Hard Times
By Stephen Lendman
10-20-8
Reposted from
www.Rense.com
- Hard and troubled.
Racked by fear and uncertainty. For many trauma. Experts
predict, speculate and conjecture, but no one knows for sure
what's ahead. Key questions are whether we're in a protracted
and severe recession. Or at the onset of another Great
Depression. So much is unresolved. The problems have built for
years and are immense. Maybe nothing at this stage will work and
the best hope is for light at the end of a very long, dark
tunnel.
-
- Again no one knows. The
worst may or may not be too late to avoid. At best,
stabilization and recovery will take time. Likely years. The
degree of pain along the way will depend on future policy
responses. Ones so far taken aren't encouraging. Their details
aren't entirely clear. They're slowly emerging and from what's
known since the original EESA/TARP announcement, the Treasury:
-
- -- will invest $125
billion to recapitalize nine major banks, including Goldman
Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America, Wells Fargo,
Morgan Stanley, Bank of New York Mellon, Merrill Lynch and State
Street; another $125 billion will go to smaller banks and
thrifts;
-
- -- according to
Bloomberg.com, amounts range from $25 billion to JP Morgan Chase
and Citigroup; another $25 billion to be divided between Bank of
America and Merrill Lynch; $20 billion to Wells Fargo; $10
billion each to Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley; and $3 billion
each to Bank of New York Mellon and State Street; the winners in
the "bailout" sweepstakes;
-
- -- investments will be
in specially issued preferred (non-voting) shares; they'll pay
5% interest to be increased to 9% after five years;
-
- -- the government will
receive warrants worth 15% of the preferred shares' value;
-
- -- FDIC insurance will
cover all small business deposits so they won't be shifted from
weak to more stable banks;
-
- -- the government will
guarantee banks' newly issued unsecured debt for three years to
make refinancing liabilities easier; retail deposits up to
$250,000 also guaranteed as previously announced;
-
- -- toxic assets will be
bought to restore liquidity in mortgage- backed securities
market; also previously announced; banks' "toxicity" is in the
multi-trillions of dollars; no amount of government largesse can
change that;
-
- -- all available tools
will be used to avoid a systemic meltdown; the IMF and other
international lending agencies will also be involved;
-
- -- the Federal Reserve
will serve as buyer of last resort for commercial paper; and
- -- measures are
intended to be temporary, but no time horizon was indicated.
-
- Will these and other
planned measures work? On October 14, Bloomberg interviewed
numerous analysts. Some were reassuring. Others weren't. They
noted heroic measures to unfreeze money markets and interbank
lending. Suggested any improvement helps but expected too
little, too late, to matter. They also cited little easing in
stress measures in stark contrast to soaring world equity
valuations. Early on, then plunging. Continuing the same
volatile pattern indicating fear and uncertainty. Plus lots of
manipulation so speculators can profit hugely on ups and downs.
-
- Steps so far taken do
nothing for distressed households. They're an aggressive attempt
to save major banks that are effectively insolvent. Stabilize
world economies if it works. Yet huge problems remain at the
"end of an era as credit bubble bursts," according to Lloyds TSB
economist Trevor Williams on October 13:
-
- "Too much debt led to
bubbles....no one really knows when or how this crisis is going
to end....this is the latest of many bubbles to have plagued the
world economy in the last 10 - 15 years....(it didn't) develop
overnight and will therefore take time to resolve....one year
(after it was clear that) asset markets, especially housing and
credit, were grossly overvalued and so (were) the value of the
securities written on them (on which so many financial firms
borrowed heavily), the crisis is intensifying rather than
abating...."
-
- For Williams and
others, the challenges are formidable. "Hence, this is a
long-term problem that will not result in business as usual
anytime soon as the changes required are far reaching and
complex. The adjustment of the balance sheets of firms in
developed economies caught up in this crisis will take many
years....cutting interest rates alone will not work....it may be
like pushing on a piece of string (because) developed country
households are already hugely in debt." Low interest rates
"reduces their income (further eroding) spending and weakening
growth....Tax cuts and public spending increases would
help....but with public finances strained by the bank rescue,
this is unlikely." How long recovery "will take is anybody's
guess."
-
- Economist Nouriel
Roubini approves of bank recapitalizations but cites
"significant downside risks" in the coming weeks:
-
- -- Treasury plans
aren't entirely clear;
-
- -- they're woefully
inadequate;
-
- -- world economies are
weakening; fiscal stimulus is lacking, so "macro news will
surprise on the downside;"
-
- -- so will quarterly
earnings;
-
- -- confidence has been
severely damaged;
-
- -- "deleveraging of the
shadow financial system" will continue;
-
- -- major stresses
remain, possibly including a credit default swap (CDS) market
blowout; hundreds of hedge funds collapsing; noted money manager
Jeremy Grantham believes 5000 ultimately will disappear; asset
liquidations will follow pressuring market valuations lower;
-
- -- insurance companies'
troubles are increasing; more rescue packages needed for "other
systemically important financial institutions;" crises emerging
in developing and advanced countries; deleveraging causing a
continued asset price deflation, margin calls, still lower asset
prices and creating "further downside risks to housing and home
prices."
-
- In addition, G-7 and EU
plans include no fiscal stimulus to boost aggregate demand.
Personal income is falling. In a state of collapse are: personal
consumption, residential and non-residential investment, and
capital expenditures. Unless government fills the breach
massively (at least $300 billion for starters), "an unavoidable
two-year recession (may) become a decade long stagnation."
Roubini cites the usual type stimuli:
-
- -- for instructures;
-
- -- green technologies;
-
- -- increased
unemployment benefits;
-
- -- targeted tax rebates
for lower income households;
- -- aiding distressed
homeowners to "avoid a tsunami of foreclosures;" potentially 10
million or more; rising rapidly to greater numbers in 2009;
measures should include a plan to reduce mortgage face values;
also let troubled homeowners retain their property and pay
affordable rent;
-
- -- further steps to
relieve over-indebted households; the result of home equity
loans, credit cards, auto and student loans; failure to reduce
these stresses assures a more protracted and deeper economic
crisis; how can banks lend to unwilling borrowers;
-
- -- federal block grants
to states and local governments among other measures.
-
- Crucial for many
experts is that without rapid implementation of these type
measures, financial institution rescue plans will be undermined.
Aggregate demand will decline further and prolong an already
severe recession. "If Main Street goes bust in the next six
months, (Wall Street will again) as the real economy implodes
further."
-
- In an October 14
Bloomberg Interview, Roubini predicted the worst US recession in
40 years. "We're going to be surprised by the severity of the
recession and (resulting) financial losses." It will last 18 to
24 months. Push unemployment to 9% from its reported 6.1% level,
and drive home prices down another 15%. He upped his bad
mortgage credit loss estimate to $3 trillion from his previous
$1 - 2 trillion amount. He also believes that $250 billion in
bank recapitalizations is just the beginning. At least double
that amount is needed to save banks from bankruptcy. Even that
total may be too little, too late. And the soaring national debt
presents its own unwelcome problems.
-
- Another issue involves
the source of bailout funding. It either has to be borrowed or
created. Printing dilutes the currency. A prescription for
future higher inflation although today's problem is deflation.
Borrowing won't be simple either. EU and other foreign central
banks have their own problems to resolve. China, Japan and
wealthy petrodollar states will have to partner with the
Treasury and Fed as lenders/bankers of last resort. In greater
amounts than they may be willing to assume.
-
- Other Problems - Too
Great to Solve and/or Ignore
-
- Earlier by others and
on October 12, the London Independent cited the resident
elephant few in the major media acknowledge. Especially in
America. A "$516 trillion derivatives 'time-bomb,' " according
to writers Margareta Pagano and Simon Evans. Roughly equal 10
times world output and "not for nothing (that) Warren Buffett
call(s) them (financial) 'weapons of mass destruction.' "
-
- These are financial
instruments that derive their value from an underlying asset,
reference rate or index. In exchange-traded and privately
negotiated forms, all sorts of them exist - swaps, forwards,
futures, puts, calls, swaptions, caps, floors, collars,
captions. Combined they represent (by far) the world's largest
financial market. They're complex, opaque and called "the
world's biggest black hole because they" comprise the shadow
financial system. Unregulated and allowed to explode to
unmanageable size. Creating potentially overwhelming risks. If
enough of them sour, world economies may crash in a cascading
domino effect.
-
- Long-time financial
observer and analyst Bob Chapman is dire in his assessment.
Using Bank for International Settlements (BIS) figures, he cites
a "quadrillion dollar (1000 trillion) powder keg waiting to
blow' and places this problem (led by credit default swaps -
CDSs) at the heart of the financial crisis." He thinks
"catastrophic losses are inevitable."
-
- Subprime and mortgage
debacles are a "side show" at around a few trillion in losses.
Their real estate derivatives problems are another matter. He
believes that the Treasury, Fed, and other smart Wall Street
types know it. They're terrified about potential losses that
"may (way) exceed the entire world's GDP (and) thus obliterat
(e) the balance sheets of every major commercial bank and the
Fed." Take down the entire world financial system and cause an
unstoppable "juggernaut of loss, insolvency, failure and
bankruptcy." Resulting in world governments having to
nationalize their financial systems and become bankers of last
resort.
-
- Chapman thinks the
train left the station, and nothing can stop it. Current
policies can only delay the inevitable through a Ponzi scheme
"final orgy of fraud and profligacy." The idea is to "take total
control, make markets do whatever pleases them (and) thus create
their own reality."
-
- If this happens,
nations will be bankrupt. So will people. Their savings erased.
Their situation unpalatable. Intolerable. A "New World
Disorder." Police state tactics will be needed to contain it.
But there's more to this story as some observers recognize.
Today's crisis was manufactured but not as it's turning out. Far
worse than planned so the best laid schemes "are unraveling,"
according to Chapman. Too many trillions in losses to handle may
result, and at this stage, who can say what's ahead. Not what
the masters of the universe had in mind except to take the money
and run.
-
- Other Assessments of
Conditions
-
- Take your choice.
Opinions are everywhere. Some credible. Many not. But one thing
about most is consistent. These are perilous times. The most
challenging in decades. Maybe ever. Prudence and caution are
essential. Enormous unpredictable risks threaten. Massive
economic damage has been done, and certain hard times are ahead
across the board. For businesses and households. Many in both
sectors won't make it. A dark prospect to consider. Unimaginable
for most.
-
- Financial expert Martin
Weiss has been a leading investor safety advocate for decades.
On October 14, he issued "an urgent update on these wild, wild
markets" and explained what most observers ignored. As world
markets soared on October 13, "bond markets suffer (ed) a
dramatic decline." He concluded: "if you think (October 13's)
euphoria means the government's newer and bigger bailout plan is
going to be a success, think again."
-
- Equities aren't at the
epicenter of the crisis. Bonds and credit markets are:
-
- -- "subprime mortgages
first collapsed;"
-
- -- mortgage-backed
bonds imploded;
-
- -- commercial paper
also;
-
- -- interbank lending
froze; and
-
- -- "the entire global
financial system (approached) a systemic meltdown."
-
- A future day of
reckoning is ahead in global bond and credit markets.
Washington's "master plan" may "temporarily stimulate" Wall
Street rallies. Possibly "ease some panic in some debt sectors."
That's worlds from ending a crisis of this magnitude, and Weiss'
advice is to "move decisively from risk to safety." For
protection and to profit from "the next phase of the crash."
-
- Since summer 2007, all
central bank plans "backfired," and the new US and EU ones "are
no different." While authorities liquified markets, fires raged
inside them. Instead of solving problems, they created greater
ones. Instability, not calm. The "very panic they sought to
avoid. The same thing is going to happen this time....The bigger
it is, the more desperation it denotes." And more of it means
it's likelier their plans will fail. Recovery will come
eventually. First, however, "the economy will suffer a great
fall," and America's contagion will spread everywhere.
-
- Ismael Hossein-sadeh
cites University of Maryland economist Herman Daly in his
October 14 article titled: "Why the Bailout Scam Is More Likely
to Fail than to Succeed." He lists five reasons:
-
- -- a lack of "faith and
trust," not liquidity; the world is awash in the latter and more
is coming;
-
- -- too little good
money to redeem the bad kind; mountains of it in the
multi-trillions, and no one knows how much;
-
- -- no help provided for
distressed homeowners; a key source of the crisis; preventing
mortgage defaults is crucial; if they're serviced,
mortgage-backed securities can be restored along with the
solvency of their holders; absent that, greater insolvency;
-
- -- no economic stimulus
is included to inject purchasing power into the economy; it's
vital to revive production, create jobs and reverse the economic
slide; and
-
- -- a
"socially-responsible fiscal policy" is needed; mirror opposite
the current one; anchored by ruinous military Keynsianism;
wealth transfers to the rich; ending responsible social
policies; and creating mountains of unrepayable debt.
-
- Add to these a
regulatory-free environment. Speculative finance crowding out
productive investments. Massive fraud allowed to persist
unchecked, and excesses creating even greater ones. Overall a
broken, pernicious, unsustainable model corroding from within
and taking America and world economies down with it. Remedies
being implemented assure greater problems. At best only
short-term relief, and in the end economic ruin. In all
likelihood the republic with it.
-
- The Housing Bubble -
The Core Economic Problem
-
- Many analysts cite the
imploding housing bubble as the core US economic problem. The
large and growing volume of bad mortgage loans. Heading up to 20
million under water in 2009. The implications of millions of
foreclosures and their negative effect on the economy. Until
home valuations stabilize, no recovery is possible. But
according to experts like economist Robert Shiller, it's likely
months off before it happens.
-
- In the Great
Depression, home prices plunged 30%. Today they're down around
20%, and Shiller believes they may match or exceed that era's
levels. Even worse, when valuations stabilize in nominal terms,
most homeowners will keep losing money. A very disquieting
prospect to consider. It may force many households to walk away
from their properties because retaining them is too costly.
-
- Not helping are
plunging housing data and the October National Association of
Home Builders (NAHB) Housing Market Index (HMI) hitting a record
low. According to NAHB's chief economist David Seiders, it's
"clear evidence than an additional economic stimulus package is
needed." Enough to spur home buying. All three HMI components
fell. Current sales conditions and expectations hit record lows,
and buyer traffic matched its July low. It affected all regions,
and Seiders said builder sentiment was the worst he can
remember.
-
- Before his death in
summer 2007 (at age 88), Kurt Richebacher was a well-respected
economist and financial analyst. Also a fierce critic of
speculative finance, particularly on Wall Street. In 2004, he
reflected on the housing bubble (before most others) in a
commentary titled "Property Bubbles: Beware of Property
Bubbles."
-
- He cited critical US
"economic and financial imbalances." The nation's growth "depend(ent)
entirely on the continuation of the frenetic housing bubble."
The certainty that "all bubbles end painfully, housing (ones) in
particular. They're an especially dangerous (type) asset bubble
because of their extraordinary debt intensity." By extracting
wealth (through refinancing) from rising valuations and by
"heavily entangl(ing) banks and the whole financial system as
lenders." Thus, property bubbles have historically been the main
cause of major financial crises.
-
- Japan in the late 1980s
for example. Its stock and property bubbles burst, but the
former got most of the attention. The "property deflation
continued for 13 years" through the timeframe of his article.
With "calamitous effects on the banking system through a
horrendous legacy of bad loans." Japan's "building sector" also
suffered and "never recovered from the depression following its
(late 1980s) excesses."
-
- Richebacher wondered if
America's fate may be similar and asked "Is the US economy in
better or worse shape today (in 2004) than in 2000 (as it faced
recession)? Is it in a self-sustaining recovery?" Absolutely
not...."it is in dramatically worse shape." The result of binge
borrowing. Financing "leveraged asset purchases and soaring
imports. The former involve no income creation; the latter
involve income destruction. By implication, this borrowing
represents entirely unproductive, or dead-weight, debt, yielding
to debtors no future flow of income from which to pay their debt
service." A bad ending is assured. In summer 2007 it arrived.
Its effects are painful and worsening. No sign of a quick or
easy resolution is evident nor will Wall Street's bailout
produce one. According to University of Chicago economics
professor Casey Mulligan, it represents a minute fraction of the
problem. It may only buy a couple of months relief. Nothing
more.
-
- An "Oasis of Calm"
-
- Along with Fidel
Castro, Washington's favorite Latin American target is Hugo
Chavez. The Wall Street Journal's Mary O'Grady attacks him
relentlessly in her Americas column, and on October 6 (and
earlier) said Venezuela's economy is deteriorating. In a
shambles. At a time it's, in fact, experiencing robust growth.
-
- Impressively with one
of the highest world rates. It also tops most nations and the
entire Hemisphere (including the US) with the largest
international reserves per capita ($1300). Credit Bolivarianism.
Abandoning neoliberalism. Maintaining sovereign independence.
Raising taxes and royalties on foreign investors to make them
pay their fair share. Imposing currency exchange controls to
prevent capital flight. High oil prices. Keeping a majority of
the profits at home. Using them to develop Venezuela's social
state among other factors.
-
- Amidst a world
financial crisis. America, Europe and Asia on the ropes. Groping
desperately for solutions. The Financial Times (on October 14)
wrote: "While stock markets all over the world were ravaged in
recent weeks, there was one oasis of calm: Venezuela's tiny
exchange, cosseted by capital controls, actually rose slightly
on days where historic losses were being reported elsewhere."
Even though a "handful of local banks and brokers" face serious
losses. The Wall Street Journal failed to notice.
-
- Ideas from the October
8 - 11 Caracas International Conference of Political Economy
-
- Attended by 40 world
specialists from 20 countries to propose South- based solutions
to the financial crisis. They fear Western plans will worsen
poverty, unemployment, and exploit workers worldwide. They
reject a massive public debt increase. The greater concentration
of capital, and a perverse restructuring to suck wealth to the
privileged.
-
- They fear an
authoritarian capitalism. Class warfare and increased racism.
Enormous productive and social costs plus weakened environmental
sustainability. They call for economic and financial
architecture reconstructing. An alternative post-capitalist
model. What Venezuela calls Socialism of the Twenty-First
Century.
-
- They want more social
spending and natural resources protections prioritized. Urgent
financial regulations to protect savings, stimulate production,
control currency movements, and prevent capital flight. They
think it's crucial to develop regional complementation. Balanced
commercial integration. Industrial agricultural, energy and
infrastructure improvement. Initiatives like cooperative trade
and the Bank of the South.
-
- Globally they want
international monetary system reform. To defend savings and
channel investments toward prioritized people needs. To curb
speculation and lessen economic disparities. Overall they want
new economic institutions in place of failed ones and said the
crisis awakened the common interests of people everywhere. They
made specific recommendations in areas of banking, finance, and
the current social emergency.
-
- They noted the
complicity of the IMF, World Bank, Inter-American Development
Bank, and transnational bankers in causing the current collapse
and its consequences. They call them discredited and want a new
financial architecture. They announced a second political
economy conference for the first quarter of 2009 in Caracas.
-
- The Crisis of World
Capitalism - A Broken, Unworkable Economic Model
-
- Over time, "free
market" capitalism has grown larger, more powerful, more
complex, more exploitive, and more crisis-prone. Currently
notable because of massive Wall Street fraud. Financialization.
Speculative finance. Computerized gambling instead of productive
investment. Largely with no regulatory oversight.
-
- When crises erupt like
today's, fire-fighting is employed to contain them. Moral hazard
bailouts for investors taking imprudent risks. Insurance called
the "Greenspan put" during his tenure. Currently, the
Bernanke/Paulson one. So far, it worked. Eventually it won't.
Eventually may be now.
-
- If so or later, the
proof is in the pudding. Each crisis begets greater ones. Sooner
or later, one too big to contain. It reveals the inherent flaw
of an unworkable model. Broken and in disrepair. With even
Washington Post writer Anthony Faiola wondering if it's "The End
of American Capitalism?" Too far gone to fix, but it likely will
be. Patched up and reinvented one more time.
-
- It was wobbly during
the 1970s. At the depths of the 1974 recession and again in 1979
heading into the 1980 - 1982 one, Newsweek magazine and later
Business Week ran the same headline on their covers: "The Death
of Equities." One day perhaps, but they were early.
-
- On October 10, Faiola
wrote: "The worst financial crisis since the Great Depression is
claiming another casualty: American-style capitalism." He means
the "hands-off" kind. Not the free-market model as such. And one
with more government intervention at times like these. At least
"temporarily for a more restrained model, particularly in
financial markets." In other words, a strategic retreat. Not a
fundamental overhaul or admission that something this broken
can't be fixed. Just patched, but eventually it's own internal
contradictions will destroy it.
-
- Meanwhile, prepare for
what economist Michael Hudson calls "the age of oligarchy." With
the "wealthiest 1 per cent of the population com (ing) into
possession of even more returns to wealth than the 57 per cent"
they now get. "Robin Hood in Reverse." From the public to the
rich. Hollowing out America. Making it look like Mexico. Locking
in "our age of deception...even more tightly." It's a "self-
defeating free-market strategy. Short-termism" that will prove
to be the financial sector's undoing. Perhaps industrial
capitalism and the republic with it. If not soon, eventually.
-
- Replaced by what is
most worrisome. Egalitarian reforms come rarely but are
possible. Past protest movements achieved them. Ones based on
what Frances Fox Piven calls a "distinctive kind of power.
Disruptive power." Past conditions were right and it happened.
Piven wonders if another "popular upheaval" is possible. It's
"the big question of our time" and even bigger with reckless
militarism. A permanent war economy. The erosion of democratic
freedoms, and potentially the nation's worst ever financial
crisis. Nothing is certain or easy, but historically "hardship
propels people to collective defiance," especially at times of
extreme inequalities of wealth. Given the current state, what
more urgent time than now.
-
- Stephen Lendman is a
Research Associate for The Center for Research on Globalization.
He lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
-
- Also visit his
blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global
Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM
- 1PM US Central time for cutting-edge discussions on key world
and national topics with distinguished guests. All programs are
archived for easy listening.
-
-
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=10596
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The talented Mr. Greenspan
salon.com > News Jan. 10, 2000
The Federal Reserve chairman has resisted
slowing the economy while waiting for his reappointment,
but will he put the brakes on now?
By Ian Williams
....For example, reportedly he is a staunch atheist,
but that did not stop him taking an oath on the Talmud
(held by his aged mum) to become chairman
of Nixon's Council of Economic Advisors,
while his prophetess Ayn Rand beamed away in the front row.
Apart from his quasi-cultist past, the main problem
with Greenspan is that he has too much power based on
his alleged powers of economic prediction....
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