Monday, June 18, 2007

It's Official : The Crash of the US Economy has begun!

The big crash has been announced regularly it seems for several years now. One of these times the announcement will probably be right! I have been wondering how the economy keeps going so well. I just wonder how huge defence and war on terror expenditures can keep up as well as people buying homes that cost more and more with mortgages that must require astronomical payments each month.
The decline in the US dollar must help fuel inflation since many consumer goods are now imported and the US dollar will be purchasing less. However US export companies should profit from the decline.


It's Official: The Crash of the U.S. Economy has begun

Saturday, 16 June 2007
by Richard C. Cook

Richard C. Cook is the author of "Challenger Revealed: An
Insider's Account of How the Reagan Administration Caused the Greatest
Tragedy of the Space Age." A retired federal analyst, his career
included work with the U.S. Civil Service Commission, the Food and
Drug Administration, the Carter White House, and NASA, followed by
twenty-one years with the U.S. Treasury Department. He is now a
Washington, D.C.-based writer and consultant. His book "We Hold These
Truths: The Hope of Monetary Reform," will be published later this
year. His website is at www.richardccook.com.


It's official. Mark your calendars. The crash of the U.S. economy has
begun. It was announced the morning of Wednesday, June 13, 2007, by
economic writers Steven Pearlstein and Robert Samuelson in the pages
of the Washington Post, one of the foremost house organs of the U.S.
monetary elite.

Pearlstein's column was titled, "The Takeover Boom, About to Go Bust"
and concerned the extraordinary amount of debt vs. operating profits
of companies currently subject to leveraged buyouts.

In language remarkably alarmist for the usually ultra-bland pages of
the Post, Pearlstein wrote, "It is impossible to predict when the
magic moment will be reached and everyone finally realizes that the
prices being paid for these companies, and the debt taken on to
support the acquisitions, are unsustainable. When that happens, it
won't be pretty. Across the board, stock prices and company valuations
will fall. Banks will announce painful write-offs, some hedge funds
will close their doors, and private-equity funds will report
disappointing returns. Some companies will be forced into bankruptcy
or restructuring."

Further, "Falling stock prices will cause companies to reduce their
hiring and capital spending while governments will be forced to raise
taxes or reduce services, as revenue from capital gains taxes
declines. And the combination of reduced wealth and higher interest
rates will finally cause consumers to pull back on their debt-financed
consumption. It happened after the junk-bond and savings-and-loan
collapses of the late 1980s. It happened after the tech and telecom
bust of the late '90s. And it will happen this time."

Samuelson's column, "The End of Cheap Credit," left the door slightly
ajar in case the collapse is not quite so severe. He wrote of rising
interest rates, "As the price of money increases, borrowing and the
economy might weaken. The deep slump in housing could worsen. We could
also discover that the long period of cheap credit has left a nasty
residue."

Other writers with less prestigious platforms than the Post have been
talking about an approaching financial bust for a couple of years.
Among them has been economist Michael Hudson, author of an article on
the housing bubble titled, "The New Road to Serdom" in the May 2006
issue of Harper's. Hudson has been speaking in interviews of a "break
in the chain" of debt payments leading to a "long, slow economic
crash," with "asset deflation," "mass defaults on mortgages," and a
"huge asset grab" by the rich who are able to protect their cash
through money laundering and hedging with foreign currency bonds.

Among those poised to profit from the crash is the Carlyle Group, the
equity fund that includes the Bush family and other high-profile
investors with insider government connections. A January 2007
memorandum to company managers from founding partner William E.
Conway, Jr., recently appeared which stated that, when the current
"liquidity environment"—i.e., cheap credit—ends, "the buying
opportunity will be a once in a lifetime chance."

The fact that the crash is now being announced by the Post shows that
it is a done deal. The Bilderbergers, or whomever it is that the Post
reports to, have decided. It lets everyone know loud and clear that
it's time to batten down the hatches, run for cover, lay in two years
of canned food, shield your assets, whatever.

Those left holding the bag will be the ordinary people whose assets
are loaded with debt, such as tens of millions of mortgagees, millions
of young people with student loans that can never be written off due
to the "reformed" 2005 bankruptcy law, or vast numbers of workers with
401(k)s or other pension plans that are locked into the stock market.

In other words, it sounds eerily like 2000-2002 except maybe on a much
larger scale. Then it was "only" the tenth worse bear market in
history, but over a trillion dollars in wealth simply vanished. What
makes today's instance seem particularly unfair is that the preceding
recovery that is now ending—the "jobless" one—was so anemic.

Neither Perlstein nor Samuelson gets to the bottom of the crisis,
though they, like Conway of the Carlyle Group, point to the end of
cheap credit. But interest rates are set by people who run central
banks and financial institutions. They may be influenced by "the
market," but the market is controlled by people with money who want to
maximize their profits.

Key to what is going on is that the Federal Reserve is refusing to
follow the pattern set during the long reign of Fed Chairman Alan
Greenspan in responding to shaky economic trends with lengthy
infusions of credit as he did during the dot.com bubble of the 1990s
and the housing bubble of 2001-2005.

This time around, Greenspan's successor, Ben Bernanke, is sitting
tight. With the economy teetering on the brink, the Fed is allowing
rates to remain steady. The Fed claims their policy is due to the
danger of rising "core inflation." But this cannot be true. The
biggest consumer item, houses and real estate, is tanking. Officially,
unemployment is low, but mainly due to low-paying service jobs.
Commodities have edged up, including food and gasoline, but that's no
reason to allow the entire national economy to be submerged.

So what is really happening? Actually, it's simple. The difference
today is that China and other large investors from abroad, including
Middle Eastern oil magnates, are telling the U.S. that if interest
rates come down, thereby devaluing their already-sliding dollar
portfolios further, they will no longer support with their investments
the bloated U.S. trade and fiscal deficits.

Of course we got ourselves into this quandary by shipping our
manufacturing to China and other cheap-labor markets over the last
generation. "Dollar hegemony" is backfiring. In fact China is using
its American dollars to replace the International Monetary Fund as a
lender to developing nations in Africa and elsewhere. As an additional
insult, China now may be dictating a new generation of economic
decline for the American people who are forced to buy their products
at Wal-Mart by maxing out what is left of our available credit card
debt.

About a year ago, a former Reagan Treasury official, now a well-known
cable TV commentator, said that China had become "America's bank" and
commented approvingly that "it's cheaper to print money than make cars
anymore." Ha ha.

It is truly staggering that none of the "mainstream" political
candidates from either party has attacked this subject on the campaign
trail. All are heavily funded by the financier elite who will profit
no matter how bad the U.S. economy suffers. Every candidate except Ron
Paul and Dennis Kucinich treats the Federal Reserve like the fifth
graven image on Mount Rushmore. And even the so-called progressives
are silent. The weekend before the Perlstein/ Samuelson articles came
out, there was a huge progressive conference in Washington, D.C.,
called "Taming the Corporate Giant." Not a single session was devoted
to financial issues.

What is likely to happen? I'd suggest four possible scenarios:

1.
Acceptance by the U.S. population of diminished prosperity and a
declining role in the world. Grin and bear it. Live with your parents
into your 40s instead of your 30s. Work two or three part-time jobs on
the side, if you can find them. Die young if you lose your health
care. Declare bankruptcy if you can, or just walk away from your debts
until they bring back debtor's prison like they've done in Dubai.
Meanwhile, China buys more and more U.S. properties, homes, and
businesses, as economists close to the Federal Reserve have suggested.
If you're an enterprising illegal immigrant, have fun continuing to
jack up the underground economy, avoid business licenses and taxes,
and rent out group houses to your friends.
2.
Times of economic crisis produce international tension and
politicians tend to go to war rather than face the economic music. The
classic example is the worldwide depression of the 1930s leading to
World War II. Conditions in the coming years could be as bad as they
were then. We could have a really big war if the U.S. decides once and
for all to haul off and let China, or whomever, have it in the chops.
If they don't want our dollars or our debt any more, how about a few
nukes?
3.
Maybe we'll finally have a revolution either from the right or
the center involving martial law, suspension of the Bill of Rights,
etc., combined with some kind of military or forced-labor
dictatorship. We're halfway there anyway. Forget about a revolution
from the left. They wouldn't want to make anyone mad at them for being
too radical.
4.
Could there ever be a real try at reform, maybe even an attempt
just to get back to the New Deal? Since the causes of the crisis are
monetary, so would be the solutions. The first step would be for the
Federal Reserve System to be abolished as a bank of issue and a
transformation of the nation's credit system into a genuine public
utility by the federal government. This way we could rebuild our
manufacturing and public infrastructure and develop an income
assurance policy that would benefit everyone.

The latter is the only sensible solution. There are monetary reformers
who know how to do it if anyone gave them half a chance.

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