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Paul Craig Roberts
Paul Craig Roberts
26 Mar 2010
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The No-Think Nation

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"The prospects of a government rescue for the foundering American automakers dwindled Thursday as Democratic congressional leaders conceded that they would face potentially insurmountable Republican opposition," reported The New York Times last Friday.

Wow! The entire country is steamed up over the Republicans bailing out a bunch of financial crooks who have paid themselves fortunes in bonuses for destroying America's pensions. Why do Democrats want to protect Republicans from further ignominy by not giving them the opportunity to vote down a bailout for workers? Quick, someone enroll the Democratic Party in Politics 101.

GM's divisions in Canada and Germany are asking those governments for help. It will be something if Canada and Germany come through for the American automaker and the American government doesn't.

Conservative talking heads are saying GM is a "failed business model" unworthy of a $25 billion bailout. These are the same talking heads who favored pouring $700 billion into a failed financial model.

The head of the FDIC is trying to get $25 billion — a measly 3.5 percent of the $700 billion for the banksters — with which to refinance the mortgages of 2 million of the banksters' victims, and Secretary of the Treasury Paulson says no. Why aren't the Democrats all over this, too?

Apparently, the Democrats still think they are the minority party or else their aim is to supplant the Republicans as the party of the rich.

Any bailout has its downsides. But if America loses its auto industry, it will lose the suppliers as well and will cease to have a manufacturing sector. For years no-think economists have been writing off America's manufacturing jobs, while deluding themselves and the public with propaganda about a New Economy based on finance.

A country that doesn't make anything doesn't need a financial sector, as there is nothing to finance.

The financial crisis has had one good effect. It has cured Democratic economists like Robert Reich and Paul Krugman of their fear of budget deficits. During the Ronald Reagan years, these two economists saw doom in the "Reagan deficits" despite the fact that Organization for Economic Development and Cooperation data showed that the United States at that time had one of the lowest ratios of general government debt to gross domestic product in the industrialized world.

Today, Reich and Krugman are unfazed by their recommendations of budget deficits that are many multiples of Reagan's. Moreover, neither economist has given the slightest thought as to how the massive budget deficit that they recommend can be financed.

Both recommend large public spending programs. Krugman puts a price tag of $600 billion on his program. If it takes $700 billion to save the banks and only $600 billion to save the economy, it sounds like a good deal.

But this $600 billion is on top of the $700 billion for the banks, the $200 billion for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the $85 billion for AIG. These figures add to $1.58 trillion dollars, a sum that must be added to the budget deficit due to war and recession (or worse).

What we are talking about here is a minimum budget deficit of $2 trillion. The United States has never had to finance a deficit of this magnitude. Where is the money coming from?

The U.S. Treasury doesn't have any money, and neither do Americans, who have lost up to half of their savings and retirement funds, and are up to their eyeballs in mortgage and consumer debt. And unemployment is rising.

There are only two sources of financing: foreign creditors and the printing press.

I doubt that foreigners have $2 trillion to lend to the United States. Thanks to the toxic U.S. financial instruments, they have their own bailouts to finance and economies to stimulate. Moreover, I doubt that foreigners think the United States can service a public debt that suddenly jumps by $2 trillion. At 5 percent interest, the additional debt would add $100 billion to the annual budget deficit. In order to pay interest to creditors, the United States would have to borrow more money from them.

Economists and policy-makers are not thinking. This enormous financing need comes not to a well-managed economy that can take the additional debt in its stride. Instead, it comes to an economy so badly managed that there are no reserves.

Massive U.S. trade deficits have been financed by giving up U.S. assets to foreigners, who now own the income flows, as well. Budget deficits from six years of pointless wars and from unsustainable levels of military spending have helped to flood the world with dollars and drive down the dollar's exchange value. Consumers themselves are drowning in debt and can provide no lift to the economy. Millions of the best jobs have been moved offshore, and research, design and innovation have followed them. Considering America's dependency on imports, part of any stimulus package that reaches the consumer will bleed off to foreign countries.

Generally, when countries acquire more debt than they can service, they inflate away the debt. If foreign creditors do not save the Obama administration, the Treasury will print bonds and give them to the Federal Reserve, which will issue money.

The inflation will be severe, particularly as Americans will not be able to pay for the imports of manufactured goods from abroad on which they have become dependent. The exchange value of the dollar will decline with the domestic inflation. Once inflation is off and running, the printing-press dollars will only have goods made in America to chase after. The real crisis has not yet begun.

Paulson should rethink the automakers' and FDIC's proposals. A bank produces nothing but paper. Automakers produce real things that can be sold. Occupied homes are worth more then empty ones.

Paulson's inability to see this is the logical outcome of Wall Street thinking that highly values deals made over pieces of paper at the expense of the real economy.

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

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


Comments

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Washington's willingness to handout, not bailout $700 billion to incompetent criminal financial wizards and their rejection of $25 billion for a poorly run but awakening auto industry which employs blue collar union Americans says all you need to know about who calls the shots and who is valued and who is not in America, land of United We Stand, or Country First for you McCainites. Our political"leaders" are either brain dead or totally contemptuous of an American public still fixated on the trivial and inconsequential; if these inustries fail, who will pay for their retired workers benefits, who will care for them, and how will we make up the taxes they would have paid if their workers no longer have a job? It must be noted that politicians from the south, land of patriots, seem all too willing to let American companies fail in order to pave the way for the foreign auto companies with plants in their states to totally take over this country, coincidentally helping to further destroy unions in this country. Meanwhile, with all this economic disater mounting by the day, any thought of reducing our bloated military budget and endless wars is totally verbotten by the politcal establishment. The fall of the USSR has allowed our country to think we had no limits to our power, that "deficits are only numbers" to idiots like Dick Cheney, that as the world's only super power, we could make our own reality and that consequences were for lesser nations. Pride cometh before the fall. Where are you now, John Mark Coney and others who have consistently derided PCR's prescient commentaries?
Please world, stop loaning us money so we will be forced to rein in our unrestrained miltary budget and begin taxing the ultra rich who have done so much to harm this country and who have benefitted far beyond any rational measure these last several decades.
Comment: #1
Posted by: michael nola
Wed Nov 19, 2008 4:50 PM
Don't forget to mention the two "stimulus" packages signed into law by the Bush admin. Could you imagine the Republican's response to those and the $700B TARP, etc. being proposed by a Democrat? George Bush has given cover to so called conservatives to mortgage our children's future with unmanageable debt burdens. Not to mention no progress on eliminating the AMT, leaving the corporate, estate and capital gains burdens at uncompetitive and confiscatory levels, and negotioating a weak (temporary) position on individual marginal tax rates and you have a disaster of uncalcuable dimensions. I believe these government ineptitudes to be the first salvos in the second amercian revolution, assuming it's worth saving at this point. Personally, I believe we should sell CA or NY to the highest bidder to satisfy our $10T debt and split the country up into more manageable and less centrally regulated entities. Look for our coming article entitled "Impeach Congress" appearing in the WSJ. We are the victims of the greatest swindle in the history of mankind by 535 incompetent and corrupt members of a feifdom that have hijacked our country for their own personal gain. Please contact me directly with any personal thoughts at bryan72562@aol.com. I run an organization called the Capital Formation Group, which is a supply-side oriented think tank located in Southern CA. Viva la Revolucion!
Comment: #2
Posted by: bryan buck
Wed Nov 19, 2008 9:51 PM
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