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Government Spending to Perpetuate Fiscal Insanity

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02/17/11 Baltimore, Maryland – Gold up a buck. Dow up 61.

Housing still going nowhere…NAHB index flat for 4 months in a row.

Food imports inflating at a 30% annual rate over the last 3 months. Fuel going up at a 60% rate. The World Bank says food stocks at “dangerously low” levels…

“Manufacturers squeezed,” by rising metals prices, says a headline.

Retails sales in January below expectations.

What can we say? Mixed signals. Confusing outlook. The underlying economy is in a slump. But the feds are putting out more and more hot money to try to fix it. It’s a Great Correction, in other words.

So, let’s step back one more time and take a look at the big picture…then we’ll return to our day by day reckoning tomorrow.

Steven Rattner, writing in The Financial Times, says we’re headed for a “fiscal nightmare.”

He puts the unfunded obligations of Social Security and Medicare at $50 trillion. Which is a lot of money. Even in this day and age.

And he notes, as we did, that Obama’s deficit cutting initiatives are puny and pathetic. In a nutshell, the Democrats don’t want to cut discretionary spending for infrastructure, education, health and other seemingly laudable goals. The Republicans don’t want to cut any money destined to maintain the security of the United States – also a worthy goal, if you put it that way.

Nobody wants to cut Social Security or Medicare entitlements.

That doesn’t leave much. It is as if the feds were trying to butcher a wicker chair. There’s no meat on it to cut.

By our reckoning, the feds collect about $2 trillion in taxes. They spend about $3.6 trillion. That is how we get a record budget deficit of more than $1.6 trillion this year.

They spend about $1.80 for every dollar in revenues, the greatest imbalance since WWII.

During wartime we can understand going deep in the hole. “Buy Bonds,” say the posters. “Support our Troops,” say the slogans. Lending money to the feds seems like a good thing to do; the alternative – defeat – would be such a drag.

But what is the emergency now? If the feds slow down their spending machine, what calamity will be upon us? What evil is so great that we should put the financial integrity of the nation at risk? Will foreign soldiers fill our bars and brothels? Will we have to surrender Bush and Cheney as war criminals? Will we have to pay reparations and lose Alaska?

Nah? Then what is it?

As near as we can figure, if we cut the deficit now we risk a return to sanity. That is, without the boost from government’s very stimulative fiscal deficits, the economy would have to operate on a more sensible basis. The feds could spend only what they could afford. People who rely on money from the feds would have to get honest jobs…or cut their own spending to bring it in line with their real incomes.

People could not spend money they got from the feds…after the feds borrowed it from someone else. So, there would be less money in the consumer economy, leading to all the big D problems – deflation, de-leveraging, defaults and depression.

In other words, without the feds’ activism, things might do what they ought to do. Debts would be written off, paid down, or restructured. Companies that depend on debt-fueled demand would go out of business. People who couldn’t make ends meet without some extra twine from the government wouldn’t be able to get their ends together; they could finally go broke and get on with their lives.

That’s what a correction is for – to fix the mistakes of the past…notably the mistakes caused by too much easy credit.

Instead, the feds seem determined. They’re doing the most remarkably imbecilic thing, no matter what we think here at The Daily Reckoning. Rather than let the private economy adjust to new circumstances…they will bankrupt the US government trying to keep the craziness going.

But we are libeling imbeciles, aren’t we? Stupid people would never think of doing such a thing. It takes a smart person with a lot of education. Because it’s not that easy to overcome common sense. You need a lot of brainpower to do something that stupid.

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Author Image for Bill Bonner

Bill Bonner

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 ReckoningDice 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. 

 

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7 Responses

  1. CommonCents said

    “Because it’s not that easy to overcome common sense.”

    Yes, but for how long?

    on February 17, 2011.
  2. JMR Alan Greenspan said

    “You need a lot of brainpower to do something that stupid.”

    Another pearl by mr. Bonner! That’s why DR is my fav. reading of the day…

    on February 18, 2011.
  3. CT said

    More people, more problems.

    on February 18, 2011.
  4. Jlaix said

    It’s not too much people CT.

    It’s as Bill said, a collossal absence of common sense.

    There are countries much smaller than ours who did it dfaster and in grander style.

    on February 18, 2011.
  5. st0veron*i*-e-e-e* said

    i liku’d this: “But we are libeling imbeciles, aren’t we?”

    t whatchoo thinka the Brits ‘rules’ aRound this?
    pretty & diff from US’z n’est-ce/sspo[o]l pas?

    perhaps they ARE imbeciles on the scale of BEing, but on the plain ole plane, they DO have us out-flanked, surrounded, and starving into surrender, or at least that is what we are Being FED, by the crack-whores of the msm.

    nice!

    on February 18, 2011.
  6. Darren said

    What’s with calling Social Security an “entitlement” and an “obligation”?

    I, along with tens of millions others have been forced into having it deducted from wages. In my case for 35 years.
    If Congress spent S.S. revenue as soon as it came in then THAT is the scandal.
    Why aren’t you detailing that?

    You are part & parcel of the disinformation — Bill Bonner.

    Tell me this …. if you (in your back-handed way) insinuate that S.S. needs to be gets cut, does that mean you also will be a strong,vocal advocate that the criminal deductions from my wages come to an end?

    Can’t have it both ways.
    Otherwise you’re a hypocrite.

    on February 19, 2011.
  7. Pink Moneypenny said

    This article by Bonner seems to have done a bit of plagiarizing from this post by Lila Rajiva on her blog in 2008:

    — snip —

    ORIGINAL POST ON AMAZON BOOK BLOG

    :08 AM PST, December 15, 2008, updated at 7:18 PM PST, December 17, 2008

    The sluice gates are open now and the tidal wave is rising……..
    more jobs were cut in November than have been cut since
    1974 – nearly 2 million so far this year.

    Some people say the ‘R’ word is giving way to the ‘D’ word. Or words…

    Debt…delinquency….distress…..disaster….dopes…delusion…derangement…
    Adding up to — Depression..

    We’re on record backing “In” rather than “De’ on the Flationary front.
    But we’re willing to compromise. We’re willing to go Stag..

    Meanwhile, what’s behind this wave of bad news (besides the revelation
    that Wall Street managers are (gasp!) sharks in suits)?

    It’s the shock from the next bubble to pop after sub-prime: Alt-A and
    Option ARMs (adjustable rate mortgages). The unloading of that pile of
    manure is raising a stink….and it’s going to be doing that for some
    time. Not until December end, as Chairman Bernanke blithely suggested, or
    even until the end of 2009… or 2010.
    But even longer.

    Hold on, though, wasn’t all this supposed to have been already fixed by
    bailing-out the financial industry? Weren’t we supposed to have been
    throwing that trillion (oops, make that $8.5 trillion) to solve the
    problem?

    After all, the total of all sub-prime mortgage debt in the US is only $1.3
    trillion. And the total of all alt-A and subprime that’s in any way in
    trouble (as of August 2008) is just under another trillion. So you’d think
    throwing a sum more than four times that figure, a sum that is over 60% of
    US GDP, would have taken care of the problem by now.

    But wait, don’t we also have credit card loans…. and student loans…..
    and auto loans….and commercial real estate.?

    I have another “d’ for you:
    Decade
    — snip —

    on February 20, 2011.

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