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View Full Version : The Madness of Ben Bernanke


Sgt Beavis
04-15-2008, 01:47 PM
From Spiegal Online
http://www.spiegel.de/international/business/0,1518,547317,00.html

There is not cliffs notes version. Shit like this is too important...


By Gabor Steingart in Washington

The dollar is in a tailspin, the trade deficit is growing and a recession is on the horizon. The American way of life is in serious danger. But the head of the Federal Reserve keeps on pumping easy credit into the system -- a crazy policy that will worsen the crisis.

Alan Greenspan and Ben Bernanke have more in common with the big cat entertainers Siegfried & Roy than any of us can be comfortable with.

The Las Vegas magicians call themselves "Masters of the Impossible" and have been fascinating audiences for decades by getting snow-white tigers to leap through burning rings.

The legendary Federal Reserve Chairman and his successor were equally adept at fascinating their audiences -- with a policy of miraculous monetary growth that gave America one of the longest periods of economic expansion in modern times. Many saw them as "Masters of the Universe." It seemed as if the central bankers had tamed predatory capitalism with their constant interest rate cuts.

Siegfried & Roy at times seemed at one with their cats, until the day everything went out of control. A tiger bit Roy in the neck during a show and looked as though it were about to devour him alive.

Greenspan and Bernanke too have lost their magic touch, and their image has been shredded by the real estate crisis and the dollar slide. The ravages of the financial markets aren't doing them any personal harm. But devalued stocks, bad mortgage loans and the diving dollar are damaging millions of small investors and savers.

It's as if the tiger has leapt of the stage and is mauling the audience. We can't blame wild cats or financial markets for being ruthless. It's in their nature to be brutal. Their unmistakeable message is: you can take things this far and no further.

In the case of the real estate crisis which reached the banks and is now unsettling the stock markets, the markets are now showing what G7 finance ministers and central bank governors meeting last weekend in Washington for their annual spring get-together declined yet again to admit publicly: Americans must change their lives -- or it will be changed for them by force.

American Way of Life Under Threat

The credit-financed consumer boom of recent years is coming to a painful end. Today's American Way of Life has no chance of surviving the coming years undamaged. The virus will continue to ravage its way through the financial system.

The property crisis is likely to spread to credit card providers soon and will then probably infect car manufacturers, furniture makers and all the other firms that owe their sales increases to the growth in credit finance. "The virus will keep on infecting the system," one management board member from a large bank said, requesting anonymity in return for the candour of his analysis.

His argument is that banks that grant mortgages to home buyers virtually unable to pay their bills are unlikely to be especially scrutinizing when it comes to lending cash to the buyers of fridges, cars and furniture. Indeed, a furniture store in Miami recently tried to lure consumers with the following offer: buy now, pay your first credit installment in three years, and no need for a down-payment.

The credit-financed way of life is typical of the US these days. Many people resort to credit to plug the gap between the lifestyle they have become accustomed to and their declining wages.

Dulling the Pain With Credit

The borrowed cash is like an anaesthetic against the painful impact of globalisation. Private household debt has been growing by $4 billion each business day for years.

All this wouldn't be so bad if the US economy were at least doing well in foreign markets. But it isn't, and hasn't been for a long time. Despite the depreciation of the dollar, which makes imports into the US far more expensive while making US exports cheaper in foreign markets, US manufacturers are finding it hard to sell their products.

Contrary to forecasts by both the Federal Reserve and the Treasury, the trade deficit has continued to grow, by 6 percent in February alone. America imported $62 billion worth of goods more than they exported in February, including a disturbingly large number of cars, computers and pharmaceutical products. Try as they might, most private households in America can't keep up this consumer miracle. The savings behavior of many Americans means that many of them now live from hand to mouth.

But Bernanke is doing nothing to dampen this hunger for credit. The former advisor to President George W. Bush is even trying to whip up credit-financed consumption by lowering interest rates. This is helping to fuel inflation because the monetary growth isn't being matched by growth in real economic output. Inflation in the US currently stands at 4 percent.

It's a paradox. The private commercial banks which have just had to make billions of dollars in write downs have become more cautious. They're scared of further risks. The management resignations at Citigroup and Bear Stearns have had a sobering impact.

Patriotic Madness

Meanwhile the Federal Reserve is urging the banks to go on taking risks. It has been injecting cash into the banking system for the past half-year while urging bank CEOs in confidential chats to offer more credit. The aim is to keep on financing consumer spending and even to stimulate it further -- for reasons of patriotism.

There's a word for this policy -- madness.

But because there is method in this madness, the meeting of mighty central bank governors and finance ministers in Washington over the weekend remained silent about it, at least officially. Outside the meeting rooms, though, there were murmurings about the poisoned legacy of Alan Greenspan and Bernanke's irresponsible behavior.

One participant told me: "There's an unwritten code of honor that says central bank governors should refrain from criticizing each other." Not least out of respect for the independence of central banks.

But the US is unlikely to realize the error of its ways on its own. "The Americans will always do the right thing," British Prime Minister Winston Churchill once said, "after they've exhausted all the alternatives."

Central bankers and tiger tamers have something else in common -- obstinacy. Roy has recovered from his wounds and wants to return to the stage in Las Vegas. "The magic is back," came the defiant announcement.

Alan Greenspan cut a similarly indestructible figure at the weekend. Even though criticism of his cheap money policy was only murmured privately, the 82-year-old legend of central banking said: "I was praised for things I didn't do. I am now being blamed for things I didn't do."

Not that he ever complained about getting false praise.

01WhiteCobra
04-15-2008, 01:51 PM
One termer for sure.

mikeb
04-15-2008, 02:28 PM
I have a feeling that when this is all said and done a lot of americans are not going to be happy, and many will find themselves financially wiped out. After that occurs many will have entirely new spending and saving habits, and a new outlook on handling money and priorities on what to spend on.

AL P
04-15-2008, 02:33 PM
Can we fire him off the roof yet? Put someone's grandma in there, at least they will know how important it is to save money.

5.0LiterRiceEater
04-15-2008, 03:48 PM
I'm not scared

Zarathustra
04-15-2008, 03:54 PM
Can we fire him off the roof yet? Put someone's grandma in there, at least they will know how important it is to save money.

Yea then she'll send everyone a check for $12 on their birthday...

Slowhand
04-15-2008, 03:58 PM
Don't you mean the GENIUS of Bernanke? :p

Yea then she'll send everyone a check for $12 on their birthday...

It's better than $600 to everyone...

Sgt Beavis
04-15-2008, 05:34 PM
I have a feeling that when this is all said and done a lot of americans are not going to be happy, and many will find themselves financially wiped out. After that occurs many will have entirely new spending and saving habits, and a new outlook on handling money and priorities on what to spend on.

Just wait. Credit card rates are already rising. Before long people with significant credit card debt are going to go from being screwed to being totally fucked.

I'm just thankful I was able to get everything paid off a couple of years ago.

Zarathustra
04-15-2008, 06:06 PM
I have a feeling that when this is all said and done a lot of americans are not going to be happy, and many will find themselves financially wiped out. After that occurs many will have entirely new spending and saving habits, and a new outlook on handling money and priorities on what to spend on.

Sounds like necessary and sufficient grounds for a revolution...

mikeb
04-15-2008, 06:41 PM
Just wait. Credit card rates are already rising. Before long people with significant credit card debt are going to go from being screwed to being totally fucked.

I'm just thankful I was able to get everything paid off a couple of years ago.

I was reading some speculation today that the credit card companies will soon be in line to fall as this thing spreads thru the financial industry. There has got to be tons of people not paying on their cards right now. I'm also credit card debt free.

TexasDevilDog
04-15-2008, 07:03 PM
I have been thinking about this for awhile. Cheap credit is not the solution to the economic problem. Americans as a whole, poor, rich, private and government, we over consume and don't save. The poor are doing it just as much as the rich, maybe even more as a percentage. Our government leads by example of financial irresponsibility. But there is no good bitching about a problem with a solution.

I would do the following:

Change the constitution so that the federal government could not borrow more than 1% of its budget for any year, except in the time of declared war. The total tax by the federal government could not exceed 10% of GDP. The federal government does way more than it should or can do efficiently. The government's borrowing has a crouding out effect of soaking up available money to lend when it could be better utilized by the private section to expand the economy.

I would encourage people to save money in banks, by excluding the interest from the first $100,000 in a bank account by individuals. To discourage over consumption, I might even put a consumption tax on credit card use or credit in general.

Vertnut
04-15-2008, 07:24 PM
Sounds like necessary and sufficient grounds for a revolution...
I know you're not serious. After all, this isn't Iran...

Sgt Beavis
04-15-2008, 08:25 PM
I have been thinking about this for awhile. Cheap credit is not the solution to the economic problem. Americans as a whole, poor, rich, private and government, we over consume and don't save. The poor are doing it just as much as the rich, maybe even more as a percentage. Our government leads by example of financial irresponsibility. But there is no good bitching about a problem with a solution.

I would do the following:

Change the constitution so that the federal government could not borrow more than 1% of its budget for any year, except in the time of declared war. The total tax by the federal government could not exceed 10% of GDP. The federal government does way more than it should or can do efficiently. The government's borrowing has a crouding out effect of soaking up available money to lend when it could be better utilized by the private section to expand the economy.

I would encourage people to save money in banks, by excluding the interest from the first $100,000 in a bank account by individuals. To discourage over consumption, I might even put a consumption tax on credit card use or credit in general.

A lot of that actually makes some sense. I really like the idea of making interest earnings tax free. Great idea.

As for the rest, you know it'll never happen...

Sgt Beavis
04-15-2008, 08:27 PM
Sounds like necessary and sufficient grounds for a revolution...

yea, but it'll be an electoral revolution.

Unfortunately American's haven't felt enough financial pain to force that kind of change. It'll be at least another election cycle before it happens. Unless, of course, the economy rights itself over the two years following this election.

TexasDevilDog
04-15-2008, 08:38 PM
yea, but it'll be an electoral revolution.

Unfortunately American's haven't felt enough financial pain to force that kind of change. It'll be at least another election cycle before it happens. Unless, of course, the economy rights itself over the two years following this election.

Obama plans to let the tax cuts expire and remove the cap on social security. That will make people in states like NY and CA, with high income tax rates, end up having to pay up to 64% in taxes. Insted of working hard at running their businesses and keeping 36 cent on the dollar, many business owners will find that they have better things to do and close down.

Zarathustra
04-15-2008, 09:09 PM
yea, but it'll be an electoral revolution.

Unfortunately American's haven't felt enough financial pain to force that kind of change. It'll be at least another election cycle before it happens. Unless, of course, the economy rights itself over the two years following this election.

I like the sound of that, an electoral revolution. I'll agree...