MISERY INDEX IS ABOUT TO SOAR
By Chriss Street
With the 2008 “Credit Crisis” bursting the global housing bubble; the United States led and the world followed with the massive amounts of government spending and money-printing stimulus promoted by “Keynesian” economists. To stem the crashes in prices on stock and commodity exchanges and a run on European banks; the U.S. Federal Reserve enlisted the world’s central banks in a coordinated drenching of the earth in vast amounts of freshly printed cash. But as the crisis waned and the “Great Recession” began, governments and their central banks continued to pour wave after wave of Keynesian deficit spending and money printing
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. With economic activity about to slow and austerity shrinking excess government spending; the citizens of the world are about to be rewarded for their trust in government with a steep recession coupled with high levels of inflation. Economists refer to this witch’s brew of escalating misery as stagflation.
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The U.S. Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of Japan, and other central banks
around the world expanded money supplies by purchasing $2.5 trillion of
sovereign debt and distressed banking assets to stem the risk of a deflationary spiral; where
lower wages and higher unemployment lead to a self-reinforcing decline in global
consumption. American and European The Congressional election sweep
of 2008 launched a new political consensus that catapulted 2009 to 2011 at the largest percentage
increase since the Great Depression. What started out as a Keynesian an
emergency economic rescue; soon morphed into a permanent higher level of
government spending and central bank money printing. But in a
contradiction to the theory of Keynesian economics; this
bold government intervention failed to generate economic growth and instead propelled
global food and basic commodityinflation.
Bazaar levels
of indebtedness and unwillingness to curtail spending has recently sparked a
new European sovereign debt and bank insolvency crisis focusing on Portugal,
Italy, Greece, and Spain. Germany, the only country to not implement
Keynesian stimulus, is being asked as lender-of last-resort to bail-out
these PIGS. The Teutonic tough-love demanded by the Germans to rescue
Greece is slashing public jobs equivalent to 20% of national employment and a
decade- long economic squeeze on the consumer and corporate sectors that will
shrivel the nation’s standard-of-living by 1/3.
U.S.
counter-Keynesian-revolutionaries were swept into political power in January of
2011 on a mandate to banish deficit spending. The recent debt-ceiling
compromise will slash $71 billion of spending this fiscal year. Add in
the expiration of incentives, such as the 100% depreciation of capital
purchases in 2011, plus the impact of continued fiscal tightening and America’s
GDP will wither next year by 2%, or $300 billion. Getting government out
of the economy will lead to big private sector growth in the future; but the
transitional slowdown and spending austerity will lead to a nasty recession in
the first half of 2012.
China, who benefited enormously by pegging their exchange rate to the U.S.
dollar has continued to stimulate their export economy by subsidizing
state-owned-enterprises commodity purchases and directing banks to loan at 2%
borrowing costs. The result has been strong employment and flooding the
world with products sold under cost. The dark side is the 15% inflation
for consumer food and rent currently ravaging workers, plus increasingly
insolvent banks. As anger builds, China will be forced to reduce the subsidies
and allow export prices to rise. To the world, this will generate a burst
of inflation.
Governments have had great fun spending lots of borrowed money on their
friends and allies. When recession began to cure over-leveraged consumers from
speculating in houses; government used the pain of households de-leveraging as
a green light to maximize spending. After three years of record expenditures,
governments have become sub-prime and are now being forced to de-leverage.
But the tsunami of government money is still sloshing around in the world
economies and will continue to drive inflation of basic commodity prices
higher.
This blend of government austerity with expiring tax incentives will soon
pull the U.S. economy down and the world’s economy will follow. With our
pre-recession Misery Index of3.9% inflation and 9% unemployment already at the highest
reading since Jimmy Carter in the 1970s; stirring in a
severe recession will drive unemployment higher and make this witch’s brew
boil.
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