more power when the private gold was called in. Sure, the USA would not totally leave the gold standard until 1971, but the die was cast – under a President who ran on the platform that such an event would never happen on his watch. This is not intended to be a hit piece of FDR; I am just stating the facts and events that took place. Senator Carter Glass summed it up in early 1933: “It’s dishonor, sir. This great government, strong in gold, is breaking its promises to pay gold to widows and orphans to whom it has sold government bonds with a pledge to pay gold coin of the present standard of value. It is breaking its promise to redeem its paper money in gold coin of the present standard of value. It’s dishonor, sir.”

The hits continued to roll throughout the 1930s. In the first year of the New Deal, the proposed budget was $10 billion, on revenues of just $3 billion. So much for the cut in government spending. Between 1933 and 1936, government expenditures increased 83%, with government debt increasing by an amazing 73%. Seriously, does ANY of this sound familiar?

In 1935, we got Social Security, and it now hangs around the neck of America like a millstone. Three years later we would get the minimum wage law, which would ensure that more Americans would remain unemployed. Remember, absent Fed mischief and felonious behavior, your dollar would be a stable store of wealth and we would not need minimum wage laws, and increases of the same, to ‘keep up’.

Mainstream economists will be quick to extoll the virtues of both Social Security and minimum wage laws. In reality, the former told Americans that they could let up their guard – the government had their backs covered, while the latter ensured that many of them had no back to cover. The minimum wage law priced (and continues to) out the members of society at the bottom of the experience scales. Namely, teens, young entrants into the workforce, and the uneducated.  It does this by saying that a firm must pay a wage that is above equilibrium in order to have the privilege of that person’s time. Simply put, if a worker can’t produce the value of the cost of his employment, then that job will not be filled. By artificially raising the bar constantly (primarily due to the above-captioned inflationary shenanigans of the USFed), more of these people are never hired, and instead rely on government assistance to survive.

The AAA (Agricultural Adjustment Act) put a tax on food processors and the revenue from that program was used to destroy crops and cattle. See, there was a surplus as a result of Smoot-Hawley, so instead of solving the problem by abolishing the miscarriage of economics that was the law, the government taxed another area, then used the tax revenue to pay farmers to pour milk down the drain. It is kind of similar to the example of corn-based ethanol where the government taxes gasoline, then uses some of that revenue to burn up the food supply while corn prices hit record highs. I know it isn’t a perfect example, but it requires the same amount of insanity to justify.

Had enough yet? I’ve got just one more – the National Recovery Administration (NRA), brought into existence by the National Industrial Recovery Act, passed in July of 1933. Again, and I don’t care if I sound like a broken record – does ANY of this sound familiar? Under this law, many industrial businesses were forced into what might easily be considered cartels. The NRA was funded by taxes on the industries it regulated and it in many ways nearly dictated how they went about doing business. Here’s the kicker; in the months leading up to the passage of NIRA, there were signs that the economy might be finally on the verge of recovery. Factory employment had increased by 23% since its bottom, and payrolls were also on the rise. The NIRA was passed and work hours were cut, wages capriciously increased or decreased, and the full regulatory burdens of this new overlord of American industry were placed squarely on companies that were just starting to get a steady footing. The results were predicable and it would be absolutely obtuse of anyone to even suggest otherwise. Six months after the law was passed, industrial production had already dropped 25%. In fact, during the NRA’s entire existence, industrial production NEVER got as high as it had in the months before the passage of that bill in July of 1933.

I could spend another 5 pages and 5,000 words detailing the rest of the New Deal, the various agencies, Acts, and actions that put a boot on the throat of the American economy. But I think you get the point. In 1933, British ‘economist’ John Maynard Keynes would strut into the history books with what is really nothing more than a bunch of gobbledygook that would justify the preposterous and underhanded actions of Hoover, Roosevelt, and the USFed. His ‘work’ was called ‘The Means to Prosperity’, which when compared with the content, was an oxymoron of dictionary example quality.

As a footnote, many of the New Deal programs like the NRA and AAA, among others, were stomped by the Supreme Court in 1935 and 1936 as being unconstitutional. The economy would undergo some recovery from late 1935 through early 1937 before crashing again as the supports were blown out from under it by the Court. Oddly enough, revisionist historians blame the Supreme Court for the final leg of the Great Depression, when again it was government interference that set the stage for that portion of the collapse as well. Unfortunately, the government still wasn’t finished perpetuating the Depression and the Wagner Act (better known as the Labor Relations Act) was passed in 1935 after the voidance of the NIRA. This essentially resulted in organized labor kicking off an orgy of organizing activity from strikes to boycotts, to seizures of plants and violence. Just what the fledgling economic recovery needed. I am not against organized labor in principle, but again, the consequences of the mere timing of this action couldn’t have been that hard to fathom.

Conclusions

I am hopeful that I have established beyond reasonable doubt in this paper that monetary policy, and more importantly, the execution and timing of monetary policy, have a direct effect on the business cycle. The 21st century tendency towards booms and busts is a direct result of the mismanagement of both the currency and the supply thereof. As a corollary, mismanagement of the business environment by government can have consequences that are just as tragic as I discussed with regard to Smoot-Hawley, NIRA, AAA, and eventually the Wagner Act. We had two leaders and complicit Congresses in the 1930s that acted like proverbial bulls in the china shop. We had a central bank that was managing things for the benefit of those who own it, and what was even worse – we had a country that was very literally demanding all of the above. And I will say it one more time for posterity – does any of this sound familiar?

Wikipedia: hoover definition: Herbert Clark 1874–1964 31st president of the United States (1929–33).

IMF Sharply Downgrades USA/Europe Growth Forecast

Published on: 09/20/2011
Categories: Current Events, Economics
Comments: No Comments

Editor’s Note: Essentially what this means is that the IMF is admitting that outside of government spending, there will be zero or negative growth in output over the next two years. It also means the IMF gives very little credibility to any of the new ‘stimulus’ programs being proposed.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The world economy has entered a “dangerous new phase,” according to the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund. As a result, the international lending organization has sharply downgraded its economic outlook for the United States and Europe through the end of next year.

The IMF expects the U.S. economy to grow just 1.5 percent this year and 1.8 percent in 2012. That’s down from its June forecast of 2.5 percent in 2011 and 2.7 percent next year.

To achieve even that still-low level of growth, the U.S. economy would need to expand at a much faster rate in the second half of the year than its 0.7 percent annual pace in the first six months.

Most economists expect growth of between 1.5 percent and 2 percent in the final two quarters. Though an improvement, it wouldn’t be enough to lower the unemployment rate. The rate has been 9 percent or higher in all but two months since the recession officially ended more than two years ago.

“The global economy has entered a dangerous new phase,” said Olivier Blanchard, the IMF’s chief economist. “The recovery has weakened considerably. Strong policies are needed to improve the outlook and reduce the risks.”

The IMF has also lowered its outlook for the 17 countries that use the euro. It predicts 1.6 percent growth this year and 1.1 percent next year, down from its June projections of 2 percent and 1.7 percent, respectively.

The gloomier forecast for Europe is based on worries that euro nations won’t be able to contain their debt crisis and keep it from destabilizing the region.

“Markets have clearly become more skeptical about the ability of many countries to stabilize their public debt,” Blanchard said. “Fear of the unknown is high.”

Overall, the IMF predicts global growth of 4 percent for both years. Stronger growth in China, India, Brazil and other developing countries should offset weaker output in the United States and Europe.

Financial turmoil and slow growth are feeding on each other in both the United States and Europe, IMF officials say. Europe’s debt crisis is causing banks to reduce lending and hold onto cash. Sharp stock market drops in the United States over the summer have hurt consumer and business confidence and will likely reduce spending. That slows growth, which leads many investors to shift money out of stocks and into safer investments, such as Treasury bonds.

In Europe, slower growth will make it harder for stressed nations to get their debt under control.

U.S. and European policymakers must act more decisively to cut budget deficits, the IMF said.

European banks need to boost their capital buffers more quickly and beyond new minimum levels set to come into force in 2019, the IMF said.

European banks have seen their stocks slide sharply this summer on fears that their exposure to the government debt of shaky countries like Greece could result in big losses.

Having extra capital would bolster confidence in the banking sector and shield Europe’s economy from the impact of jitters in financial markets.

But the IMF’s demand clashes with the position of the European Union, which limits how much assistance member states can provide to their banks.

The U.S. economy faces longer-lasting problems that go beyond high gas prices and disruptions caused by the Japan crisis, the IMF said.

Employers are adding few jobs and giving out meager pay raises. Many homeowners owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth. Banks are keeping credit tight.

All those trends are holding back consumer spending. Unemployment is likely to average 9 percent next year, the IMF’s report said, echoing a recent estimate by the Obama administration.

President Barack Obama’s proposal to cut taxes and spend more on infrastructure should provide much-needed short-term stimulus, the IMF said. But it needs to be paired with a longer-term plan to reduce the deficit over, the report said. The timing of the budget cuts is key, Blanchard said.

Budget cuts “cannot be too fast or it will kill growth,” Blanchard said in a statement. “It cannot be too slow or it will kill credibility.”

President Obama on Monday proposed more than $3 trillion of tax increases and spending cuts over 10 years. His proposal will be considered by a congressional panel charged with finding $1.5 trillion in deficit reduction this year.

Both Obama’s jobs proposal and the tax increases face stiff opposition from Republicans. They oppose any tax increases and have strongly criticized the president’s plans.

The 187-member nation fund conducts economic analysis and lends money to countries in financial distress. It will hold its annual meetings with the World Bank later this week in Washington.

Vast Majority of Americans Declare: We’re in a Recession

Editor’s Note: Could be that the proletariat is finally waking up to the idea that the economic figures lie and the the political liars use figures. When a million people apply for 60,000 McDonalds jobs, does that sound like a healthy economy to you?

(Reuters) – More than half of Americans say the U.S. economy is in a recession or a depression despite official data that show a moderate recovery, according to a poll released on Thursday.

The April 20-23 Gallup survey of 1,013 U.S. adults found that only 27 percent said the economy is growing. Twenty-nine percent said the economy is in a depression and 26 percent said it is in a recession, with another 16 percent saying it is “slowing down,” Gallup said.

The poll findings have a 4 percentage point margin of error, according to Gallup.

The health of the U.S. economy is expected to be a major issue as President Barack Obama, a Democrat, seeks re-election in 2012.

The government reported on Thursday that U.S. economic growth slowed more than expected to 1.8 percent in the first quarter of the year, as soaring food and gasoline prices drained consumer spending power.

A slowdown in first-quarter growth was acknowledged on Wednesday by the Federal Reserve, which described the U.S. economic recovery as proceeding at a “moderate pace.” That was a step back from the “firmer footing” that Fed officials cited for the recovery in March.

The Gallup poll found that Democrats are the most likely to say the economy is growing. Forty-three percent of Democrats said the economy is in a recession or depression, 13 percent said it is slowing down and 42 percent said it is growing.

Sixty-eight percent of Republicans and supporters of the conservative Tea Party movement said the economy is in a recession or a depression. Fourteen percent of Republicans and 13 percent of Tea Party supporters said the economy is growing.

Fifty-seven percent of independent voters — a crucial segment of the electorate for Obama’s re-election bid — said the economy is in a recession or depression and 24 percent said it is growing.

US Household Net Worth Drops

Published on: 09/21/2010
Categories: Current Events, Economics
Comments: 1 Comment

(Reuters) – U.S. household wealth fell by $1.5 trillion in the second quarter, according to Federal Reserve data on Friday that showed the strain a slow-paced recovery and high unemployment are putting on Americans.

Household net worth fell to $53.5 trillion, well below the $64.2 trillion it had reached at the end of 2007 when the recession officially began, according to the central bank’s quarterly flow of funds report.

Declines in the value of financial assets — especially in stocks and mutual funds — accounted for much of the decline in second-quarter net worth. Stocks alone were down $1.9 trillion to $14.9 trillion, more than offsetting small gains in other areas like state and local government retirement funds.

Consumers pared debt at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 2.3 percent, the ninth consecutive quarter in which they did so. Home mortgage debt fell at an annual rate of 2-1/4 percent after a 4-1/4 percent drop in the first three months this year.

During the financial crisis that wracked the country from 2007 to 2009, trillions of dollars in housing and financial market wealth was wiped out and heavy household and financial sector indebtedness was exposed.

The government has stepped in with increased spending and stimulus programs to try to spur recovery but the unemployment rate in August edged up to 9.6 percent and housing markets are still in distress.

Federal government debt expanded during the second quarter at a hefty 24.4 percent annual rate after a 20.5 percent increase in the first quarter. By contrast, state and local government debt shrank 1.3 percent during the second quarter.

Business debt excluding financial companies was up a slim 0.1 percent following a 0.5 percent rise in the first quarter.

Data issued on Thursday by the U.S. Census Bureau similarly underlined the extent to which the financial crisis and ensuing recession has hurt household incomes.

The Census Bureau’s annual look at U.S. living standards — once the envy of the world because of the upward mobility Americans could tap into — found the poverty rate at a 15-year high of 14.3 percent in 2009, up from 13.2 percent in 2008.

1 in 7 Americans Live in Poverty

Washington Post

In the second year of a brutal recession, the ranks of the American poor soared to their highest level in half a century and millions more are barely avoiding falling below the poverty line, the Census Bureau reported Thursday.

About 44 million Americans – one in seven – lived last year in homes in which the income was below the poverty level, which is about $22,000 for a family of four. That is the largest number of people since the census began tracking poverty 51 years ago.

The snapshot captured by the census for 2009, the first year of the Obama presidency, shows an America in the throes of economic upheaval.

Since 2007, the year before the recession kicked into gear, the country has almost 4 million fewer wage-earners. There are more children growing up poor. And for the first time since the government began tracking health insurance in 1987, the number of people who have health coverage declined, as people lost jobs with health benefits or employers stopped offering it.

With midterm elections less than two months away, the statistics bare the reality fueling much of the anger toward Washington.

In the Washington region, Virginia’s poverty rate rose the most, to 10.5 percent from 8.6 percent. Maryland’s edged up half a percentage point to 9 percent. The District’s rate was the highest, but it declined from 18 percent to 17 percent.

Although the recession’s impact was broad-based, there were disparities among groups. The official poverty rate increased for all races and ethnicities except Asians, who continued to have the highest median household income. More working-age adults lived in poverty, while the number of poor people 65 or older fell, largely as a result of increases in Social Security payments.

More than 51 million Americans lack health insurance, the census reported, and a greater-than-ever percentage of those who do have insurance are getting it from the government.

Scholars, nonprofit groups that work with the poor and President Obama all expressed concern about the gloomy picture.

Obama said the numbers could have been much worse were it not for government assistance.

“Because of the Recovery Act and many other programs providing tax relief and income support to a majority of working families – and especially those most in need – millions of Americans were kept out of poverty last year,” he said in a statement.

Many conservatives, however, laid the blame on government programs that don’t work.

“We’re spending more money fighting poverty than ever before, yet poverty is up,” said Michael D. Tanner, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. “Clearly, we’re doing something wrong.”

Along with a rise in the number of people living in poverty, the census reported a decrease in the number of people who are living just above poverty level, suggesting that many of those just slightly above poverty slipped over the edge in the previous year.

Food banks and shelters around the country say they are seeing former donors asking for help.

Dale City resident Jamie Imler is one. She used to give money to charity and make quilts for homeless shelters. But since she began treatment for breast cancer last year, she has been too weak to work at either of the two jobs she held, one in a restaurant and one for a recruitment agency. Her income has dropped from $2,000 a month to less than $700 – not enough to cover her rent – and she has been coming for the past six months to a food pantry in Prince William County called Action Through Service.

“Things were good,” she said. “I was a single mom, raised my son and needed food stamps.”

“And now I’m here,” she added.

While the number of the country’s poorest people is higher than in any other recorded period, the rate is not without precedent. The last time it was this high was 1994. And in the early 1960s, it was over 20 percent.

Despite the jump in poverty, median income did not go down for those who still had jobs. Men working full time saw their median earnings rise 2 percent, to $47,000, while the median wage of women rose about the same amount, to a little over $36,000.

The median household income declined a little, to just under $50,000. But household income is down 4.2 percent since the recession began and 5 percent from its peak of more than $52,000 in 1999. Black households fared particularly poorly, as incomes dropped 4.4 percent compared with 1.6 percent for white households.

“We always have a situation where some population groups have higher poverty rates than others,” said Margaret Simms, who directs the Low Income Working Families Project at the Urban Institute. “During recessions, we see who bears the brunt in hard times in the kinds of numbers we see today.”

The statistics have quickly become fodder for a debate on the proper role of government in combating economic downturns.

“It’s a strong indication that there is not enough focus on growth and investment in job production,” said Ken Blackwell, the former Ohio state treasurer who is a fellow at the Family Research Council.

Ron Haskins, a head of the Brookings Center on Children and Families at the Brookings Institution, said government programs do not have enough money to make up for the decline among private and employer-provided health care. “Is the government going to pick it up?” he said. “That means bigger government, bigger expenses, more taxes.”

This summer, a proposal to extend jobless benefits to the long-term unemployed came under attack by Republicans, who objected to more spending that would add to the soaring deficit. The measure eventually passed.

Some of those who have struggled to find work are making their way to Good Shepherd Alliance, a food pantry in Loudoun County, which is one of the country’s wealthiest jurisdictions.

Vickie Koth, executive director, said she has grown accustomed to hearing clients say, almost as if dazed by their dizzying descent, that they used to volunteer at nonprofits like hers. The downturn will end some day, she noted, and hard times should be remembered.

“A lot of the community is really seeing this issue for the first time,” she said. “. . . Once this turns around, I hope that people will remember what we went through so that our communities will be more open to serving those around us who are in need.”

Staff writers Jennifer Buske and Caitlin Gibson contributed to this report.

1 in 10 Homeowners Face Foreclosure – MBA

Published on: 08/26/2010
Categories: Current Events, Economics
Comments: 1 Comment

From AP

WASHINGTON — One in 10 American households with a mortgage was at risk of foreclosure this summer as the government’s efforts to help have had little impact stemming the housing crisis.

About 9.9 percent of homeowners had missed at least one mortgage payment as of June 30, the Mortgage Bankers Association said Thursday.

That number, which is adjusted for seasonal factors, was down slightly from a record-high of more than 10 percent as of April 30.

In a worrisome sign, the number of homeowners starting to have problems with their mortgages rose after trending downward last year. The number of homes in the foreclosure process fell slightly, the first drop in four years.

More than 2.3 million homes have been repossessed by lenders since the recession began in December 2007, according to foreclosure listing service RealtyTrac Inc. Economists expect the number of foreclosures to grow well into next year.

The number of Americans missing payments and falling into foreclosure has followed the upward trend in unemployment, which has been near double digits all year and has shown no sign of dropping soon.

“Ultimately the housing story, whether it is delinquencies, homes sales or housing starts, is an employment story,” Jay Brinkmann, the trade group’s top economist, said in a statement. “Only when we see a consistent increase in employment will we see an increase in sales and starts, and a sustained improvement in the delinquency numbers.”

There was some modestly encouraging news. The percentage of mortgage borrowers receiving foreclosure notices fell slightly to 4.57 percent in the April-to-June quarter. That’s down from 4.63 percent in the January-to-March period and the first drop in four years.

And the percentage of loans receiving their first notice of foreclosure also dipped. That fell to 1.1 percent in the second quarter from 1.2 percent in the first quarter.

Besides forcing people from their homes, foreclosures and distressed home sales have pushed down on home values and crippled the broader housing industry. They have made it difficult for homebuilders to compete with the depressed prices and discouraged potential sellers from putting their homes on the market.

Government efforts haven’t made much of a difference. Nearly half of the 1.3 million homeowners who have enrolled in the Obama administration’s main mortgage-relief program have been cut loose through July, the Treasury Department said last week. The program is intended to help those at risk of foreclosure by lowering their monthly mortgage payments.

Roughly 32 percent of those who started the program have received permanent loan modifications and are making their payments on time.

Dow Headed to 5,000?

Published on: 08/24/2010
Comments: No Comments

Dow Faces Bouncy Ride to 5,000: Strategist

MARKET, STOCK MARKET, DOW, STOCK MARKET, INVESTMENT STRATEGY, ECONOMY
CNBC.com
| 24 Aug 2010 | 03:12 AM ET

The Dow Jones Industrial Average will lose about half of its value over the next couple of years as it follows a Nikkei-like pattern of several sharp rallies in an overall decline, according to Charles Nenner, founder and president of Charles Nenner research.

Stocks are currently in a bear-market rally, and looking at charts and past trends, unemployment and leading indicators suggest the Dow will drop to 5,000 in the next two to two-and-a-half years, Nenner told CNBC in an e-mail.

Deflation will arrive, along with a sharp double-dip recession, pushing the Dow lower, although, like the Japanese market, stocks will see several jumps of 30 percent to 40 percent, he said.

- Watch the full Charles Nenner interview above.

“Things look really bad for the next 10 years,” Nenner said.

While most stocks will get caught in the downturn, the exception will be those with exposure to soft commodities like wheat, corn and soybeans, he added.

Last week, JPMorgan strategist David Kelly said there is still a lot of opportunity in stocks and that a double-dip scenario is “very unlikely.”

Nenner is also bullish on gold and silver over the longer term and expects the precious metals to start a new leg higher by the end of the year.

Bond yields should go lower for the next three or four years and the Japanese yen should gain against the dollar, he said, adding that his target was 80 yen per dollar.

Nenner also said that there is a strong case to suggest that the Federal Reserve will ease monetary policy further.

  • Charts: Dow Facing ‘Serious Trouble’
  • © 2010 CNBC.com

    URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/38826988/


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    © 2010 CNBC.com

    Only It Didn’t

    The powers that be are now starting to be shown what should be a very important lesson in the old saying: “You can fool all of the people some of the time and you can fool some of the people all of the time, but you can’t fool all of the people all of the time”. For a year and a half now, starting at a rather well defined point in time during early March 2009, the govermedia switched gears and pronounced that the shattered American economy was in recovery.

    The perceptive ears on Wall Street picked up on this rather quickly and the markets reversed and headed higher. Consumers bought it not only because they’d bought almost anything that moved for nearly a decade and a half, but frankly, because they wanted to. The doomsday talk was really putting a damper on the consumption party, and well hey, let’s pass out the credit cards and get it rolling again. It would have seemed as if the powers that be had created another blowout, profited from it, bailed themselves out at taxpayer expense, then with a few crafty words and graphics on the telescreen kick start the next phase. It was all set up to happen perfectly.

    Consumer Credit

    Only it didn’t.

    The consumer bit for a while, but never fully embraced the idea of the jobless recovery. Many times over the past year, these pages were filled with wonderment at the unmitigated gall of an establishment that would think that a man without a means to make a living, unable to support his family, would hike out his credit card and march off to the store and forget about it all. It defied logic. Yet that was what was supposed to happen.

    Only it didn’t.

    In early 2009, the federal government handed out cash to consumers and instead of spending it, consumers saved it, paid down debt, bought Gold or any number of a hundred things other than doing what they were ‘supposed’ to do with it, namely spending it. I joked at the time that because of non-compliance, the next stimulus would be store gift cards. While we haven’t gotten there yet, there has been zero talk of another round of checks.

    This should send a very clear signal that our government, a miserable failure in doing anything to help our economy, STILL thinks it can spend your money better than you can. Look at recent actions this week as our government decided to pull the ultimate robbing of Peter to pay Paul when it swiped $12 Billion from the food stamps program to give bailouts to the teachers’ union and other state and local employees.

    And even this will not last. States are still broke. What happens when this money is spent? The same thing as when the last stimulus money was exhausted. We’re right back where we started with nothing to show except more kicking of the can down the road and a hefty bill for our children and grandchildren. Larry Kotlikoff’s article on Bloomberg this week nailed it – We’re broke and we don’t even know it. The fiscal gap, now at $202 trillion, is up roughly $17 trillion in the last 6 months.

    The debt function is going parabolic and yet there are still people on TV on a daily basis screaming that America has the strongest economy in the world. If a fiscal gap that represents almost 15 years of GDP is considered the strongest, then I’d hate to see what the weakest looks like. It is repeated like Newspeak in the hopes that some of it will stick.

    Yet there truly is a dichotomy going on in America. Take a trip to the local shopping mall and you’ll see people snapping up the latest iGadgets, consumer electronics, and other ‘necessities’. Yet retail sales are flat. Granted, much of the spending is being done on deeply discounted items, but there is something worth mentioning here. There is a silver lining in all this. If you are one of those people who have been responsible (and fortunate) and have savings and some extra cash for discretionary spending, there has never been a better time. America is on sale – literally, and in more ways than one. Don’t get too excited though; the silver linings pretty much end right there.

    In recent weeks, almost on perfect cue, the mainstream press started playing up the ‘Double Dip’ card. They even trotted out the relic Alan Greenspan for a few sound bytes. The buzzword is now deflation. M3 is contracting (albeit bouncing somewhat in the past few weeks). M1 growth is falling, and M2 is hovering very close to the zero-growth area. The banks are being blamed for hoarding bailout dollars and not lending to consumers and businesses. Funny thing though, it is the Fed who is incentivizing this behavior by paying the banks to keep their money there and it is the same Fed who is working on a ‘bank CD’ system to pay the banks an even higher return for not lending.

    Monetary Aggregates

    Something ought to ring patently false then when Ben Bernanke gets up on his soapbox and talks about the need for lending by banks. Yet no one in Congress has the fortitude to ask these tough questions save for Ron Paul and perhaps one or two others. The Fed knows our economy is built on inflation, credit, and increasing money supply, yet in similar fashion to the 1930’s, the Fed is actually encouraging deflation through a number of its policies while talking about overall easing through its pursed lips and crossed fingers.

    I realize that this is heresy to the many people who talk about quantitative easing and hyperinflation as being a certainty. The truth is that the banking system creates much more inflation than the Fed, and right now the banking system isn’t doing it. Granted, the Fed is doing QE through a variety of channels – if it were not, we’d have crashed a long time ago. But to be fair, most of that QE has been for the purposes of saving banks and related institutions rather than helping consumers and the economy. I think everyone can agree on that point.

    Again, one must ask serious questions about the Fed and its true purposes. The latest talk is that the Fed is worried about the recovery. The last time I checked, the Fed’s ONLY two mandates were price stability and maximum employment, not micromanaging the economy. They’ve done a lousy job on both counts, but have painted a picture of a slow, but steady recovery that would get fuel from borrowed money, stimulus, and the last of the age of consumer largesse. It was all supposed to happen just like that.

    Only it didn’t.

    Initial Jobless Claims hit 5-Month High

    Published on: 08/12/2010
    Categories: Current Events, Economics
    Comments: No Comments

    From Bloomberg:

    The outlook for the August employment report is off to a bad start in what can’t be good for today’s stock market. Initial jobless claims for the August 7 week came in at 484,000, far above expectations for 460,000 and the highest level since February. The four-week average, up a steep 14,250 to 473,500, is also the highest since February. There are no unusual factors affecting the results.

    In a partial offset, continuing claims fell 118,000 in data for the July 31 week. The four-week average fell 64,000 to 4.519 million. The unemployment rate for insured workers came down one tenth to 3.5 percent. These numbers do look good but do reflect, to a degree, the expiration of benefits as the unemployed simply fall out of the insured labor pool.

    No Surprise in Housing’s Dive

    Published on: 06/23/2010
    Comments: 1 Comment

    Wall Street doubled over in anguish today as the latest numbers on existing home sales hit the news wires. I must say that I am totally confused as to why the decline was any kind of surprise, however. The mainstream press dutifully expressed every emotion from grief to even outrage as the number was reported and analyzed.

    Most people have quickly forgotten that the biggest reason there were so many sales to begin with was due to the fact that Congress had waded into yet another market and propped it up with cash on the barrelhead for anyone willing to take the leap. When they lured all the first time buyers they could, they took the next logical step and offered the cash to pretty much everyone else. Couple those actions with the Fed’s active (and now passive) buying of mortgage backed securities and it was bubble mania all over again. Until it wasn’t. That point came at the end of April, when the tax cuts were mercifully allowed to expire, saving our children and grandchildren untold billions.

    At that point, I began to have serious doubts as to whether this beaten market could even avoid another crash. I studied the Mortgage Bankers Association reports each Wednesday and watched applications for new purchases fall off a cliff. My contacts in that particular industry said their phones have never been so quiet regarding new purchases. The refinance business kept them busy, but nobody seemed interested in buying a house after April 30. At that point, I wondered how bad May’s numbers would be. It was pretty obvious that the end of the tax credit had pulled at least most of May’s agreements back into April; and quite likely some of June’s as well. Where demand would settle after that was anyone’s guess.

    Exiting Home Sales

    One of the problems with the report on existing homes released today is that the report is based on actual closings. So any one who was hurrying to get locked in during March and perhaps even the early part of April would have had their closing count in May’s number provided it happened before the end of the month. May’s actual purchases for existing homes (or lack thereof) will not hit the statistics until at least June and perhaps July. So the 2.2% drop, while not a surprise, does not reflect base demand for existing housing ex-stimulus. Unfortunately, this was the spin being applied by at least some folks in the MSM. They posited that housing can indeed survive and even thrive without further stimulus and declared the tax credits a smashing success and a fine example of the benefits of government intervention.

    30-Year Rates

    However, stimulus in the housing arena has taken on three forms; one fairly transparent; the other two much less so. The transparent stimulus was the tax credits. Many are in fact clamoring for a reinstatement of the credits. Unfortunately, this is an election year, and right now it just isn’t cool to be a big spender – at least not openly. Congress will actually forego having a budget for FY2011. If there is no budget, I guess there can be no budget deficit. Are we really that far along in this charade? We could go a long way down that road without ever finishing this point, however. The second type of stimulus with regard to housing is the ultra-low interest rates that have been created by the Federal Reserve and it’s illicit (and often illegal) actions. These actions have kept 30-year mortgage rates under 5% and that alone has been enticing many people into taking the plunge. In truth, the total amount repaid on a $200,000 mortgage will be over $20,000 less if you can get a 4.8% rate as opposed to 5.25%. The bottom line is that low rates trump tax credits any day of the week. The third type of stimulus – and one that is setting an alarming trend is the number of mortgages being essentially underwritten by the US Government. This number has been hovering somewhere around 50% on average depending on the week.

    What must be asked, however, is how much lower mortgage rates can reasonably be expected to go? At the same time rates have been near historic lows, it is more difficult than any time during the last 20 years to actually obtain financing. Many lenders, still ringing from 2007 and 2008’s losses are demanding better financial situations lending in many areas. It is not odd to hear lenders requesting 20% down, which was virtually unheard of just a few years ago. The rest have pretty much been following suit despite the fact that they were made whole by the US Taxpayer.

    New Home Sales

    With so many economists and policymakers hanging their hats on the return of the housing bull to fuel the next economic binge, it would seem that today’s number was maybe a small jolt. If today was a jolt, tomorrow’s new home purchases report is likely to act as a thunderbolt. Contrary to the manner in which existing sales are reported, new home numbers are tabulated based on when a contract is actually signed. In other words, tomorrow morning’s report will give us the first glimpse at the post stimulus housing market. Economists are expecting quite a drop – roughly 20%.

    One point that is often overlooked is the fact that there are now so many publicly traded homebuilders. They even have their own index. Inventories have been a problem since the middle of 2006, but never once has anyone seriously mentioned a cessation to building. Sure, permits fluctuate, but most experts will readily agree that the quickest resolution to this crisis would have been to put a moratorium on homebuilding for a few months and let them inventory get worked down. However, how many public company CEO’s would be able to hold their job if they took a quarter off? How would a homebuilder’s stock fare if they hung up the shovels for 3 or 6 months? Answer: it wouldn’t. This is why the housing problem won’t get better, and in fact will probably get worse. Prices will adjust until it simply ceases to be profitable to build a house. Once that happens, the building will stop and the market can start to address its inventory problem.

    Contributing to that inventory problem are foreclosures, which are still running at all-time highs, tax sales, which are close to all-time highs in many locales, and the continued loss of quality jobs, which are driving people out of certain areas while not bringing anyone back in to replace them.

    With so much of our economic prospects tied into housing, it will be very important to see how well this market stands on its own – if it can do so at all. Should the numbers start to falter, will the Congress race back in with more incentives? Are potential buyers expecting more tax credits? Will the Fed continue to keep rates in the cellar? My guess at this point is that, like so many other areas, it’ll go until it doesn’t. And then once again we’ll have to be reactive as opposed to proactive.

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