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The Curious Bush Recovery
lewrockwell.com ^ | February 19, 2004 | Steven LaTulippe

Posted on 02/20/2004 4:02:29 PM PST by Destro

The Curious Bush Recovery

by Steven LaTulippe

While I am admittedly not a professional economist, I am an "evil capitalist’ with some interest in the field. From this perspective, a quick examination of recent economic data is showing odd and scary trends that defy the general consensus that we are in a great "Bush recovery." And the more closely this data is analyzed, the stranger it gets. As with everything else concerning this administration, it leaves one wondering what the hidden agenda is and who is pulling the levers.

Things just don’t happen this weirdly by themselves.

The first oddity is the lack of job creation. Normally, by this time in the recovery cycle, millions of jobs would have been added to the national economy. As businesses move out of the wary psyche of recession and into the daylight of prosperity, they eventually hire more workers to meet increasing demand.

This recovery has seen no such hiring surge. In fact, some recent data shows that the manufacturing sector now has fewer employees than it did back in 2000. This must be the first time in US history that a recovery has fewer manufacturing jobs than the recession that preceded it.

But unlike many of the other oddities, the obvious explanation for this one is that the recovery is creating manufacturing jobs…in China. That giant nation has seen an historic surge in industrial production, much of which is destined for our shores.

While this is no great mystery, things do get a bit more bizarre when one looks at the twin behemoths of our trade and budget deficits in conjunction with the dollar’s trends on international markets.

In a nutshell, the US government is spending money at a heretofore unprecedented pace…and is going into debt at a rate seldom seen before in human civilization. And much of this spending is not defense or terrorism related. Education, housing, and numerous other social programs have exploded under this president at rates far in excess of the "liberal" Clinton administration. This president is about to become one of a very few in history to never have vetoed a single bill during a 4 year term in office.

Accompanying this surge of government indiscretion is our trade deficit. These past months, it has rocketed to stratospheric levels. Americans have been importing far more than they export for many decades, but the current rate could set an all-time record.

What makes this even scarier is that the trade imbalance is occurring in conjunction with two other factors.

First, Americans have essentially ceased saving money. We are financing this import binge on credit (thanks, in part, to the Federal Reserve’s manipulation of interest rates). The average US household now has somewhere in the neighborhood of $7–8000 in credit card balances…and growing. EZ credit and mortgage refinancing schemes (fueled largely by the government-manipulated and quasi-governmental mortgage industry) have encouraged Americans to raid their one last store of wealth: the equity in their houses.

Second, is the fact that this massive trade deficit is occurring amid an historic slide of the US dollar on the world’s currency exchanges. In normal times, a large trade deficit depreciates a nation’s currency relative to other nations’ currencies. The market thus returns things to equilibrium by making imports more expensive and exports cheaper.

But in the Bush-Greenspan universe, nothing seems to operate as it should.

Last month we nearly set a record for a monthly trade deficit, but it occurred after a long 30% slide in the value of the dollar against a variety of world currencies. Our exports should be booming, and imports should be prohibitively expensive…bringing our deficit to a balance.

But the trade deficit somehow got worse.

Numerous policies can be blamed for the continued hemorrhage. The fact that OPEC continues to accept only dollars for oil purchases is a biggie. If America was any other nation, the recent plunge in the value of our currency would result in a gigantic surge in the price of oil. This alone would short-circuit the recovery and slump the economy back into recession…shutting off our ability to import and thus bringing the trade deficit to balance.

But since the dollar is the medium of oil purchases, OPEC gets hosed when the dollar drops, while we continue to import oil at the same price.

One might ask why OPEC goes along with this charade. In fact, some oil-exporting nations have discussed switching to the Euro, to gold, or to a basket of currencies. But this would undoubtedly raise the ire of some very heavily armed people.

The last guy who switched from dollars to Euros for oil purchases was Saddam Hussein. He changed over in 2000, and found himself in a jail cell just a couple of years afterwards (as to whether these two events are connected in any way, I’ll leave it to the reader to decide).

Secondly, we are able to continue on this path to oblivion because the wonderful Chinese government maintains a fixed exchange rate between its currency (the yuan) and the dollar. Thus, if the US dollar drops on international currency exchanges, the yuan does as well…meaning that the baubles we buy from China at WalMart do not change in price when the dollar drops.

And the Chinese (and Japanese) also help Uncle Sam’s voracious appetite for money by circulating the dollars from their trade surplus back to the US in the form of US Bond purchases.

In essence, the Bush recovery consists of the Japanese loaning us money to purchase things from the Chinese that we really can’t afford.

The Asians are financing our government’s budget deficit with dollars obtained from our Asian trade deficit.

This is not a stable economic strategy…it is a bizarre high-wire act.

Since the market doesn’t like to be dallied with, it always finds a way to make itself heard. The flaw in this crazy theory of economics is the willingness of Asians to continue to buy US bonds. The question is quite simple: Why buy a bond with a 1–2% yield when the currency in which the bond is denominated is plunging? The investor loses on the spread big-time (it should also be added that the investor has a further disincentive when he realizes that the USA is so far in debt that we’ll never be able to pay it back…even with devalued dollars)

Sooner or later the geniuses over at the Japanese Central Bank are going to begin to ask themselves this very question. Right now, they probably don’t pull the plug because they 1) are afraid of precision-guided munitions (after all, some of their cities have only recently stopped glowing from the last run-in they had with Uncle Sam), and 2) realize that their own industries rely on giving Americans their money back to buy more junk.

Talk about a dysfunctional relationship!!

But this can only go so far. Sooner or later, the Asians are going to realize that we can’t pay the money back…and that even if we could, the plunging dollar makes it ludicrous to loan us any more.

Then, interest rates on US bonds will have to rise to lure more investors. And then the budget deficit explodes, the economy slows down due to higher rates, and things get really ugly.

There are a lot of little guys in leotards swinging through the air under the big top. Sooner or later, someone isn’t going to be at the right place at the right time.

Now some folks might ask who I am to question the Federal Reserve Chairman. To which I reply with the old adage: "Remember, it was amateurs who built the Ark, and professionals who built the Titanic."

February 19, 2004

Steven LaTulippe [paleoliberty@aol.com] is a physician currently practicing in Ohio. He was an officer in the United States Air Force for 13 years.

Copyright © 2004 LewRockwell.com


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bushrecovery; greenspan; manufacturing
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To: bluejay
I was unaware that Karl Marx was advocating anything to be free. My understanding is that he believed that everything, including trade, should be under government control.

Correct. He was a big fan of managed capitalism, much like we are today.

21 posted on 02/20/2004 5:24:51 PM PST by steve50 ("Every decent man is ashamed of the government he lives under." -H. L. Mencken)
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To: bluejay
You're are just trying to confuse people with facts. Stop it!
/sarcasm
22 posted on 02/20/2004 5:29:28 PM PST by going hot (Happiness is a momma deuce)
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To: BCrago66
Ever notice that there's an inverse relationship between the length of the whack-job articles on sites like anti-war.com and and lewrockwell.com and the intelligence found therein?

I agree that lewrockwell.com has been home to some ravings. But this article is well grounded in libertarian economics rather than generic Bush-bashing.

BTW, if you need a clue as to whether the 2.3 million jobs lost during the Bush Administration will return before the election, just divide the $87 billion we're spending to rebuild Iraq by 2.3 million, and you get $37,826 per job. I suppose you could mumble a Keynesian mantra like, "We owe it to ourselves," but that won't put food on the table for 2.3 million Americans. Or their families.

23 posted on 02/20/2004 5:33:58 PM PST by 537 Votes (I'm logical, rational, and informed -- and I vote!)
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To: bluejay
Good point! I've been thinking that this recent hysteria is alot like when we thought the Japanese were going to buy America in the early 80's (anyone remember that silly Michael Keaton movie about the auto industry?).

Outsourcing has been going on for decades, and outsourcing in the technology sector has been going on heavily for the past 6-7 years. All of the sudden, we are in an election cycle, and we're getting bombarded with doom and gloom predictions about outsourcing at an astounding rate. Perhaps the Dems are trying to talk down the economy?

24 posted on 02/20/2004 5:38:41 PM PST by rocklobster11
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To: BCrago66
>> Ever notice that there's an inverse relationship between the length of the whack-job articles on sites like anti-war.com and and lewrockwell.com and the intelligence found therein?

Very good observation. I agree 100%. (and don't tell anyone; my IQ is much higher than some others would ever comprehend)
25 posted on 02/20/2004 5:42:41 PM PST by PattonReincarnated (Rebuild the Temple)
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To: bluejay
1980 per-capita income: $22,883
2003 per-capita income: $35,650
Inflation adjusted to 2000 USD.
1980 unemployment rate: 7.1%
2003 unemployment rate: 6.0%

True, true. But consider 2 additional factors.
1st, taxes per capita are higher today. Yeah, Bush's tax cut helped - but it does not effect social security, medicare, state, sales, or real estate taxes. Just as an example, in Cook county in the Chicago metro, the real estate taxes typically run $5000 - $9500 per year for a single family home, with a sales tax running around 9% - 11% (variation depending on product or whether you are buying a meal).
2nd, we don't calculate unemployment rate today the same way it was calculated in 1980. Just as one example, in 1980 the military was not counted as "employed" in the statistics (they were excluded from the statistics) -- whereas today it is.

Therefore, even after adjusting for inflation, we are not comparing apples to apples. So the raw percentages are not as valid as they first appear.

26 posted on 02/20/2004 5:50:02 PM PST by dark_lord (The Statue of Liberty now holds a baseball bat and she's yelling 'You want a piece of me?')
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To: Destro
WARNING: Off point post.

I was fascinated by this line: "This president is about to become one of a very few in history to never have vetoed a single bill during a 4 year term in office. ", so I googled "presidential veto". It took me to http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0801767.html, where I discovered that Adams (both of them), Jefferson, W.H. Harrison (< 1 mo in office), Taylor, Fillmore, and Garfield (<6 mo in office) are the other presidents not to have exercised the veto. If he doesn't veto for the remainder of his tenure, however long it may be, he would be the first in 120 years to do so, 150 if you don't count Garfield since he got shot shortly after becoming president.
Of course, how many presidents have had their party control both houses of Congress, as GWB has for half of his first term?
27 posted on 02/20/2004 6:52:37 PM PST by m1911
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To: Destro

In a nutshell, the US government is spending money at a heretofore unprecedented pace…and is going into debt at a rate seldom seen before in human civilization.


----

In a nutshell, nonsense! Both spending as a percentage of GDP and the deficit as a percentage of GDP is smaller than it was during the Reagan mid-1980s.

So much that is shades of grey is painted in stark black and white terms. This kinds of false picture only aids the demagogues fool the ignorant.
28 posted on 02/20/2004 7:26:57 PM PST by WOSG (Bush/Cheney 2004!!)
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To: StatesEnemy
"Do you deny that the "recovery" has been strangely Job-Impaired?"

There is nothing strange about it. Productivity is surging. We dont need new jobs and we are gaining a great benefit with doing more production with smaller workforce.
With unemployment at 5.8%, and total employment near all-time highs, we are not bad off there at all.

"Do you deny that the deficit is exploding?"
The deficit next year is smaller than it was last year.
The term for that is SHRINKING. This problem has been quite overrated IMHO, a lot of the short-term deficit increment is war-related and the rest is simply due to being a bit lax on the spending side. And yet, that kind of thing doesnt hurt the economy short-term. ... so in 2005 when our economy is revving up well, govt can go back and throttle back on spending, and it will balance out pretty well.

"Is the megatrade imbalance an illusion?"

In a sense yes, because capital surplus balances trade deficit and vice versa. Moreover, our intellectual property ie hollywood is not counted in the manufacturing trade but is very real.

All these things - trade deficits, jobs, etc, are concerns but are secondary to overall economy's PRODUCTION and STANDARD OF LIVING. In 2003, the economy grew over 4%. That is a very good number and if we can keep that up, it will help rebalance all these secondary items.

"Tell me, where will America be in 20 years?"

If we follow Bush's lead and cut taxes, reform legal system, keep regulations in check; then if we also educate ourselves and the next generation and keep a productive workforce; if we win the war on terror; if we find a way to stem the tide of illegal immigration; find low-cost new energy technologies (ie next-gen nuclear) to go beyond the age of oil; ... then in 20 years America will be better off than every before.

29 posted on 02/20/2004 7:35:52 PM PST by WOSG (Bush/Cheney 2004!!)
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To: bluejay
It is fascinating that our share of world GDP actually increased in the last 23 years despite all the howling about being taken over by others (in the 1980s it was Japan, in the 1990s, Asian tigers, now its China).
30 posted on 02/20/2004 7:37:24 PM PST by WOSG (Bush/Cheney 2004!!)
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To: Destro
He's not an economist, but he plays one on LewRockwell.com
31 posted on 02/20/2004 7:52:32 PM PST by dr_who_2
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To: Destro
The way it has to work is for the US to create some new grand idea and make the products for it and then create a next new grand idea immediately thereafter. We have to hit homerun after homerun. The law of averages catches up to us, though, and we have a drought. I think we will come up with the next big thing, but I don't know when. I'll say, though, that Japan is doing amazing work on robots and I hope that somehow robots aren't the next big thing.
32 posted on 02/20/2004 7:54:13 PM PST by GraniteStateConservative ("Bush wakes up every morning thinking about how to take the war to the terrorists." -- C. Hitchens)
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To: Destro
A 13 year airforce vet and physician wrote this article

I remember when the Clintons were able to muster 100 physicians with a certain POV and yet it didn't stop Conservatives from seeing the BS.

Gee-whiz, how times have changed.

33 posted on 02/20/2004 7:58:55 PM PST by FreeReign
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To: WOSG
...and total employment near all-time highs, we are not bad off there at all.

Isn't total employment at an all-time high now?

34 posted on 02/20/2004 8:07:09 PM PST by FreeReign
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To: Destro
This "Jobless recovery" is pure and simple a democrat talking point, open the Sunday paper and look at the employment ads, there are tons of job advertisements on the west coast (southern) and a lot in southern Maryland, I checked two weeks ago when I was there just to see if we were an anomaly, this issue is going to turn on them big time in the coming months, one by one every hysterical issue they bring up is being smashed right before our eyes.
35 posted on 02/20/2004 8:09:15 PM PST by mcgiver38
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To: Destro
As with everything else concerning this administration, it leaves one wondering what the hidden agenda is and who is pulling the levers.

From the dems most recent talking points memo.

36 posted on 02/20/2004 8:11:36 PM PST by <1/1,000,000th%
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To: Destro
"As with everything else concerning this administration, it leaves one wondering what the hidden agenda is and who is pulling the levers."

I stopped reading the moment the author donned his tin-foil hat and revealed his true disposition.
37 posted on 02/20/2004 8:15:23 PM PST by Tempest (Sigh.. ....)
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To: StatesEnemy
Pssttt... Job recovery is always the last indicator in a economic recovery.
38 posted on 02/20/2004 8:19:09 PM PST by Tempest (Sigh.. ....)
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To: Destro
Read later.
39 posted on 02/20/2004 9:33:40 PM PST by EagleMamaMT
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To: Destro
The fact that OPEC continues to accept only dollars for oil purchases is a biggie. If America was any other nation, the recent plunge in the value of our currency would result in a gigantic surge in the price of oil. This alone would short-circuit the recovery and slump the economy back into recession…shutting off our ability to import and thus bringing the trade deficit to balance. But since the dollar is the medium of oil purchases, OPEC gets hosed when the dollar drops, while we continue to import oil at the same price. One might ask why OPEC goes along with this charade. In fact, some oil-exporting nations have discussed switching to the Euro, to gold, or to a basket of currencies. But this would undoubtedly raise the ire of some very heavily armed people. The last guy who switched from dollars to Euros for oil purchases was Saddam Hussein. He changed over in 2000, and found himself in a jail cell just a couple of years afterwards (as to whether these two events are connected in any way, I’ll leave it to the reader to decide).

Bump!

40 posted on 02/21/2004 12:30:17 AM PST by AmericanVictory (Should we be more like them, or they like us?)
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