How about real austerity? Real growth?

Today, we introduce a new twist on these Daily Reckoning remarks… The new approach is that we are going to write less. Yes…we promise! Long term Daily Reckoning sufferers have heard this before. But this time, we really mean it. Honest injun.

And to prove we are serious, we’re keeping today’s comments to just two pages…And only one subject. An old one.

We live in a world of frauds and counterfeits…bunkum and claptrap…

That’s what makes it so much fun! It brings tears to our eyes one day…and seizures of laughter the next. So many imposters…so little time.

As you know, neither Europe’s austerity policies nor America’s growth policies have worked. Why? Because they are both phony.

In Europe, governments collectively spent 44.8% of GDP in 2000. Today it is 49.2%. A big increase. That’s not austerity…that’s stimulus. The Europeans are letting out their belts, not cinching them up.

And now that the phony austerity is not working, a new batch of leaders wants to try something new — phony growth. Francois Hollande, France’s new president, says he will hire more government workers and spend more money to promote “growth.” He also says he’ll raise taxes on the rich to 75% of marginal income (up from 41% now) and increase the “wealth tax.” How he thinks you get real growth out of this foul mixture is a mystery. The government already directs and consumes half the nation’s output…and the economy is flat. How will it do better with more money? Instead, the French will be wasting resources…squeezing the most productive part of the economy…and getting poorer.

Meanwhile, the US has stuck to its phony growth policies. The feds run huge deficits to ‘stimulate’ the economy.

(Reuters) — The government posted a budget deficit of $125 billion in May, more than twice the level registered in the same month last year.

The May deficit, which was close to analyst forecasts, followed a rare month of surplus in April that was due to higher budget receipts during tax season but also other temporary factors.

So far this fiscal year, the budget deficit stands at $844.5 billion, narrower than at the same time a year ago.

Under the government’s accounting system, October is the opening month of fiscal 2012. During fiscal 2011 which ended September 30, the budget deficit totaled $1.296 trillion.

We saw yesterday where all that money has gotten us. Nowhere. Family wealth has dropped back to levels of 20 years ago.

But wait…maybe it’s not the feds’ fault. While the Europeans pretend to cut back, maybe America’s stimulus program is a fraud too. That’s what a pair of professors at Yale claim. This ‘recovery’ is different from previous recoveries, they believe, because the US is following a “hidden austerity program:”

…there is something historically different about this recession and its aftermath: in the past, local government employment has been almost recession-proof. This time it’s not. Going back as long as the data have been collected (1955), with the one exception of the 1981 recession, local government employment continued to grow almost every month regardless of what the economy threw at it. But since the latest recession began, local government employment has fallen by 3 percent, and is still falling. In the equivalent period following the 1990 and 2001 recessions, local government employment grew 7.7 and 5.2 percent. Even following the 1981 recession, by this stage local government employment was up by 1.4 percent.

Without this hidden austerity program, the economy would look very different. If state and local governments had followed the pattern of the previous two recessions, they would have added 1.4 million to 1.9 million jobs and overall unemployment would be 7.0 to 7.3 percent instead of 8.2 percent.

So, dear reader, pick your poison. Phony growth? Or phony austerity? Neither works. What does work? What would turn this economy around…and put it back on the road to real growth? We’ll tell you next week. We’re out of space for today.

Regards,

Bill Bonner,
for The Daily Reckoning

Since founding Agora Inc. in 1979, Bill Bonner has found success and garnered camaraderie in numerous communities and industries. A man of many talents, his entrepreneurial savvy, unique writings, philanthropic undertakings, and preservationist activities have all been recognized and awarded by some of America's most respected authorities. Along with Addison Wiggin, his friend and colleague, Bill has written two New York Times best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt. Both works have been critically acclaimed internationally. With political journalist Lila Rajiva, he wrote his third New York Times best-selling book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets, which offers concrete advice on how to avoid the public spectacle of modern finance. Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force behind The Daily Reckoning. Dice Have No Memory: Big Bets & Bad Economics from Paris to the Pampas, the newest book from Bill Bonner, is the definitive compendium of Bill's daily reckonings from more than a decade: 1999-2010. 

  • http://www.investorsfriend.com The InvestorsFriend

    MORE PHONEY JOBS

    We could pay people to smash windows and vanalise our towns and then apy others to fix the damage…

    We could hire more governemnt workers but limit the damange by having them not do anything.

    Or, maybe we could just have the government try to keep out of the way while the economy recovers.

  • Don Levit

    Bill:
    Do you have figures on money invested in stocks versus money redeemed?
    I have been reading that the outflow has exceeded the inflow for a long time, yet the stock market continues to rise.
    Am I incorrect, or can the market rise even though outflow exceeds income?
    Don Levit

  • john

    how’s that crash alert flag doing Bill? I’ve seen so many of those since 2009.

  • gman

    “As you know, neither Europe’s austerity policies nor America’s growth policies have worked. Why? Because they are both phony.”

    so’s the debt.

    “What would turn this economy around…and put it back on the road to real growth?”

    jubilee. 100% across the board. including you.

    I won’t hold my breath ….

  • gman

    “how’s that crash alert flag doing Bill? I’ve seen so many of those since 2009.”

    we’ve been crashing, since 2009. remember, it’s not the fall that kills, it’s the sudden stop at the bottom.

  • http://lifeinthekeyofc.waterforlife.ws/ David

    Yeah, that what we need, jubilee. Let’s reward all those idiots that got us into this mess with more freedom. That sends a great message to those who were actually responsible with their money.

    Here is a better idea. Crank rates up to 7%. It will reward those who actually saved their money and bankrupt those who still owe some. That way they still get their synthetic jubilee by going bankrupt except that they can’t borrow any more money and start the mess all over again

  • CommonCents

    The Euro and their phony money is coming crashing down. The result will be a major devaluation of the entire zones individual currency. Long term result will be a stronger dollar and our exports will be less competitive. The Fed will attempt to counteract with major printing of fiat, keeping the banks and international corporations flush. Everyone else is screwed.

    End result and time frame who knows!

  • TomTerrific

    Yes Bill, the stimulus went to the wrong people. The idle rich got richer, and the working people in America got the bill.

  • gman

    “The idle rich got richer, and the working people in America got the bill.”

    you don’t get it. the idle rich are the RIGHT people. that’s why they’re idle rich. they infested correctly so they earned it. as for the working people if they were worth anything they’d be worth something. sheesh.

    “Here is a better idea. Crank rates up to 7%.”

    like this guy here. he obviously has infestments he is counting on, but the supply of workers is running low. so his answer is to weed out all the other infestment contenders and gather up only the best workers for himself. you have to admire a man like that – rather than just fear the coming crisis he views it as an opportunity to improve his own position (at everyone else’s expense, but hey, SOMEBODY’s gotta pay his bills!).

  • CT

    Phony growth or any kind of growth does not or will not work anymore. We are at the end of a dying concept that some keep shouting about that will fix everything. Pathetic, really pathetic.

  • gman

    “Phony growth or any kind of growth does not or will not work anymore.”

    ah, but the infestment dream never dies! next stop – serfdom. land slavery. pharaohs. think of it as a return to basics.

  • CT

    Infestments of growth dreamers when rulers really ruled and didn’t hide behind the curtain of corporate business.

  • Sanity

    Phony growth on things like roads, sewers, new school buildings, is the only game left in town.

    Much better than the phony growth on the military, IMHO.

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