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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
16 Feb 2012
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America Must Take the Cure

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Al goes to the doctor.

Al: "I'm still short of breath. I know you told me to quit smoking, and honestly, I've tried. But kicking the habit is really stressful. Doc, can you help me?"

Doctor: "I understand. Let me find a way to help you continue smoking."

No serious medical professional would ever offer that response. Smoking caused Al's breathing problems. However difficult quitting cigarettes may be, it is the only way Al will get better.

Likewise for the sick consumer economy. The cure will require discomfort. While Washington should take the panic out of shoppers, it should not impede their pained efforts to change unhealthy behavior.

An example of the conflicts involved comes in the report that American families started paying down their debt in October. (This is the first time household debt has contracted since records were first kept in 1952.) Sounds like a fine piece of news, but here is The Wall Street Journal's take: "That is a punishing turn for an economy in which consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of gross domestic product."

We appreciate the concern, but too much borrowing is how we got into trouble. There is no way to reduce debt other than to reduce debt. If the consumer economy hurts for that reason, well, isn't this a side effect of the needed pill? Eventually, consumers won't owe so much, and so they'll feel confident enough to shop again.

There are things the federal government can fix and things it shouldn't. Washington must help unfreeze the credit markets so that people can borrow for such big purchases as cars. But it will have to passively watch a lot of stores and entire malls go broke. The "overstoring" of America was fueled in part on consumer borrowing.

Many retail chains are themselves debt laden and will not survive this downturn.

But a consumer switch from borrowing to saving should leave a smaller but healthier retailing infrastructure. As financial advisers like to say, saving is nothing but delayed spending.

Some may remember the old Christmas clubs. All year round, workers would put, say, $40 a month into special holiday savings accounts. Come November, they take out money to blow on presents.

As with falling debt loads, swooning house prices are not an entirely bad thing. Some of the business interests that benefited from inflated home prices now demand intervention to prop up the flattened values of these assets. To hear them speak, you'd think that soaring prices were the natural order of things and tumbling prices abnormal. Of course, the market price of something is whatever someone is willing to pay for it.

Lower house values mean that consumers can buy homes for less money and with smaller mortgages. That will leave them more to spend on other things.

The new economic reality is curtailing the practice of borrowing off one's home equity to free cash for other spending. Consumers will regard their home as their shelter, not their piggy bank. Once that mental change happens, they won't care so much what the house was worth in 2006, but that there be a stable market when they need to sell.

Like Al's smoking, Americans' love of debt and taste for real-estate speculation made the problem now needing treatment. The cure in both cases is to stop the bad habits that caused it.

The big question: If the good times were caused by consumer borrowing, and consumers shouldn't go back to their old ways, how can we bring back the hot times? Answer: The times won't be as hot, but they'll be fine.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.


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Ma'am;...We can't live without credit...Isn't that something we hear all the time now??? We can't live without credit??? Like hell we can't... High profits are synonymous with depression; unless you can keep feeding the monster with more and more credit... There is a reason working people need credit... They don't earn enough to buy back what they produce, and very often they do not produce anything... But those who do produce cannot buy back what they produce with their wages... So what??? Give them a loan, and you can suck every bit of future they expect to have right out of their pockets...When the rich have greater income, it means the rich own more property and wealth... Do you think; if the old need a reverse mortgage, that their property, the capital of a life time, is not lost to their families for ever??? If the family farm is lost to the bank, or cannot support the interest on the machinery needed to farm it; is it not gone forever??? What if a future is mortgaged to buy an education??? Who pays for that??? When our children feel they have no one to thank for their educations but themselves, because they are reduced to slavery through their most productive years to pay the debt; who pays for that??? We create young people without business morals and wonder why... It is stupid to wonder why when the cause is so obvious... We have created a class of people living solely on interests who are no more productive than people behind bars.. We have interest extracted for every public or private good... For interest, we have managers drive their workers to the wall, and for their reward they take a vast share of the squeeze; while the working people must rely more and more upon credit... When I first bought this house, the price was tripled by the interest... Why??? If property had paid taxes, the price would have been low to begin with; because if IT did not make enough to pay taxes it would have been sold cheap..Taxes might have accomplished a public good, of making property productive, or putting it in the hands of many small holders.... Instead; its price was inflated because it could be held for little cost; and so the government suffered a loss of income on the taxes, and on my wages paid in interest... On the other end; because my wages paid taxes, and also paid profit, I had to work that much harder to have my needs, and often had to resort to credit... When property paid taxes, property was cheap, and labor was dear... Making me work harder to have only enough made labor cheap, and paying interest on property made me work just so much harder to hold my ground... Interests, and finance account for ninty percent of the profit in this land... We are all on the hook; government, and individuals to pay for a class of people to do nothing but prey upon us, to drive us into the dirt, and ultimately to buy all our rights with our own dime... Those people who say we cannot live without credit must face the fact that interest has sucked all the wealth out of this people...We cannot pay the credit that people have been forced to rely on... Our greatest assets, our houses have been reduced to nearer their true value as taxes should have done long ago... The fact is, that credit has ruined our markets to show a short term gain... It is for interest profit that our jobs have become slavery, and for interest that our capital has been exported... We have let finance dictate our foreign policy, and it may have wrecked our ability to supply our own needs... And, When the government could have helped the people it instead helped those people bleeding us... They all have to go....WE have to recognize that government and capital were simply a pyramid scheme, and trash them both and start at zero... If government cannot imagine a world without credit, let them imagine a world without government, because for money to have any meaning everyone has to have some; and if no one but the rich have it all what is the point of protecting it??? Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Tue Dec 16, 2008 5:28 AM
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