Where is The Bull ?
Posted by slowsmile April 30, 2009
Not long ago, it was suggested that the limping, insolvent but dollar-insatiable American Bank behemoths should be nationalized. But both American citizens and the US government have recoiled from this idea — What!! — And become a Socialist State, lose all our freedoms, expand government unnecessarily, eventually becoming a welfare state etc….!!?
When we take a steadier, closer look at the current mess of US financial problems and beyond this limiting socialist paranoia, the question inevitably comes up - What are the current policies actually achieving - if anything - from the present extension of the blurry shovel-as-much-money-into-Wall-Street-Banks-and-let’’s-see-what-happens strategy from the Bush/Bernanke/Paulson legacy? Has it worked? Or is it working?
Apparently not. Corruption, distrust and fraud are all alive and well in Wall Street whose natural greed accepts all such rescue donations without conscience, never failing to give a big fat zero in return. AIG, that derivative leviathan with a too-big-to-fall rep, is a prime and dirty example. The US govt. gave billions of US taxpayer’s money in support of this financial institution, those billions quickly disappearing out the backdoor of AIG and onto the balance sheets of the likes of Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase who both - quite remarkably and so unexpectedly - reported a surprising rise in profits last month against all expectations. Ah yes, I keep forgetting, this is all normal and acceptable Wall Street behaviour. Yes, yes, I forgot - it’s all about the Free Market principle isn’t it? Well I guess we must all be in a Bull market then….
OK, let’s get back to considering nationalizing the insolvent US banks. Let’s look at this as a possible way of saving the big US banks. The main arguments against this strategy, as I’ve already said, are that it is apparently a dangerously socialist policy, and very un-American. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again - economics is a fairly pure science, politics is a dirty science at best. Good economics has little or nothing to do with politics. To disallow a policy - bank nationalization - that could well save both the financial infrastructure as well as the major financial institutions within the US must be considered against all the questionable socialist paranoia that is so aptly promoted by the US media.
The engendered paranoia of turning the US into a socialist state seems to blind people to the great advantages of temporary nationilization. Maybe we should look at history.
In the ’90s there was a major bank crisis in Europe, which badly affected the Swedish, Norweigian and Netherland banking systems - forcing many of their major banks towards the edge of bankruptcy. The solution — you’ve guessed it — was to nationalize these all important banks. But it didn’t stop there, because after the banks returned to proper economic balance and the crisis passed, all these banks were then re-privatized when they bought-back — by contractual agreement — all holding shares from their various governments. Result: Full banking recovery and no taxpayer money lost or ill-spent by these governments. Therefore unquestionably in this instance, this economic strategy cannot be defined as a Socialist policy at all - because the banks were re-privatized soon after recovery. So, to call the outcome of this temporary nationaization a Socialist policy is a little unfair, somewhat amusing, and bears no thought or consideration for the fact that this very strategy is what economically saved the banks in these European countries in the ’90s. Indeed, other European governments are implementing these same temporary bank nationalization policies in the current crisis.
And now let’s take a peek at the current Obama financial policies which leads me quickly to another question. Can anyone out there, an economic guru or academic, name me one successful applicable instance in economic history or indeed any convincing evidence at all where endlessly shoveling of taxpayer’s money into failing, insolvent banks, changing the “fair value” rules to “cheat” bank insolvency, constant tax cuts, reshuffling wealth distribution, trickle-down economics(not a drop has reached US citizens in nearly 2 years), a massive increase in infrastructure and Medicare projects - has actually worked to successfully recover any economy? Even Roosevelt’s expansive New Deal policies in 1933 - very similar to the current US mega-spend policies now - were never considered as a successful economic tactic against the deflation of the 1930’s. Most economists now freely admit that it was WW ll — about 14 years later — that pulled the US out of its Depression. The only recent historic and economic parallel that comes close to the current US financial crisis is the continuing financial crisis in Japan which began over 18 years ago - and their economy is still stagflating. The Japanese government similarly threw billions at the wall, and kept interest rates low - just like the Fed are doing now. Deja vu ?
Or is the US government aiming its strategy solely at another misty economic mark? Perhaps their clumsy Keynesian economics has re-sighted its intellectual popguns in an attempt to appeal to and sucker that most elusive of all market entities - Market Confidence - back into the bull-ring. Trouble is that the US government’s policies are all biased towards investors - that’s Wall Street - and very few of the US government’s current policies are likely to enveigle or encourage any its citizen into spending their hard earned salaries. At the moment and understandably, these citizen salaries are being used to desperately pay off debts and mortgages, and any savings are being hoarded in a similar way as all the Wall Street investment banks. So we finally have the situation where the big financial institutions aren’t lending to each other because they don’t know to what extent their own brother banks own toxic debt. Similarly, the ordinary US citizen has also changed their behaviour, now saving and hoarding, in full knowledge that wages and salaries will probably remain static for a long time(if they still even have a job) amidst the constant erosion of dollar value from inflation due to the Fed’s blessed and incessant Quantitative Easing policies.
So the banks still aren’t lending, and the ordinary, bewildered US citizen is similarly desperately hoarding what’s left of their pennies - but the CPI inflation chart shows no positive change, continuing to nose-dive ever closer to the bane of negative inflation(deflation). And the velocity of money is at a precarious standstill - all have taken flight into US Treasuries - nobody is spending or lending, so disinflation is likely to continue unabated while the production of vast quantities of US fiat notes steadily hits the streets at a completely uninspiring, breakneck pace. And still the US government hurls truckloads of these paper dollars into the hungry coffers of the tight Wall Street brotherhood - just government debt feeding Wall St debt when you think about it - very little ever meeting the ordinary US citizen’s needs. That’s trillions and billions of dollars that have been thrown at the Wall Street banks, while the US government gives nothing but notional promises, meagre pennies and horrific generational debt back to its own peoples.
What price The Bull now ?
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