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Stimulus

Final Revisions of First Quarter GDP: Stimulus Not Working

This past weekend was the G-20 meeting, and the anticipated brawl between the US and Germany on spending versus cost cutting… Well, the brawl didn’t happen, instead they agreed to say that they will “tackle deficits once economic recoveries are assured”… Which here in the US means… NEVER! Not that the economic recovery won’t eventually come along, but that our lawmakers aren’t going to stop spending… However, there are elections that might just change their minds, eh?

The currencies can’t figure out what just happened in Toronto, so they are trading in a tight range, with a bias to sell dollars this morning… And gold is nearing ,260 once again, after that big sell off one day last week.

Well… Friday, we saw the final revision to first quarter GDP print… Let me take you back in time first, to a time when the original first quarter GDP printed and the government tried to tell us it was 3.2%… Here’s what I had to say…

“Yes, GDP for the first quarter just printed a revised downward number of 3%. This originally printed at 3.2%, so the trend there doesn’t look good for the final revision later this month. 3% GDP with good domestic demand represents nice growth. However, 3% GDP without domestic demand, and nothing but government stimulus, spending, easy credit, historic low rates driving the GDP, and you do not have a strong economy.”

Well… Guess what? The final revision was moved down to 2.7%… We sure didn’t see government officials all over the cable news stations on Friday, pounding their chests, and bragging about how their “stimulus was working,” now did we?

And like I said a month ago… “Let’s see what happens when the government removes their stimulus”… Maybe now we don’t want to see what will happen… I know I certainly don’t!

So, add first quarter GDP to the list of economic data we’ve seen lately that just doesn’t smell like an economic recovery is taking place… We’ll see quite a few data prints this week, some not so important, and some, like Personal Income and Spending (today), S&P/CaseShiller Home Price Index, and Consumer Confidence (tomorrow), and the Chicago Purchasing Manager Index (Wednesday), that will carry the bulk of the load this week. So by Friday, when everyone is attempting to get out of Dodge early to head to the lake, or the Hamptons, or whatever, we’ll have a better understanding of the data here in the US… My guess? Well… My guess is that it will all print soft, and not give the markets a warm and fuzzy about the US being the engine of global growth!

Getting back to G-20 for a minute – and the thought that our government keeps pressing on with, and that is… You have to spend to get out of this mess… And the thought that I’ve said over and over again that to think that is just plain wrong, was addressed in a story that I read on Friday… Wanna read a great story that supports my stance and shoots holes in the government’s stance? Click here.

Here’s a snippet for those of you in a hurry… OK… Let me set this up for you first… Allan Meltzer is a well known and distinguished monetarist who advised presidents Kennedy and Reagan… But he is perhaps better known for his pushing Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher toward tough fiscal policies that launched Britain to years of balanced budgets, modest spending increases, falling joblessness, and extraordinary economic growth.

“When Allan Meltzer was asked about the government’s stance toward spending instead of tougher fiscal policies, he had this to say… ‘If Obama announced a strategy to deal with the long-term debt and stopped doing things to increase the uncertainty that businesses face, it would do a great deal to stimulate the economy,’ declares the 82-year old Meltzer.

“Meltzer is right, and most of the ‘experts’ – from Paul Krugman to Ben Bernanke – are wrong. The best stimulus is a solid, credible plan to radically reduce government spending, starting right now.”

Great stuff!

And keeping with the theme of deficits… The Bloomie reported on Friday that: “Forty-six states face budget shortfalls that add up to 2 billion for the fiscal year ending next June, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington research institution. State spending is 12 percent of US GDP.” Hmmm… Wonder where the Chicken Littles are that cried about Greece?

OK… Enough on that! There has to be happy news out there somewhere!

Oh! Hey! It looks like Sweden’s Central Bank (the Riksbank) will join the ranks of the rate hikers this week! Now, I don’t believe the markets are on board with this, but as usual, I’ll go out on a fat limb, and say that the Riksbank hikes rates 25 BPS this Thursday…

In Australia… The Aussie dollar (AUD) continues to inch higher after the Prime Minister change last week… The thought then, was that the new PM, Gillard, would not go forward with the mining tax that had hung over the Aussie dollar like the Sword of Damocles! But, now I hear that Gillard will go forward with a watered down tax… I doubt she’ll get the support she needs for her watered down tax either, so we could see her thrown out on her ear too, should she continue down that path!

In Canada, we’ll see the color of the April GDP report later this week (Thursday)… The most recent data in Canada has been softer than expected, throwing cold water all over the hopes that the Bank of Canada (BOC) would hike rates next month. But still, the Canadian dollar/loonie (CAD) remains well bid…

OK… I read a story last night about how traders and hedge fund managers have “backed off” the selling of euros for now, to see how the nearly trillion aid package plays out… If in a couple of months, there are no signs of stabilization, then the selling could come back… But for now…

“A successful bond sale by Spain and an agreement by EU leaders to disclose how banks perform on stress tests have tempered concern that nations will have trouble financing themselves. Spain sold 3 billion euros (.7 billion) of 10-year debt on June 17 to yield of 4.864 percent, below the 5.04 percent that the bonds traded at before the sale. Investors bid for 1.89 times the amount offered.

“The European Central Bank raised its euro-region growth forecast for this year on June 10 to 1 percent, from a previous estimate of 0.8 percent. It will grow about 1.2 percent in 2011, the ECB predicted.”

So… For now, there’s a light at the end of the Eurozone tunnel; the question is… Is that daylight on the other end… Or… Is it a train coming toward them?

And to that I saw this… “Greece is on its way to overcoming the sovereign-debt crisis and ultimately will succeed, said Paul Thomsen, head of the International Monetary Fund mission that is helping the country. ‘The effort has begun vigorously and I firmly believe that Greece will succeed,’ he told Greek newspaper To Vima.”

To recap… The G-20 left the markets confused, and not really knowing exactly what the G-20 leaders wanted. So… The bias this morning is to sell dollars… The US data has been soft recently, and there are quite a few data prints this week to confirm that the economy is not growing or recovering! Aussie and Canada are inching higher versus the dollar this morning, and Chuck went out on a limb (a fat one) to say the Riksbank would hike rates this week in Sweden…

Chuck Butler
for The Daily Reckoning

Final Revisions of First Quarter GDP: Stimulus Not Working originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
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Stimulus, Austerity, and the Spiral of Decline

In an economic decline, mediocre governments typically bounce back and forth between “stimulus” and “austerity.” They are the ketchup and mustard of bad recession policy.

“Stimulus” – favored by the left-leaning politicians – rarely amounts to more than a form of welfare spending. This is appreciated in hard times, but it tends to be extremely expensive and does little for the economy as a whole. Deficit worries increase. Then comes the “austerity,” often favored by conservative politicians.

“Austerity” usually means spending cuts and tax hikes. But, it does not take long before politicians, bureaucrats, public employees and corporate cronies all agree that they don’t actually want to cut spending. Usually, they take some unpleasant swipes at welfare programs and services – in other words, the only programs that actually do some good, and which are especially important in a recession. This also happens to be the only government expenditure that does not land in the pockets of politicians, bureaucrats, public employees and corporate cronies.

These spending cuts rarely amount to much, so the government relies more and more on tax hikes for their “austerity” plans. The results of the tax hikes are typically an even worse economy, and often no appreciable increase in tax revenue.

As the economy contracts further, demands on the government increase. “Austerity” becomes unpopular, and is postponed until some future date “after the economy recovers.” (The tax hikes remain, however.) If the government has not exceeded its debt carrying capacity, it lurches back toward “stimulus” and large deficits. Japan has been though this cycle probably a half-dozen times by now.

If the government can no longer credibly issue debt, the typical next step is a double helping of “austerity.” There is talk of huge spending cuts, which rarely materialize. What usually happens next is minor spending cuts and huge tax hikes. This often begins the final implosion, when businesses give up completely, and tax evasion soars as the government has lost all legitimacy. Default may follow soon after.

Britain’s government is near this point now. “Stimulus” is no longer tenable. Out come the tax hikes. The talk now is of raising the capital gains tax from 18% to 40%, and even 50% in some situations. This would be on top of an increase in the VAT to around 20% from 17.5%. It was 15% in 2009. In November 2008, Britain’s government raised the top income tax rate from 40% to 45%, and in 2009 it increased to 50%.

In his 1932 election campaign, Herbert Hoover boasted that more public works had been built in the four years of his administration than in the previous thirty. Federal spending ballooned from .9 billion in 1929 to .4 billion in 1931, a 52% increase. Part of this gusher of cash went to build the Hoover Dam on the Colorado River.

This spending binge, in the midst of recession, brought huge deficits. Hoover then tried to address the deficit with a huge tax hike. In 1932, the top income tax rate in the US rose from 25% to 63%. He also tried to implement a national sales tax, but this was defeated. This followed the infamous Smoot-Hawley Tariff of 1930, which put a 60% tariff on more than 3,200 products.

After 1933, the Roosevelt administration pursued much the same approach. By 1935, Federal expenditures had grown to .4 billion, and in 1940 they hit .5 billion – over three times the level in 1929. That year, the top personal income tax rate was 79%. President Roosevelt’s Treasury Secretary, Henry Morgenthau, described the results in May 1939:

“We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work. …We have never made good on our promises… I say after eight years of this Administration we have just as much unemployment as when we started… And an enormous debt to boot.”

The cycle of “stimulus” and “austerity” eventually leads to more spending and higher taxes. It doesn’t work. So what’s the solution?

A better strategy is less spending and lower taxes.

In 1976, Britain was so hard up that it had to go to the IMF for a loan. Without this assistance, the government would have likely defaulted. The IMF insisted on its usual “austerity” plan, with spending reductions and higher taxes of course. In 1979, Margaret Thatcher became prime minister. Thatcher is remembered today for her sweeping reorganization of government, in which public employees, subsidies and state-run businesses were slashed or discarded. She crushed the influence of public unions in the face of widespread strikes.

Despite this, in the 1983 general elections, only 39% of union members voted for the opposing Labor Party. Thatcher was popular. Why? The other side of her strategy was tax cuts. She immediately moved to lower top income tax rates from 83% to 60%. By 1986, the top income tax rate was 40%, and the basic rate had fallen to 25%. Capital gains tax rates were reduced from 75% to 30%, and indexed to inflation. The corporate tax rate was reduced from 52% to 35%.

Ronald Reagan, in the US, had much the same strategy: tax cuts and spending cuts. During his presidency, the top US income tax rate fell from 70% to 28%. His attempts to reduce spending floundered in the Democrat-controlled Congress.

Ideally, spending reductions should focus on the waste, theft and graft – the politicians, bureaucrats, public employees and corporate cronies – not on the public services which are the government’s primary reason for existence. Britain still has its National Health system.

I find that these sorts of policies are accompanied by a certain change in mood. The political focus shifts from parasitic self-enrichment to one of national success and failure. If your initial premise is to find a way to strip-mine the populace for wealth, and then distribute your gains among your cronies, then tax hikes and spending increases are the natural conclusion. Politicians find the answers when they start to ask the questions. Thatcher studied conservative texts, and actually read Friedrich Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom from cover to cover.

You can sense this change in mood when the terms “stimulus” and “austerity” disappear from discussion. Politicians start to talk about “national greatness,” as Vladimir Putin did in 2000 when he introduced Russia’s amazing 13% flat income tax. In the explosive recovery that followed, the Russian government’s income tax revenues soared. In 2001, the first year of the new tax system, income tax revenues increased by an astonishing 46%! This had nothing to do with oil prices, which finished that year at .33 per barrel. In 2002, income tax revenues increased another 40%, and crude oil finished the year at .42. By 2007, income tax revenues were 624% higher than they were in 2000, and Russia was once again a major world power.

This can be a wonderful time for investors.

Sometimes, governments never pull out of their spiral of decline. During the 16th century, Spain was the wealthiest and most powerful state in Europe, with a world empire stretching from California and Peru in the west to the Philippines in the east – not to mention Portugal and most of Italy and the Netherlands. By the early 17th century, native Spaniards were fleeing to the Americas to escape crushing taxes.

In his wonderful book, For Good and Evil: the Impact of Taxes on the Course of Civilization, Charles Adams notes an observer in early 17th century Madrid who said:

“The galleons left on the 28th of last month; I am assured that in addition to the persons who sailed for business reasons, more than 6,000 Spaniards have passed over to America for the simple reason that they cannot live in Spain.”

Four hundred years later, Spain remains a nice place for a sunny vacation.

Nathan Lewis
for The Daily Reckoning

Stimulus, Austerity, and the Spiral of Decline originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold

Economic Stimulus Can’t Stop De-Leveraging

You say yes, I say no
You say stop and I say go, go, go
Oh, no

– The Beatles

We keep saying the same thing here at The Daily Reckoning. Not because we lack imagination… It’s because things are still the same.

“Outlook for home prices grows darker,” says The Wall Street Journal.

Well, yes. Much darker. Bloomberg:

Sales of US New Houses Plunge to Record Low as Credit Ends

June 23 (Bloomberg) – Purchases of US new homes fell in May to the lowest level on record after a tax credit expired, showing the market remains dependent on government support.

Sales collapsed an unprecedented 33 percent from April to an annual pace of 300,000, less than the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and the fewest in data going back to 1963, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Demand in prior months was revised down.

Exceeds Drop Projected

Sales were projected to drop 19 percent to a 410,000 annual pace, according to the median estimate of 76 economists surveyed. Forecasts ranged from 300,000 to 530,000. The government revised April’s purchase rate down to 446,000 from a previously reported 504,000.

Hey, what happened to that trillion worth of stimulus spending, guarantees and bailouts? We said it wouldn’t work from the get-go. They said ‘yes, it will.’ We said ‘no, it won’t.’ Can we have our money back?

Last week’s report showed that used or existing houses were not selling. Now we find that new houses are selling even worse. The tax credit doesn’t really expire until the end of this month. But you can’t build a new house in 4 weeks, so the May new house data reflects the end of the credit.

You’ve heard the expression, ‘bad money after good’? Well, stimulus money was bad money from the beginning. It headed down the drain the minute it left the bank. Trillions of dollars wasted. And for what?

That’s the interesting thing. The feds couldn’t really stop the process of de-leveraging. They could make-believe…with federal spending projects that looked a little like real work…and handouts that looked like real income.

But all they could really do was rob Peter to pay off Paul…or rip off them both with debts they couldn’t pay and phony money they couldn’t back with anything real.

All they did was make sure some people were hurt worse than others. Shareholders, for example, lost trillions as stocks fell. The market has recovered much of the loss, but US stock market investors are still out more than trillion. Homeowners lost big, too. Clip 20% to 50% off the value of America’s housing stock and you’ve erased as much as trillion. We don’t know yet. The housing market moves slowly. It discovers what things are worth…but only by fits and starts.

After the latest housing news, our guess is that house buyers are going to squeeze their nickels even harder. And house sellers are going to be even more desperate. Between the reluctance of the buyers and the eagerness of the sellers, house prices will probably come down another 10% to 20% – maybe more – before they finally reach bottom.

But thanks to the generosity or stupidity of the US government, bondholders have done pretty well. Instead of letting the whole capital structure collapse, so that it might be rebuilt on a more solid foundation, the feds bailed out the bondholders…who just happen to be very cozy with Wall Streets big banks and federal authorities.

Then, of course, the feds congratulated themselves. They avoided a disaster. They saved the world. They brought the world economy back from the brink of catastrophe. At least that is how they and the press spun the story.

For our part, we would have preferred to see the whole thing go over the edge. Not that we know what kind of catastrophe would have resulted. But we wanted to find out. And whatever it was, we doubt that it would have cost trillion.

In fact, the price would have probably been only a fraction of that amount… For every bondholder who would have taken a loss there was a debtor somewhere who would have been relieved of a burden he couldn’t pay. In the present case, the debtor was relieved of his burden. The feds took it over from him. Now, it’s on all our backs!

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Economic Stimulus Can’t Stop De-Leveraging originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold

Economic Stimulus Can Stop De-Leveraging

You say yes, I say no
You say stop and I say go, go, go
Oh, no

– The Beatles

We keep saying the same thing here at The Daily Reckoning. Not because we lack imagination… It’s because things are still the same.

“Outlook for home prices grows darker,” says The Wall Street Journal.

Well, yes. Much darker. Bloomberg:

Sales of US New Houses Plunge to Record Low as Credit Ends

June 23 (Bloomberg) – Purchases of US new homes fell in May to the lowest level on record after a tax credit expired, showing the market remains dependent on government support.

Sales collapsed an unprecedented 33 percent from April to an annual pace of 300,000, less than the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and the fewest in data going back to 1963, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Demand in prior months was revised down.

Exceeds Drop Projected

Sales were projected to drop 19 percent to a 410,000 annual pace, according to the median estimate of 76 economists surveyed. Forecasts ranged from 300,000 to 530,000. The government revised April’s purchase rate down to 446,000 from a previously reported 504,000.

Hey, what happened to that trillion worth of stimulus spending, guarantees and bailouts? We said it wouldn’t work from the get-go. They said ‘yes, it will.’ We said ‘no, it won’t.’ Can we have our money back?

Last week’s report showed that used or existing houses were not selling. Now we find that new houses are selling even worse. The tax credit doesn’t really expire until the end of this month. But you can’t build a new house in 4 weeks, so the May new house data reflects the end of the credit.

You’ve heard the expression, ‘bad money after good’? Well, stimulus money was bad money from the beginning. It headed down the drain the minute it left the bank. Trillions of dollars wasted. And for what?

That’s the interesting thing. The feds couldn’t really stop the process of de-leveraging. They could make-believe…with federal spending projects that looked a little like real work…and handouts that looked like real income.

But all they could really do was rob Peter to pay off Paul…or rip off them both with debts they couldn’t pay and phony money they couldn’t back with anything real.

All they did was make sure some people were hurt worse than others. Shareholders, for example, lost trillions as stocks fell. The market has recovered much of the loss, but US stock market investors are still out more than trillion. Homeowners lost big, too. Clip 20% to 50% off the value of America’s housing stock and you’ve erased as much as trillion. We don’t know yet. The housing market moves slowly. It discovers what things are worth…but only by fits and starts.

After the latest housing news, our guess is that house buyers are going to squeeze their nickels even harder. And house sellers are going to be even more desperate. Between the reluctance of the buyers and the eagerness of the sellers, house prices will probably come down another 10% to 20% – maybe more – before they finally reach bottom.

But thanks to the generosity or stupidity of the US government, bondholders have done pretty well. Instead of letting the whole capital structure collapse, so that it might be rebuilt on a more solid foundation, the feds bailed out the bondholders…who just happen to be very cozy with Wall Streets big banks and federal authorities.

Then, of course, the feds congratulated themselves. They avoided a disaster. They saved the world. They brought the world economy back from the brink of catastrophe. At least that is how they and the press spun the story.

For our part, we would have preferred to see the whole thing go over the edge. Not that we know what kind of catastrophe would have resulted. But we wanted to find out. And whatever it was, we doubt that it would have cost trillion.

In fact, the price would have probably been only a fraction of that amount… For every bondholder who would have taken a loss there was a debtor somewhere who would have been relieved of a burden he couldn’t pay. In the present case, the debtor was relieved of his burden. The feds took it over from him. Now, it’s on all our backs!

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning

Economic Stimulus Can Stop De-Leveraging originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold

A Faux Recovery Based on Economic Stimulus

More money! More stimulus! And more borrowing from the future to combat the errors of the past…

President Obama wants another billion, presumably to keep the economy “stimulated.” We “must take these emergency measures…” he wrote in a letter to congressional leaders, or else risk “…massive layoffs of teachers, police and firefighters.”

Are you scared yet, fellow reckoner? Well, you should be, but not because of the reasons Mr. Obama cites. The whole “emergency measure” line reminds your editor of a story; something about a boy and a wolf… It ended with a lot of crying, if we remember correctly.

“That ought to hit ’em where it hurts,” we can almost here the Feds saying. Go for the “safety net” jobs; the ones a free market society supposedly could not support on it’s own.

The government would have us think that if it didn’t pay people to keep the streets clean and the buildings up to fire code, then the nation would descend into a murderous rage of crime and scorching flames. We are supposed to believe that the only thing standing between free citizens and Dante’s Inferno is the vigilance and service of Inner Beltway busybodies. Don’t buy it for a second. If asked whether he would prefer a private contractor coming to his rescue during a bank robbery or a member of Baltimore’s finest, your editor would take the “profiteer” every time. Besides, it’s the state that’s robbing your savings account, not some junkie miscreant down the road.

But back to our topic…

The “recovery,” it seems, is waning…just as the effects of the economic stimulus are fading. Consumer spending is falling, according to the most recent figures. Mortgage defaults are creeping steadily higher. Debts – at both the state and federal level – are ballooning. And the overall jobs situation – not including census “workers” – is worsening.

That all sounds about right to us. After all, dead men don’t walk. The unemployed don’t spend. And even if they did, spending is no way to prosperity anyway. In days or yore, “consumption” was considered a disease. Today, welfare statists consider it to be an unalienable right: “Life, Liberty, The Pursuit of Happiness…and a brand new blender!”

…or something like that.

But even the world’s largest economy can’t prop up a dead man forever, no matter how many kitchen appliance vouchers it bribes its citizens with. This is a Weekend at Bernie’s recovery, in other words, not a Chariots of Fire one. It is simulated at the public’s expense; not stimulated by the private sector’s toils. And that trend – from private wealth production to public wealth destruction – is a worrying one indeed.

As Austrian School luminary, F.A. Hayek, astutely observed: “If government relieves us of the responsibility of living by bailing us out, character will atrophy. The welfare state, however good its intentions of creating material equality, can’t help but make us dependent. That changes the psychology of society.”

If President Obama is not careful, the price of his economic recovery will be enough to send the nation broke(er).

Joel Bowman
for The Daily Reckoning

A Faux Recovery Based on Economic Stimulus originally appeared in the Daily Reckoning. The Daily Reckoning, offers a uniquely refreshing, perspective on the global economy, investing, gold, stocks and today’s markets. Its been called “the most entertaining read of the day.”


Daily Reckoning
gold