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Global
Research, July 7, 2007
Remember
when the U.S. was the world’s greatest industrial democracy? Barely
thirty years ago the output of our producing economy and the skills
of our workforce led the world.
What
happened? It’s hard to believe that in the space of a generation our
character and capabilities just collapsed as, for example, did our
steel and automobile industries and our family farming. What then
are the causes of the decline?
Here’s how I
would put it today: our economy is on an artificial life-support
system, a barely-breathing hostage in a lunatic asylum. That asylum
is the U.S. and world financial systems which are on the verge of
collapse.
The inmates
are the world’s central bankers, along with most of the financial
magnates big and small. The fact is that the economy of much of the
world is in a decisive downward slide which the financiers cannot
stop because the systems they operate are the primary cause. As
often happens, the inmates rule the asylum.
The problems
aren’t confined to the U.S. Unemployment worldwide is increasing,
debt is rampant, infrastructures are crumbling, and commodity prices
are rising.
In such an
environment, crime, warfare, terrorism, and other forms of violence
are endemic. Only the most naïve, self-centered, and deluded
jingoist could describe such a scenario in terms of the
freedom-loving Western democracies being besieged by the “bad guys.”
Rather what
is happening highlights the growing failures of Western globalist
finance whose impact on political stability has been so corrosive.
As many responsible commentators are warning, we are likely to see
major financial shocks within the next few months. The warnings are
even coming from high-flying institutional players like the Bank of
International Settlements and the International Monetary Fund.
We may even
be seeing the end of an era when the financiers ruled the world. At
a certain point, governments or their military and bureaucratic
establishments are likely to stop being passive spectators to the
onrushing disorder. It is already happening in Russia and elsewhere.
The
countries that will be least able to master their own destiny are
those like the U.S. where governments have been most passive to
economic decomposition from actions of their financial sectors. The
financiers are the ones who for the last generation have benefited
most from economies marked by privatization, deregulation, and
speculation, but that may be about to change. Whether the change
will be constructive or catastrophic is yet to be seen.
THE
HOUSING BUBBLE SETS THE STAGE FOR THE U.S. COLLAPSE
Within the
U.S., foreign investors, above all Communist China, have been
propping up our massive trade and fiscal deficits with their
capital. To keep them happy, interest rates—after six years of
“cheap credit”—must now be kept relatively high. Otherwise the
Chinese, et.al., might bail-out, leaving us to fend for ourselves
with our hollowed-out shell of an economy.
Even so,
these investors are increasingly uneasy with their dollar holdings
and are bailing out anyway. Foreign purchase of U.S. securities has
plummeted. And our debt-laden economy, where our manufacturing base
has been largely outsourced, is no longer capable of providing our
own population with a living by utilizing our own productive
resources.
For a while
we were floating on the housing bubble, but those days are now
history when, according to a Merrill-Lynch study, the artificially
pumped-up housing industry, as late as 2005, accounted for fifty
percent of U.S. economic growth.
As everyone
knows, the Federal Reserve under Chairman Alan Greenspan used the
housing bubble, like a steroid drug, to pump liquidity into the
economy. This worked, at least for a while, because consumers could
borrow huge amounts of money at relatively low interest rates for
the purchase of homes or for taking out home equity loans to pay off
their credit cards, finance college education for their children,
buy new cars, etc.
When the
final history of the housing bubble is written, its beginnings will
be dated as early as 1989-90, when credit restrictions on the
purchase of real estate first began to be eased. According to
mortgage industry insiders interviewed for this article, they began
to be taught the methods for getting around consumers’ weak credit
reports and selling them homes anyway in the mid to late 1990s.
The Fed
started inflating the housing bubble in earnest around 2001, after
the collapse of the dot.com bubble, which failed with the stock
market decline of 2000-2002. Then, over a trillion dollars of
wealth, including working peoples’ retirement savings, simply
vanished.
Also
according to mortgage specialists, it was in March 2001, two months
after George W. Bush became president, that a “wave of intoxicated
fraud” started. Mortgage companies began to be instructed, by the
creditors/lenders, on how to package loan applications as "master
strokes of forgery," so that completely unqualified buyers could
purchase homes.
There could
not have been a sudden onset of industry-wide illegal activity
without direction from higher-up in the money chain. It could not
have continued without reports being filed by whistleblowers with
regulatory agencies. Today the government is prosecuting mortgage
fraud, but they certainly had to know about it while it was actually
going on.
The bubble
was coordinated from Wall Street, where brokerages “bundled” the
“creatively-financed” mortgages and sold them as bonds to retirement
and mutual funds and to overseas investors. Portfolio managers were
directed to buy subprime bonds as other bonds matured. It’s the
subprime segment of the industry that has now collapsed, triggering,
for instance, the recent highly-publicized demise of two Bear
Stearns hedge funds.
And it’s not
just lower-income home purchasers who are affected. The Washington
Post has reported that for the first time in living memory
foreclosures are happening in Washington’s affluent suburban
neighborhoods in places like Fairfax, Loudon, and Montgomery
Counties.
The subprime
bonds were known to be suspect. One reason was that they were based
on adjustable rate mortgages that were actually time bombs,
scheduled to detonate a couple of years later with monthly payments
hundreds of dollars a month higher than when they were written. Many
of these mortgages will reset to higher payments this October.
Purchasers
were lied to when they were told they could re-sell their homes in
time to escape the payment hikes. Now the collapse of the market has
made further resale at prices high enough to escape without losses
impossible.
One way the
system worked was for mortgage lenders to maximize the “points”
buyers were required to finance, making the mortgages more
attractive to Wall Street. Of course bundling and selling the
mortgages relieved the banks which originated the loans from
exposure, pushing a considerable amount of the risk onto millions of
small investors. This was in addition to the normal sale of
mortgages to quasi-public agencies like Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae.
Was it a
scam? Of course. Did the Federal Reserve know about it? They had to.
Did Congress exercise any oversight? No.
What did the
White House know?
Amy Gluckman,
an editor of Dollars and Sense, reported in the November/December
2006 issue: “During the Clinton administration, Greenspan was
relatively ‘unembedded’—averaging only one meeting per month at the
White House….
“But when
George W. Bush moved into 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Greenspan’s
behavior changed. During 2001, he averaged 3.3 White House visits a
month, more than triple his rate under Clinton and much more often
with high-level officials like Vice President Cheney. His visits
rose to 4.6 a month in 2002 and 5.7 in 2003.
“Whatever
White House officials were whispering in Greenspan’s ear, it worked:
Greenspan abruptly changed his tune on tax cuts, lending critical
support to Bush’s massive 2001 and 2003 tax giveaways, and he
loosened the reins by cutting Fed-controlled interest rates
repeatedly beginning in January 2001, a gift to the Republicans in
power.”
Along the
way, the bubble caused housing prices to inflate drastically, which
officialdom touted as economic “growth.” Even today, periodicals
like Barron’s naively boast that this inflation boosted American’s
“wealth.”
But this
source of liquidity for everyday people has been maxed out, like our
credit cards, and there is nothing to replace it. There is no cash
cushion anymore, because years ago people stopped earning enough
money for personal or household savings.
As
purchasers lose their homes to foreclosure, the real estate is being
grabbed at bankruptcy prices by the banks and by any other investors
with ready money. Whole neighborhoods of cities like Cleveland or
Atlanta are turning into boarded-up ghost towns.
What we are
seeing are the results of an economic crime on a fantastic scale
that implicates the highest levels of our financial and governmental
establishments. It spanned three presidential administrations—Bush
I, Clinton, and Bush II—though the worst of it came with the surge
of outright lending fraud after 2001.
As usual
when hypocrisy is rampant only the small fry are being called to
account. Commentators, including a sleepwalking Congress, have
self-righteously railed at consumers who got in over their heads.
The Mortgage Bankers Association is even lobbying Congress to
allocate $7 million more to the FBI to go after the supposedly rogue
brokers within their own industry who are being scapegoated.
THE
BUBBLES ARE ONLY SYMPTOMS
But there’s
much more to it than that. These bubbles are symptoms. They are
created because our wage and salary earners lack purchasing power
due to stagnant incomes and various structural causes. These causes
include the outsourcing of our manufacturing industries to China and
other cheap labor markets and the super-efficiency of the remaining
U.S. industry which is able to manufacture products with ever-fewer
workers.
Also, our
farming, mining, and other resource-based industries are in a
long-term slide. This and the decline of hard manufacturing have
been going on since our oil production peaked in the 1970s, followed
by the Federal Reserve-induced recession of 1979-83. Next came the
deregulation of the financial industry. It was all part of the
economic disintegration that led to today’s “service economy.”
Now, for the
first time in modern U.S. history, there are no new economic engines
at all. The last real engine was the internet which has now reached
maturity with marginal players being weeded out.
Our biggest
sources of new private-sector jobs today are food service,
processing of financial paperwork, health care for the growing
numbers of retirees, and menial low-paying jobs, like landscaping
and building maintenance. These are increasingly being performed by
immigrants who are also underpricing U.S. citizens in many service
jobs like childcare and auto repair.
Today the
rank-and-file of our population must increasingly turn to borrowing
in order to survive. Only the banks and the credit card companies
are the beneficiaries. The total societal debt for individuals,
businesses, and government is over $45 trillion and climbing. This
is happening even while the real value of wages and salaries is
decreasing.
What I have
just been saying is bad enough, but here’s where the real lunacy
enters in.
A major
factor connected to the decline in the value of employee earnings is
dollar devaluation in the overarching financial economy due to the
proliferation of huge quantities of bank credit being used to keep
the stock market afloat and to fuel the speculative games of equity,
hedge, and derivative funds.
In other
words, while our factories continue to shut down, the Wall Street
gambling casino—like its Las Vegas counterpart—is running full-bore,
24/7. This, along with financing of the massive federal deficit, is
what critics are talking about when they speak of the Federal
Reserve “printing money.”
The main
growth factors for federal spending are Middle East war expenditures
and interest on the national debt. But within the private sector
it’s leveraged loans to businesses which The Economist recently said
“mirror….interest-only and negative-amortization mortgages” in the
subprime market. But here’s the big difference: in the leveraged
business economy, the amount of assets at stake are even greater
than with the housing bubble.
The
financial world, which Dr. Michael Hudson calls the FIRE
economy—Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate—has been producing
millionaires and billionaires among those who know how to play the
game.
The Wall
Street hedge funds stand out as the most irresponsible financial
scams in history. Unregulated and secretive, they account for a
third of all stock trades, own $2 trillion in assets, and pay their
individual managers over $1 billion a year. Think about this the
next time someone you know has their job outsourced to China or when
his adjustable rate mortgage resets and drives up his monthly house
payment past the level of affordability.
The hedge
funds borrow huge sums from the banks which generate loans under
their Federal Reserve-sanctioned fractional reserve privileges.
Often this money is used by the hedge funds to “short the market,”
thereby earning profits when stock prices decline.
In other
words, the hedge funds and their banking enablers use banking
leverage to bet against the producing economy. In doing so, they may
actually drive stock prices down, causing ordinary investors to lose
a portion of their own wealth. Can this be called anything other
than a crime?
The
livelihood of much of the U.S. workforce and perhaps half of the
rest of the world’s population—maybe three billion people—is being
threatened by such financial lawlessness. The justification that was
first used for financial deregulation and tax cuts for the rich was
that the trickle-down effect of wealthy peoples’ earnings would
spill over to the rank-and-file.
The Reagan
administration ushered in these policies in the 1980s under the
heading of “supply-side economics.” But the opposite has happened.
The system has institutionalized an increasingly stratified
worldwide culture of haves and have-nots.
THE
ROOT CAUSE OF THE CATASTROPHE
How did
today’s looming tragedy come to pass?
Looking for
causes is like peeling an onion. What we are really seeing are the
terminal throes of a failed financial system almost a century old.
It’s happening because, since the creation of the Federal Reserve
System in 1913—even during the period of the New Deal with its
Keynesian economics aimed at full employment—our economy has been
based almost entirely on fractional reserve banking.
This means
that under the regime of the world’s all-powerful central banking
systems, money is brought into existence only as debt-bearing loans.
Interest on this lending tends to grow exponentially unless
overtaken by real economic growth.
Remember
that every instance of bank lending, from purchase of Treasury
Bonds, to credit cards, to home mortgages, to billion-dollar loans
to hedge funds for leveraged buyouts or sheer speculation, must
eventually be paid back somewhere, somehow, sometime, by somebody,
with interest. In the end, it all comes back to people who work for
a living, whether in the U.S. or elsewhere, because that is the only
way the world community ever creates real wealth.
In an anemic
economy like that of the U.S., growth cannot catch up with interest
in a deregulated financial marketplace where interest rates are
high. Rates may not seem high compared with, say, the twenty
percent-plus rates of the early 1980s, but they are high in an
economy with, at best, a two percent GDP growth rate.
And they
have been high on average since the 1960s, as the banking industry
became increasingly deregulated. Interestingly, since 1965, the U.S.
dollar has lost eighty percent of its value, which tends to validate
the contention by some observers that higher interest rates not only
do not reduce inflation, as the Federal Reserve contends, but
actually cause it.
The
situation today is worse in many respects than 1929, because the
debt “overhang” vs. real economic value is much higher now than it
was then. The U.S. economy was in far better shape in the 1920s,
because so much of our population was gainfully employed in
factories or on farms.
The question
is not when will the system start to come down, because this has
already begun. It’s shown most clearly by the fact that according to
Federal Reserve data, M1, the part of the money supply most readily
available for consumer purchases, is not only lagging behind
inflation but has actually decreased in eleven of the last twelve
months. This means that the producing economy is already in a
recession.
The federal
government is trying to figure out what to do. Their biggest concern
is that foreign investors have started to pull out of
dollar-denominated markets.
The
government’s “plunge protection team”—known officially as the
President’s Working Group on Financial Markets—is trying to engineer
what they call a “soft landing.” It’s been likened to the process by
which you cook a frog in a pot where you raise the temperature one
degree a day. The frog doesn’t hop out because the heat goes up
gradually, but before long it’s too late. The frog has been cooked.
Even if the
plunge protection team succeeds, and the frog cooks slowly, there
will be a massive de facto default on dollar-denominated debt and a
long-term degradation of the U.S. standard of living. The inside
word is that we are likely to see major monetary shocks and a
possible stock market crash as early as December 2007.
The worst
off will be people locked into retirement funds which have a heavy
load of mortgage-related securities. Entire investment portfolios
are likely to disappear overnight.
The banks,
along with the bank-leveraged equity and hedge funds, are preparing
for the biggest fire sale in at least a generation. Insiders are
going liquid to get ready. If you think Enron was “the bomb,” you
won’t want to miss this one.
WHAT
CAN BE DONE?
There are so
many flaws in the system that it’s time for real change.
As I have
been pointing out in articles over the last several months, the key
to a rational solution would be immediate monetary reform leading to
a fundamental shift in how the world conducts its financial
business. It would mean taking control of the world’s economy out of
the hands of the private bankers and giving it back to
democratically elected governments.
I spent
twenty-one years working for the U.S. Treasury Department and
studying U.S. monetary history. For much of our history we were a
laboratory for diverse monetary systems.
During and
after the Civil War (1861-5) we had five different sources of money
that fueled our economy. One was the Greenbacks, an extremely
successful currency which the government spent directly into
circulation. Contrary to financiers’ propaganda, the Greenbacks were
not inflationary.
Another was
gold and silver coinage and specie-backed Treasury paper currency.
The third was notes lent into circulation by the national banks. The
fourth was retained earnings—individual savings and business
reinvestment of profits—which was the primary source of capital for
industry. The fifth was the stock and bond markets.
After the
Federal Reserve Act was passed by Congress in 1913, the banks and
the government inflated the currency through war debt and destroyed
most of the value of the Greenbacks and coinage. The banks never
entirely displaced the capital markets but eventually took them over
during the present-day era of leveraged mergers, acquisitions, and
buyouts, while the Federal Reserve created and deflated asset
bubbles.
The banking
system which rules the economy through the Federal Reserve System
has produced the crushing debt pyramid of today. The system is a
travesty. Banks, which can be useful in facilitating commerce,
should never have this much power. Many intelligent people have
called for the Federal Reserve to be abolished, including former
chairmen of the House banking committee Wright Patman and Henry
Gonzales and current Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul.
Some might
call such a program a revolution. I prefer to call it a
restoration—of national sovereignty. Central to the program would be
the elimination of the Federal Reserve as a bank of issue and
restoration of money-creation to the people’s representatives in
Congress. This is what our Constitution says too. It’s the system we
had before 1913.
THE
MONETARY PRESCRIPTION
The
fundamental objectives of monetary policy should be to secure a
healthy producing economy and provide for sufficient individual
income. The objectives should not be to produce massive profits for
the banks, fodder for Wall Street swindles, and a blank check for
out-of-control government expenditures.
Note I
referred to income. I did not say “create jobs.” That is the
Keynesian answer, because Keynes was a collectivist, and the main
thing collectivists like to come up with is to give everyone more
work to do, even if it’s just grabbing a shovel and digging ditches
like they did with the WPA during the Depression.
It’s what
President Clinton did with his welfare-to-work program that threw
hundreds of thousands of mothers off the welfare rolls and into a
job market where sufficient work at a living wage did not exist.
It’s another reason the government is constantly borrowing more
money to fuel the military-industrial complex by creating more
military, bureaucratic, and contractor jobs.
Back to
income. The idea of “income,” as opposed to “jobs,” is a civilized
and humane idea. When are we going to realize that everyone doesn’t
need a paying job in order for an industrial economy to provide all
with a decent living? When are we going to realize that the
productivity of the modern economy is part of the heritage of all of
us, part of the social commons?
Why can’t
mothers have the choice of staying home with the kids like they
could a generation ago? Why can’t some people choose to do
eldercare? Why can’t others comfortably go into lower-paying
occupations like teaching or the arts? Why can’t some just opt to
study or travel for a while or learn new skills or start a business
without facing financial ruin as they often must today? Why can’t
retirees enjoy their retirement instead of having to stay in the job
market or worrying about Social Security going broke?
The U.S. and
world economies are on the brink of collapse due to the lunacy of
the financial system, not because we can’t produce enough.
Contrary to
so many doomsayers, the mature world economy is capable of providing
a decent living for everyone on the planet. It cannot because the
monetary equivalent of its bounty is skimmed by interest-bearing
debt.
These are
things that monetary reformers have known about for decades. The
first steps within the U.S. would be 1) a large-scale cancellation
of debt; 2) a guaranteed income for all at about $10,000 a year, not
connected to whether a person has a job; 3) an additional National
Dividend, fluctuating with national productivity, that would provide
every citizen with their rightful share in the benefits of our
incredible producing economy; 4) direct spending of money by the
government for infrastructure and other necessary costs without
resort to taxation or borrowing; 5) creation of a new system of
private lending to businesses and consumers at non-usurious rates of
interest; 6) re-regulation of the financial industry, including the
banning of bank-created credit for speculation, such as purchase of
securities on margin and for leveraging buyouts, acquisitions,
mergers, hedge funds, and derivatives; and 7) abolishment of the
Federal Reserve as a bank of issue with retention of its functions
as a national financial transaction clearinghouse.
While these
proposals are basically simple, the overall program is so different
from what we have today with our financier-controlled system that it
takes careful reading and a great deal of thought to understand
exactly how it would work. One way to approach it is to look at the
likely effects.
These
measures would immediately shift the basis of our economy from
borrowing from the banks to a mixed system that would include the
direct creation of credit at the public and grassroots level. The
size of government would shrink, our producing economy would be
reborn, debt would come down, economic democracy would become a
reality, and the financial industry could be right-sized. Finally,
the international situation could be stabilized because we would no
longer be driven to a constant state of warfare to seize other
nations’ resources as with Iraq and to prop up the dollar as a
reserve currency abroad.
Such a
system would work by creating indigenous sources of credit needed to
mobilize the natural wealth and productivity of the nation. There
are people who could implement this program. Systems to do so could
be installed within the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Reserve within
a matter of months.
Fundamental
monetary reform implemented to restore economic democracy is what
America’s real task should be for the twenty-first century. One
thing is for certain. The out-of-control financial system that has
wrecked the U.S. and world economies over the last generation cannot
be allowed to continue.
How the
outcome will play out may well depend on whether there is a
Jefferson, Lincoln, or Roosevelt waiting in the wings. The success
of each of these great leaders was due to one critical factor: their
ability to implement monetary reform at a time of national
emergency.
Richard C. Cook is the author of “We Hold These Truths: The Hope of
Monetary Reform,” scheduled to appear by September 1, 2007. A
retired federal analyst, his career included service with the U.S.
Civil Service Commission, the Food and Drug Administration, the
Carter White House, and NASA, followed by twenty-one years with the
U.S. Treasury Department. His articles on monetary reform,
economics, and space policy have appeared on Global Research,
Economy in Crisis, Dissident Voice, Arizona Free Press, Atlantic
Free Press, and elsewhere. He is also author of “Challenger
Revealed: An Insider’s Account of How the Reagan Administration
Caused the Greatest Tragedy of the Space Age.” His website is at
www.richardccook.com . He appears
frequently on internet radio at
www.themicroeffect.com on Saturday
mornings at 11 a.m. Eastern.
Richard C. Cook is
a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global
Research Articles by Richard C. Cook
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