|
Peggy Noonan, maybe the most gifted essayist of our time, wrote a few weeks
ago about the vague concern that many of us have that the monster looming up
ahead of us has the potential (my interpretation) for not just plucking a few
feathers from the goose that lays the golden egg (the US free-market economy),
or stealing a few more of the valuable eggs, but of actually killing the goose.
Today we look at the possibility that the fiscal path of the enormous US government
deficits we are on could indeed kill the goose, or harm it so badly it will
make the lost decades that Japan has suffered seem like a stroll in the park.
And while I do not think we will get to that point (though I can't deny the
possibility), for reasons I will go into, there is the very real prospect that
the upheavals created by not dealing proactively with the problems (or denying
they exist) will be as bad as or worse than the credit crisis we have gone
through. This is not going to be something that happens overnight, and the
seeming return to normalcy that so many predict has the rather alarming aspect
of creating a sense of complacency that will only serve to "kick the can" down
the road.
This week we look at the problem, and then muse upon what the more likely
scenarios are that may play out. This is a longer version of a speech I gave
this morning to the New Orleans Conference, where I also offered a path out
of the problems. This letter will be a little more controversial than normal,
but I hope it makes us all think about the very serious plight we have put
ourselves in.
Let's review a few paragraphs I wrote last month: "I have seven kids. As our
family grew, we limited the choices our kids could make; but as they grew into
teenagers, they were given more leeway. Not all of their choices were good.
How many times did Dad say, 'What were you thinking?' and get a mute reply
or a mumbled 'I don't know.'
"Yet how else do you teach them that bad choices have bad consequences? You
can lecture, you can be a role model; but in the end you have to let them make
their own choices. And a lot of them make a lot of bad choices. After having
raised six, with one more teenage son at home, I have come to the conclusion
that you just breathe a sigh of relief if they grow up and have avoided fatal,
life-altering choices. I am lucky. So far. Knock on a lot of wood.
"I have watched good kids from good families make bad choices, and kids with
no seeming chance make good choices. But one thing I have observed. Very
few teenagers make the hard choice without some outside encouragement or help
in understanding the known consequences, from some source. They nearly always
opt for the choice that involves the most fun and/or the least immediate pain,
and then learn later that they now have to make yet another choice as a consequence
of the original one. And thus they grow up. So quickly."
What Were We Thinking?
As a culture, the current mix of generations, especially in the US, has made
some choices. Choices which, in hindsight, leave the adult in us asking, "What
were we thinking?"
We made a series of bad choices and suffered the credit crisis because of
it. Now, as a nation, we are in the middle of making an even worse choice,
one that will leave us with no good choices - only choices of pretty bad to
awful. Let's begin with a quote from a recent client letter by my friends at
Hayman Advisors (in Dallas).
"Western democracies, communistic capitalists, and Japanese deflationists
are concurrently engaging in what may be the largest, global financial experiment
in history. Everywhere you turn, governments are running enormous fiscal deficits
financed by printing money. The greatest risk of these policies is that the
quantitative easing will persist until the value of the currency equals the
actual cost of printing the currency (which is just slightly above zero).
"There have been 28 episodes of hyperinflation of national economies in the
20th century, with 20 occurring after 1980. Peter Bernholz (Professor Emeritus
of Economics in the Center for Economics and Business (WWZ) at the University
of Basel, Switzerland) has spent his career examining the intertwined worlds
of politics and economics with special attention given to money. In his most
recent book, Monetary Regimes and Inflation: History, Economic and Political
Relationships, Bernholz analyzes the 12 largest episodes of hyperinflations
- all of which were caused by financing huge public budget deficits through
money creation. His conclusion: the tipping point for hyperinflation occurs
when the government's deficit exceed 40% of its expenditures.
"According to the current Office of Management and Budget (OMB) projections,
US federal expenditures are projected to be $3.653 trillion in FY 2009 and
$3.766 trillion in FY 2010, with unified deficits of $1.580 trillion and $1.502
trillion, respectively. These projections imply that the US will run deficits
equal to 43.3% and 39.9% of expenditures in 2009 and 2010, respectively. To
put it simply, roughly 40% of what our government is spending has to be borrowed. [Emphasis
mine]
"One has to ask whether the US reached the critical tipping point. Beyond
the quantitative measurements associated with government deficits and money
creation, there exists a qualitative aspect to such a scenario that may be
far more important. The qualitative perceptions of fiscal and monetary policies
are impossible to control once confidence is lost. In fact, recent price action
in metals, the dollar and commodities suggests that the market is already anticipating
the future."
Let me point out that the deficits for 2010 assume a rather robust recovery,
and so they could turn out to be much worse, especially if unemployment continues
to rise and Congress decides (rightly) to extend unemployment benefits.
The interest on the national debt in fiscal 2008 was $451 billion. Even though
the debt has exploded, the interest for fiscal 2009 is down to "only" $383
billion. My back-of-the-napkin estimate says that is over 20% of total 2009
tax receipts. I guess when you take interest rates to zero and really load
up on short-term debt, it helps lower interest costs. (More on that future
problem later.) http://www.savingsbonds.gov/govt/reports/ir/ir_expense.htm
The fiscal deficits are projected to be about 11% of nominal GDP, which is
now roughly $14.3 trillion. The Congressional Budget Office currently projects
that deficits will still be $1 trillion in ten years.
Last spring I published as an Outside the Box a very important paper by Dr.
Woody Brock on why you cannot grow government debt well above nominal GDP without
causing severe disruptions to the overall economic system. If you have not
read it, or would like to read it again, click
here.
I am going to reproduce just one table from that piece. Note that this was
Woody's worst-case assumption, adding 8% of GDP to the debt each year, and
not the 11% we are experiencing today. The Congressional Budget Office projections
are now even worse, and that assumes a very rosy 3% or more growth in the economy
for the next five years. Under Woody's scenario, the national debt would rise
to $18 trillion by 2015, or well over 100% of GDP, depending on your growth
assumptions. Take some time to study the tables, but I am going to focus on
2015 and not the outlier years.

$1.5 trillion dollars means that someone has to invest that much in Treasury
bonds. Let's look at where the $1.5 trillion might come from. Let's assume
that all of our trade deficit comes back to the US and is invested in US government
bonds. Today we found out that the latest monthly trade deficit was just over
$30 billion, or $370 billion annualized (which is half what it was a few years
ago). That still leaves $1.13 trillion that needs to be found to be invested
in US government debt (forget about business and consumer loans and mortgages).
Killing the Goose
$1.13 trillion is roughly 8% of total US GDP. That is a staggering amount.
And again, that assumes that foreigners continue to put 100% of their fresh
reserves into dollar-denominated assets. That is not a safe assumption, given
the recent news stories about how governments are thinking about whether to
create an alternative to the dollar as a reserve currency. (And if I was watching
the US run $1.5 trillion deficits with no realistic plans to cut back, I would
be having private talks too. They would be idiots not to do so.)
There are only three sources for the needed funds: either an increase in taxes
or people increasing savings and putting them into government bonds or the
Fed monetizing the debt, or some combination of all three.
Now the Fed is in fact monetizing a portion of the debt as part of its quantitative
easing program, and US consumers are saving more. Tax receipts are way down.
I can tell you there is a great deal of angst in New Orleans tonight about
the Fed monetization. This is traditionally a "gold bug" conference, and many
of the participants and speakers see only inflation in our future.
Long-time readers know that I think the Fed has been able to get away with
its rather large monetization program because of the massive deflationary forces
let loose in the world by the credit crisis, which is forcing a monster deleveraging
regime all over the world. Where has all the money gone that the Fed has printed?
Right back onto the Fed's balance sheet as bank reserves. The banks are not
lending, so this money does not get into the system in the usual manner associated
with fractional reserve banking. Until that happens, and is accompanied by
increasing wages and employment, inflation is not in our immediate future.
And this brings us to our conundrum. You cannot continue to run deficits significantly
larger than nominal GDP for too long without risking the demise of the economic
system. Ask Argentina or any of the other nations where hyperinflation occurred,
as detailed in the study mentioned above. But we are in a deflationary environment,
so the Fed can monetize the debt far more than any of us suppose without risking
immediate and spiraling inflation.
But there is a limit to the Fed's ability to do so without causing real inflation.
First, as long as the Fed is independent, at some point they will simply have
to tell Congress we can no longer monetize the debt. While I am sure that some
of you doubt they would do so, the Fed officials and economists I have been
around are pretty adamant about that. There is a line they will not be pushed
past. It may be further than I like, but it is there.
The Fed cannot simply buy up all the debt needed to fund the government. Again,
no one on the FOMC would either advocate or allow that. That would in fact
start us down a very dangerous path rather quickly. Therefore, they must have
a large number of willing bond buyers outside the Fed. The good news, gentle
reader, is that we will find someone to buy that debt. That is also the bad
news. Let's go back 30 years.
Legend now has it that Paul Volker single-handedly took the inflation bull
by the horns and ripped them off. Now, it took fortitude to do that in the
face of certain recession and high unemployment. Those were not fun days. But
his partner in the deed was the bond market. Bond investors simply demanded
higher returns, because they were really worried about inflation.
At some point, if we do not get the government deficit under control, the
bond market is once again going to react. Seemingly overnight, real (inflation-adjusted)
rates are going to rise, and will do so rapidly. And I am not talking about
1 or 2%. You just cannot have 8% of a $14-trillion GDP go into US government
debt every year, forever, at today's low real rates.
Let's play a thought game. If you take 8% of US consumer spending and save
it, and it finds its way into government bonds, you have reduced consumer spending
and therefore the actual GDP. But how about those who want to invest in stocks?
Foreign bonds and currencies? New businesses? Loans of all types? How much
are we going to have to save to get the necessary capital? How high will the
saving rate have to be to finance all those other activities in a world where
debt securitization is still anemic?
Some will point to Japan and their government debt-to-GDP ratio, which will
soon be over 200%, a far cry from where we are today. Why can't we grow our
debt to 200%? Because the Japanese have long had a culture of saving and investing
in government bonds. It's what you do to support the country. But even they
will run into a wall as their savings rate continues to drop, because so many
of their citizens are retired and are now selling bonds to finance retirement.
They too are running massive fiscal deficits, on the order of the size of the
US deficits. And does anyone really want to have two lost decades, like Japan?
How long can we go before there is an upheaval? I don't know. The markets
can remain irrational or complacent for a lot longer than most of us think.
It could be years. Or not. Suddenly, it will be July 2008 and the bond vigilantes
stampede.
But now, we seemingly can borrow with no consequences. The deflation that
is in the air, plus the lack of bank lending holds, down the normal inflation
impulses. We as a nation are leveraging ourselves up. We're partying like it's
still 2005. The music is playing and we are dancing. Our Congress is trying
to figure out how to run even higher deficits.
At some point, the consequences will be significant. There are two paths,
and it is not clear which one we will take. First, we might see inflation kick
in and actual rates rise. Since so much of our national debt is short-term
debt, that means yet another rise in the deficit as rates rise. Mortgage rates
rise, putting pressure on the housing market. There will be even more pressure
on commercial mortgages. Consumer debt will be harder to get and cost more.
It will mean funding costs for businesses will rise, and that hurts employment.
It would be a return to the 1970s of high interest rates and stagnant growth
in a very slow-growth environment.
Second, we could see deflation kick in and, even though rates stay more or
less where they are, real (after-deflation) rates could rise as they did in
the '30s and in Japan.
Some of my most knowledgeable friends argue for the inflation side, and others
take the deflation side. I tend to think the Fed will fight deflation until
we get inflation, but the consequences will not be pleasant. There is no benign
path.
How can we avoid such an upheaval? The only way is to make some very difficult
choices. There have to be some adults making the choices, as the teenagers
now in control clearly cannot make them.
As I have written in the past, we can run deficits of 2% of GDP for a very
long time, which in a few years would be about $300 billion. It is my belief
that if the bond market and world investors saw a credible plan to put us on
a path to a deficit no larger than 2% of GDP, the dire upheaval that is in
our future could be avoided.
But that will mean some painful choices. It is not a matter of pain or no
pain, it is just deciding when and how bad it will be. The longer we wait,
the worse the consequences.
Let's Play Turn It Around
There are businessmen who are called turnaround specialists. They come into
companies that are sick but have a basic competency, and that with the right
management can be made into viable concerns. Generally, the choices the new
management makes are painful to those involved, but they are necessary if the
enterprise is to remain a going concern.
So, for the next few pages, I am going to suggest some things we can do to
turn the US around. They are not easy fixes, and I know a lot of readers will
not like what they read or will disagree on points. But something like this
is going to have to be done, or we risk killing the goose.
First, we must acknowledge the deficit is out of control, and spending must
be cut. If we raise taxes by as much as the Obama administration now wants
to, we will most assuredly put the country back into a deep recession in 2011.
Think what raising taxes in 1937 did to a nascent recovery. A $3-trillion-dollar
budget is 20% of the US economy. That is just simply too much.
Quick fact. The most credible studies show that government expenditures exert
no multiplier effect on the economy. Actually, they show them to be very slightly
negative. This is not just in the US. However, the tax effect has a multiplier
of 3! If we raise taxes by $300 billion in 2011, that will slam the economy
in the face. Further, we will collect less taxes than projected, as economic
activity will fall.
You cannot cure a too much debt problem with more debt. We cannot borrow our
way into prosperity. Every crisis of the past decades has been a result of
too much debt and leverage and we seem to want to repeat the past mistakes,
hoping that this time it will be different. It won't.
Ok, now let's play the Turnaround Hammer Game.
+ We should start with a 5% acrossthe-board cut in spending in all programs.
Federal employees, except for military personnel, should see a 5% cut in pay
as part of that program. The average federal worker makes $75,419 a year, while
the average in the private sector is $39,751. The rest of us are taking pay
cuts in the form of higher taxes. No cost of living increases, etc. We are
on an austerity program and need to do what it takes. If a program is deemed
too important to be cut, then another program has to be cut more.
Then the next year another 2.5% cut across the board. And then an absolute
freeze on the overall budget size until the deficit is 2% or less of GDP.
+ Social Security must be fixed now. We all know that it is going to have
to be done, so why not just do it? Means testing should be a part of the mix.
As an idea, for every $10,000 in income a retiree has, he gets $1,000 less
in SS payments. And increase the retirement age down the road. When SS was
launched, retirement age was 65. But the average life span was 65. There are
other things we can do, but whatever our poison of choice is, we need to take
it.
+ Medicare must be revised, with real health-care reform. The national debt
is $56 trillion if we count unfunded liabilities, much of which is Medicare.
It will become a nightmare around the middle of the next decade. Adding more
expenses now without cutting elsewhere makes no sense. If we kill the goose,
no one will get anything excect very empty promises.
Side note: there actually is a lot of waste in the system. Software should
be written that analyzes every patient and procedure and produces an outcomes-based
analysis of what is reasonable, rather than throwing every test at every patient.
And the government should make sure, even if it has to spend the money, that
the updated system is in place in every hospital and clinic in the country.
And doctors should be given access to it so they can decide what type of care
is appropriate to prescribe. And health-care reform means tort reform.
Today, I got a note from a friend of mine who just had yet another heart attack.
It seems his stent is now blocked by 50%. He is a vet, and his primary care
is the Veterans Administration. The Veterans Hospital system will not do a
procedure to unblock the stent until it is 70% blocked. He does not have any
money, so he is simply waiting to have another heart attack. I am really looking
forward to government-run health care.
+ Each year we allow almost 1 million immigrants into the US, mostly family
of people already here. I suggest that for the next two years we stop that.
Instead, let anyone who can buy a home, passes basic screening, and can demonstrate
the ability to pay for health insurance immigrate to the US and get a temporary
green card. If they behave, then the card becomes permanent after four years.
We almost immediately put a floor on the housing market, absorb the excess
homes, and within a year the housing-construction market, along with the jobs
that are now gone, will be back. That is stimulus that costs the taxpayers
nothing.
+ While I can't believe I am writing this, taxes are going to have to rise,
if for no other reason than this Congress is hell bent on raising taxes. But
rescinding the entire Bush tax cuts, plus adding a 10% surcharge as Congress
wants to do in one fell swoop, is an absolute guarantee of a recession. So
do it gradually over (say) 4 years, and then reinstitute the cuts when the
deficit is under 2% of GDP. Remember the negative tax-multiplier effect of
raising taxes. And the definitive work on that was done by Obama's chairman
of the Council of Economic Advisors, Christina Romer.
We should consider a VAT tax and a major cut/reorganization of the corporate
tax. We need to encourage corporations to hire more, and you do that by taxing
less. Let's make our corporations more competitive, not less. Our taxes are
much higher than those of any of our major competitors. And please forget that
insane carbon tax. If you want to cut emissions, do it straightforwardly by
raising taxes significantly on gasoline. Don't back-door it on consumers. (And
I am NOT advocating such a policy.)
+ An aggressive tax benefit for new venture-capital money that is invested
in new technologies will result in new industries. The only way we can grow
our way out of this mess is to create whole new industries, like we did in
the late '70s and '80s. (Think computers and the internet and telecom.)
+ Unemployment is likely to continue to rise and last longer than ever before.
We have to take care of the basic needs of those who want work but can't find
it. Unemployment insurance should be extended to those who are still looking
for work past the time for benefits to expire, and some program of local volunteer
service should be instituted as the price for getting continued benefits after
the primary benefits time period runs out. Not only will this help the community,
but it will get the person out into the world where he is more likely to meet
someone who can give him a job. But the costs of this program should be revenue-neutral.
Something else has to be cut.
+ We have to re-hink our military costs (I can't believe I am writing this!).
We now spend almost 50% of the world's total military budget. Maybe we need
to understand that we can't fight two wars and support hundreds of bases around
the world. If we kill the goose, our ability to fight even one medium-sized
war will be diminished. The harsh reality is that everything has to be re-evaluated.
As an example, do we really need to be in Korea? If so, why can't Korea pay
for much of the cost? They are now a rich nation. There are budgetary fiscal
limits to being the policeman for the world.
+ Glass-Steagall, or some form of it, should be brought back. Banks, which
are subject to taxpayer bailouts, should not be in the investment banking and
derivatives-creating business. Derivatives, especially credit default swaps,
should be on an exchange, and too big to fail must go. Banks have enough risk
just making loans. Leverage should be dialed down, and hedge funds selling
what amounts to naked call options in any form, derivative or otherwise, should
be regulated.
Let me see, is there any group I have not offended yet? But something like
I am suggesting is going to have to be done at some point. There is no way
we can continue forever on the current path. At some point, we will hit the
wall. The fight between the bug and the windshield always ends in favor of
the windshield. The bond market is going to have to see a credible effort to
get back to a reasonable deficit, or we risk a very difficult economic environment.
The longer we wait, the worse it will be.
It is not going to be easy to persuade a majority of Americans that we need
to do something now. More realistically, we are going to probably have to begin
to experience a crisis of some type to get politicians motivated to do something.
This last Tuesday, I spoke to the Financial Leadership Association at the
University of Texas at Dallas. It was mostly undergraduates, and my assigned
topic was how financial research impacts our investment decisions. In touched
on the topic above, in less detail, but pointing out that at some point we
are going to have to bring the deficit under reasonable control. I got some
push-back, as some could not understand why we just couldn't keep running deficits,
as we simply owe it to ourselves. I tried to explain, but for a few of them
I was not getting through (though I think most got it). And these were the
finance students! I shudder to think what the sociology department would be
like.
We are not going back to normal, although it is likely we will see some form
of Statistical Recovery. But we cannot get complacent. Somewhere out there
is the real potential for another crisis, which will dwarf the last one. You
will not want to be long much of anything when it happens, except hedged or
liquid investments. Though admittedly, this could go on for a long time. I
just don't know how long "long" is. Other than it will be too long and then
not long enough.
Detroit, the Red Sox and the Yankees and Traveling Too Much
I leave for Detroit next Friday and speak at a private conference on Saturday,
then rush to the airport to fly to New York. My friend Barry Habib has second-row
behind-home-plate tickets to what we hope is a Yankees - Boston Red Sox playoff
championship game. That would have to be one of the most exciting games to
watch - the emotions will run as high as in any sporting event around. So I
find myself in the strange position of cheering on both the Yankees and the
Red Sox in the first round of playoffs, and hoping that there is not a four-game
sweep in the second.
Dinner with the guys at Yahoo Tech Ticker on Monday, and then an early train
to Philadelphia, where I will speak at a conference hosted by my friends and
partners at CMG. Dinner that night, a very early flight to Dallas, change airports,
fly to Houston to speak at Salient Partners, then a late-night flight back
to Dallas, up early to fly to Orlando to be with Jon Sundt of Altegris at the
Commonwealth conference, fly back early (sigh) Saturday morning to Dallas,
drive home, pack, and take an overnight flight to Buenos Aires to start a speaking
tour with new Latin American partner Enrique Fynn, then on to Montevideo, Uruguay,
Sao Paulo. and Rio de Janeiro, and then back to Montevideo for a day of R&R.
Then back home Monday. I am already tired.
Tomorrow I get to hear Karl Rove (wonder if he will remember me from our Texas
days?), Howard Dean, Charles Krauthammer, and a lot of friends, then a series
of parties tomorrow night. I always enjoy coming to The Big Easy for this conference.
(Note to Chinese and Spanish translators: the Big Easy is a nickname for New
Orleans. I can't expect them to know that one.)
It is time to hit the send button, as I have to speak at my next session.
You have a great week, and remember that together we will get through all the
coming problems. Just keep paying attention.
Your worried about all the unintended consequences analyst,
|