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As the Federal bailout bonanza prepares to spread beyond the mortgage and
financial sectors to fill Detroit's depleted coffers, few economic or policy
analysts have spared a thought for the destitution of the U.S. government itself.
Put simply, our government doesn't have enough spare cash to bailout a lemonade
stand let alone a bloated and failing industry that is losing tens of billions
of dollars per month. Washington can only offer funds that it has borrowed
from abroad or printed. Unfortunately, the nation is in the grips of a delusion
that money derived from these sources has the power to heal. But history has
clearly shown that borrowed or printed money only has the power to destroy.
The argument that energizes the pro-Detroit camp is that the government should
extend the same courtesy to the rank and file auto workers that it lavished
upon the fat cats of Wall Street. While two wrongs certainly do not make a
right, the fact remains that the Wall Street firms are still floundering despite
the bailouts. What's worse, the money spent was either printed or borrowed
from abroad. Both options are destructive to America.
When it comes to bailouts, the real discussions are not centered in Washington
but rather in Beijing, Tokyo, and Riyadh. With no money of our own, our ability
to bailout our own citizens is completely dependent on the world's willingness
to foot the bill. While I am sure that Bush and Paulson are doing their best
to convince the world that open ended financing of the United States is in
the global interest, my guess is that, unlike Congress, our foreign creditors
will see through the self-serving nature of our plea.
Like any bailout, our foreign creditors should consider the moral hazard of
rewarding bad behavior, and the old investment adage of not throwing good money
after bad. By continuing to "lend" us money, the world is merely delaying the
necessary rebalancing of our upside down economy. By continuing to subsidize
our reckless and outsized consumption, the world merely delays the inevitable
re-balancing and exacerbates the underlying problem at the root of the current
global financial crisis.
If Washington bails out General Motors, the funds will never be recovered.
GM will simply burn through the bailout money and then be back for more. Talk
of designing a new fleet of "green" cars that will pave the way to profitability
by spurring a new buying spree is simply delusional. Given the staggering "legacy" costs
of health care and pensions for millions of current and former workers, Detroit
cannot produce cars profitably. Unless these costs are seriously brought down,
and there is very little chance that they will be, Detroit will remain a bottomless
money pit.
Similarly any money that the world lends to America to finance more consumption
will never be repaid. We will simply blow through it, and be back, hat in hand,
begging for more. As we painfully learned in the housing bust, lending people
money that they cannot pay back makes no sense. This applies equally to foreign
central banks lending to America as it does to commercial banks lending to
homeowners.
So for the same reasons that Washington should not bail out General Motors,
the world should not bailout America. Like GM, our economy is in desperate
need of a restructuring. Spending must be replaced with savings, and consumption
with production. The service sector must shrink and manufacturing must expand
to fill the void. The dollar must fall, wages in America must be brought down
to a competitive level, and hopefully government spending and burdensome regulation
can be reduced.
This transformation will not be fun, but it is necessary. Our standard of
living must decline to reflect years of reckless consumption and the disintegration
of our industrial base. Only by swallowing this tough medicine now will our
sick economy ever recover. By accepting a lower standard of living today, we
will eventually be rewarded with a higher one tomorrow.
For a more in depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers
they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read
my just released book "The Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets." Click here to
order your copy now.
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