Politics, Programming and Possibilities
19 Dec
By my best estimation, we are about to see a “hard landing” for the U.S. economy. I’ve been watching the signs for several months now, and in the last two weeks there have been some Big signs of imminent disaster. The stock market may be able to maintain its speculative climb in to insanity for a month or two, but sooner or later things are going to come down.
The possibility of economic uncertainty first reached my awareness earlier this year through articles written in international publications such as the UK’s Indymedia— “Why the Dollar Bubble is about to Burst” —and Canada’s Maclean’s magazine— “Is America Going Broke?”
A little while later, I heard about the trillion-dollar housing bubble. Low interest rates in the early 2000s gave rise to an investor buying frenzy, along with ARM and other exotic loans to higher-risk individuals. In the first quarter of this year, the residential housing bubble burst and has been “falling off the cliff” ever since. If the “commercial construction trails residential construction” trend holds as it always has, then we are now about to see the commercial real estate bubble burst as well. According to CalculatedRisk, this translates in to a loss of half a million jobs over the next 6 months.
Then I heard about the dismal auto sales. General Motors and Ford announced they would each slash 30,000 jobs at the end of last year. Ford hired a new CEO to try to pull the company out of its slump. According to the New York Times, significant drops in auto sales have predicted recessions 5 out of the 6 times America has undergone a recession, and concludes, “[a significant drop in auto sales] has never warned of a recession that did not occur.” Auto sales are definitely falling.
Now, in the festive Christmas season when nobody is watching, the Treasury/OMB released the Financial Report of the United States Government in which the Comptroller states (p. 152):
Despite improvement in both the fiscal year 2006 reported net operating cost and the cash-based budget deficit, the U.S. government’s total reported liabilities, net social insurance commitments, and other fiscal exposures continue to grow and now total approximately $50 trillion, representing approximately four times the Nation’s total output (GDP) in fiscal year 2006, up from about $20 trillion, or two times GDP in fiscal year 2000.
As this long-term fiscal imbalance continues to grow, the retirement of the “baby boom” generation is closer to becoming a reality with the first wave of boomers eligible for early retirement under Social Security in 2008.
Given these and other factors, it seems clear that the nation’s current fiscal path is unsustainable and that tough choices by the President and the Congress are necessary in order to address the nation’s large and growing long-term fiscal imbalance.
4 times the GDP! Can you imagine a sane bank manager offering a loan to someone whose “fiscal imbalance continues to grow”? Foreign lenders, like banks, will very soon be calling the same stops on the U.S. government. As the risk of investment increases, so will their demands on interest rates. (See also the commentary by Chris Martenson, “The United States is Insolvent“.)
As if this news weren’t foreboding enough, some shady things are also going on. The measure of how much cash is available in the world economy, a statistic published by the Fed as “M3“, was discontinued in March of this year. From what I understand, it’s possible to put M3 together using the still-published M0, M1 and M2 statistics (plus some other pieces, I presume), and someone has done just that. According to this calculated M3 stat, the real inflation rate of the U.S. dollar is closer to 8 or 9 percent.
My last observation, and the one that convinces me that we’re really in for a big dip here, is that everyone is starting to catch on. There’s an elephant in the room, and we know it. And people are talking about it all over the ‘net. It’s on Digg and Reddit. It’s in blogs. The international papers have long ago covered the topic, and are continuing to do so. And, cautiously, our U.S. news outlets are making mention of it too.
What should you do? Get out of debt. Invest in gold. Invest in silver. Diversify your currency in to the Euro, Swiss Franc or some other foreign currency that isn’t heavily tied to the U.S. dollar. And scoop up some stocks in mining companies or indexes such as NYSE:GLX. I’m also invested in some smaller startups like American Creek Resources in Canada.
If the U.S. dollar collapses and is replaced by something like the Amero, you don’t want to trade dollars for Ameros. You will get a very bad deal.
10 Responses for "Watching the U.S. Economy Crumble"
What do you know?
inflation is under control…real estate market is cooling off… market is strong because companies are making money…unemployment is under control… we’re in the middle of a war (wars money-making machines)… and we are 2 years away from a presidential election.
I think we are under control for smooth sailing.
Thanks for you blog. I come here for rails blog posts, but I find your political posts sobering and just as good to read.
[...] I just received word that the small-cap gold and silver mine that I mentioned previously spiked today. Word is that trading for this stock was halted on the Toronto Stock Exchange, due to the 4-fold overnight increase. This seems to be confirmed by the fact that I can’t seem to get a reading on it today. [...]
[...] In December, I predicted that the stock market “may be able to maintain its speculative climb in to insanity for a month or two, but sooner or later things are going to come down.” I believe they are now on their way. If I’m right, then we may see a few turbulent swings up and down, but the trend itself will be all downward. [...]
International Institute of Management (IIM) published a research report addressing the U.S. economic risks for the next decade. Your analysis is validated by this independent research. The most interesting thing about the report is that warning signs listed in the paper are all coming true, including this month’s stock market meltdown, subprime pain, investment deficit and trade deficit report. The complete text of the report can be found on http://www.iim-edu.org/u.s.economyrisks/
What is disturbing about the subject is that few economists disagreed with the presidential state of economy speech on Jan 31st (citing strong Down Jones performance and economic growth). The author of the paper explains the interplay of U.S. and global economic forces in a detailed yet easy to understand logic for non-economists. According to the report, the worst thing that could happen to the U.S. economy is the loss of investor’s confidence. Med Yones, the president of the research, links current economic challenges to globalization forces and government policies. He recommends unusual strategies to mitigate the risks.
The market is full of noise and conflicting reports on the outlook of the U.S. economy, this paper cuts through all of the noise and focuses on the big picture rather than short term stock market behavior. It’s a sobering assessment of the future of U.S. socioeconomic health.
On March 11th, Reuters published the a story, citing the part of the report http://www.reuters.com/article/hotStocksNews/idUSN0925116620070311
Another supporting point of view can be found in an article written by John Freeland, PhD, Credit Card Nation - Should the Government Get Credit Counseling?
http://www.tpmcafe.com/blog/john_freeland/2007/mar/01/credit_card_nation_should_the_government_get_credit_counseling
Aaron…
I realy enjoyed reading your blog, i needed some info on this subject for my new study economimy in the USA and your post helped me out a lot thank you for that …
[...] Many analysis and news stories are already out today on the looming downfall of the US Economy. Many say that it’ll be a hard landing. It’s just a like a Humpty Dumpty who fell from the wall. [...]
When do you think the Feds will implement the Amero currency?
Do you think the Amero will be just as worthless as the current dollar? Do you think things will be far worse if they do bring in the Amero?
What things can we expect to see (economy, society, housing, food, energy, foreign relations ect..) when they do bring in the Amero?
If I were you I would start buying gold and silver coins which I am.
Because those coins will be worth more than the dollar and the Amero.
Great post, really enjoyed it.
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