The US
Economy Has Not Recovered And Will Not Recover
By Paul
Craig Roberts
February
18, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- The US economy died when middle class jobs were
offshored and when the financial system was
deregulated.
Jobs
offshoring benefitted Wall Street, corporate
executives, and shareholders, because lower labor
and compliance costs resulted in higher profits.
These profits flowed through to shareholders in the
form of capital gains and to executives in the form
of “performance bonuses.” Wall Street benefitted
from the bull market generated by higher profits.
However,
jobs offshoring also offshored US GDP and consumer
purchasing power. Despite promises of a “New
Economy” and better jobs, the replacement jobs have
been increasingly part-time, lowly-paid jobs in
domestic services, such as retail clerks, waitresses
and bartenders.
The
offshoring of US manufacturing and professional
service jobs to Asia stopped the growth of consumer
demand in the US, decimated the middle class, and
left insufficient employment for college graduates
to be able to service their student loans. The
ladders of upward mobility that had made the United
States an “opportunity society” were taken down in
the interest of higher short-term profits.
Without
growth in consumer incomes to drive the economy, the
Federal Reserve under Alan Greenspan substituted the
growth in consumer debt to take the place of the
missing growth in consumer income. Under the
Greenspan regime, Americans’ stagnant and declining
incomes were augmented with the ability to spend on
credit. One source of this credit was the rise in
housing prices that the Federal Reserves low inerest
rate policy made possible. Consumers could refinance
their now higher-valued home at lower interest rates
and take out the “equity” and spend it.
The debt
expansion, tied heavily to housing mortgages, came
to a halt when the fraud perpetrated by a
deregulated financial system crashed the real estate
and stock markets. The bailout of the guilty imposed
further costs on the very people that the guilty had
victimized.
Under Fed
chairman Bernanke the economy was kept going with
Quantitative Easing, a massive increase in the money
supply in order to bail out the “banks too big to
fail.” Liquidity supplied by the Federal Reserve
found its way into stock and bond prices and made
those invested in these financial instruments
richer. Corporate executives helped to boost the
stock market by using the companies’ profits and by
taking out loans in order to buy back the companies’
stocks, thus further expanding debt.
Those few
benefitting from inflated financial asset prices
produced by Quantitative Easing and buy-backs are a
much smaller percentage of the population than was
affected by the Greenspan consumer credit expansion.
A relatively few rich people are an insufficient
number to drive the economy.
The Federal
Reserve’s zero interest rate policy was designed to
support the balance sheets of the mega-banks and
denied Americans interest income on their savings.
This policy decreased the incomes of retirees and
forced the elderly to reduce their consumption
and/or draw down their savings more rapidly, leaving
no safety net for heirs.
Using the
smoke and mirrors of under-reported inflation and
unemployment, the US government kept alive the
appearance of economic recovery. Foreigners fooled
by the deception continue to support the US dollar
by holding US financial instruments.
The
official inflation measures were “reformed” during
the Clinton era in order to dramatically understate
inflation. The measures do this in two ways. One way
is to discard from the weighted basket of goods that
comprises the inflation index those goods whose
price rises. In their place, inferior lower-priced
goods are substituted.
For
example, if the price of New York strip steak rises,
round steak is substituted in its place. The former
official inflation index measured the cost of a
constant standard of living. The “reformed” index
measures the cost of a falling standard of living.
The other
way the “reformed” measure of inflation understates
the cost of living is to discard price rises as
“quality improvements.” It is true that quality
improvements can result in higher prices. However,
it is still a price rise for the consumer as the
former product is no longer available. Moreover, not
all price rises are quality improvements; yet many
prices rises that are not can be misinterpreted as
“quality improvements.”
These two
“reforms” resulted in no reported inflation and a
halt to cost-of-living adjustments for Social
Security recipients. The fall in Social Security
real incomes also negatively impacted aggregate
consumer demand.
The rigged
understatement of inflation deceived people into
believing that the US economy was in recovery. The
lower the measure of inflation, the higher is real
GDP when nominal GDP is deflated by the inflation
measure. By understating inflation, the US
government has overstated GDP growth.
What I have
written is easily ascertained and proven; yet the
financial press does not question the propaganda
that sustains the psychology that the US economy is
sound. This carefully cultivated psychology keeps
the rest of the world invested in dollars, thus
sustaining the House of Cards.
John
Maynard Keynes understood that the Great Depression
was the product of an insufficiency of consumer
demand to take off the shelves the goods produced by
industry. The post-WW II macroeconomic policy
focused on maintaining the adequacy of aggregate
demand in order to avoid high unemployment. The
supply-side policy of President Reagan successfully
corrected a defect in Keynesian macroeconomic policy
and kept the US economy functioning without the
“stagflation” from worsening “Philips Curve”
trade-offs between inflation and employent. In the
21st century, jobs offshoring has depleted consumer
demand’s ability to maintain US full employment.
The
unemployment measure that the presstitute press
reports is meaningless as it counts no discouraged
workers, and discouraged workers are a huge part of
American unemployment. The reported unemployment
rate is about 5%, which is the U-3 measure that does
not count as unemployed workers who are too
discouraged to continue searching for jobs.
The US
government has a second official unemployment
measure, U-6, that counts workers discouraged for
less than one-year. This official rate of
unemployment is 10%.
When long
term (more than one year) discouraged workers are
included in the measure of unemployment, as once was
done, the US unemployment rate is 23%. (See John
Williams, shadowstats.com)
Fiscal and
monetary stimulus can pull the unemployed back to
work if jobs for them still exist domestically. But
if the jobs have been sent offshore, monetary and
fiscal policy cannot work.
What jobs
offshoring does is to give away US GDP to the
countries to which US corporations move the jobs. In
other words, with the jobs go American careers,
consumer purchasing power and the tax base of state,
local, and federal governments. There are only a few
American winners, and they are the shareholders of
the companies that offshored the jobs and the
executives of the companies who receive
multi-million dollar “performance bonuses” for
raising profits by lowering labor costs. And, of
course, the economists, who get grants, speaking
engagements, and corporate board memberships for
shilling for the offshoring policy that worsens the
distribution of income and wealth. An economy run
for a few only benefits the few, and the few, no
matter how large their incomes, cannot consume
enough to keep the economy growing.
In
the 21st century US economic policy has destroyed
the ability of real aggregate demand in the US to
increase. Economists will deny this, because they
are shills for globalism and jobs offshoring. They
misrepresent jobs offshoring as free trade and, as
in their ideology free trade benefits everyone,
claim that America is benefitting from jobs
offshoring. Yet, they cannot show any evidence
whatsoever of these alleged benefits. (See my book,
The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and
Economic Dissolution of the West.)
http://www.amazon.com/Failure-Laissez-Faire-Capitalism/dp/0986036250/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1455746560&sr=1-1&keywords=paul+craig+roberts-the+failure+of+laissez-faire+capitalism
As an
economist, it is a mystery to me how any economist
can think that a population that does not produce
the larger part of the goods that it consumes can
afford to purchase the goods that it consumes. Where
does the income come from to pay for imports when
imports are swollen by the products of offshored
production?
We were
told that the income would come from better-paid
replacement jobs provided by the “New Economy,” but
neither the payroll jobs reports nor the US Labor
Departments’s projections of future jobs show any
sign of this mythical “New Economy.”
There is no
“New Economy.” The “New Economy” is like the
neoconservatives promise that the Iraq war would be
a six-week “cake walk” paid for by Iraqi oil
revenues, not a $3 trillion dollar expense to
American taxpayers (according to Joseph Stiglitz and
Linda Bilmes) and a war that has lasted the entirely
of the 21st century to date, and is getting more
dangerous.
The
American “New Economy” is the American Third World
economy in which the only jobs created are low
productivity, low paid nontradable domestic service
jobs incapable of producing export earnings with
which to pay for the goods and services produced
offshore for US consumption.
The massive
debt arising from Washington’s endless wars for
neoconservative hegemony now threaten Social
Security and the entirety of the social safety net.
The presstitute media are blaming not the policy
that has devasted Americans, but, instead, the
Americans who have been devasted by the policy.
Earlier
this month I posted readers’ reports on the dismal
job situation in Ohio, Southern Illinois, and Texas.
In the March issue of Chronicles, Wayne
Allensworth describes America’s declining rural
towns and once great industrial cities as
consequences of “globalizing capitalism.” A thin
layer of very rich people rule over those “who have
been left behind”—a shrinking middle class and a
growing underclass. According to a poll last autumn,
53 percent of Americans say that they feel like a
stranger in their own country.
Most
certainly these Americans have no political
representation. As Republicans and Democrats work to
raise the retirement age in order to reduce Social
Security outlays, Princeton University experts
report that the mortality rates for the white
working class are rising. The US government will not
be happy until no one lives long enough to collect
Social Security.
The United
States government has abandoned everyone except the
rich.
In the
opening sentence of this article, I said that the
two murderers of the American economy were jobs
offshoring and financial deregulation. Deregulation
greatly enhanced the ability of the large banks to
financialize the economy. Financialization is the
diversion of income streams into debt service. When
debt service absorbs a large amount of the available
income, the economy experiences debt deflation. The
service of debt leaves too little income for
purchases of goods and services and prices fall.
Michael
Hudson, who I recently wrote about, is the expert on
finanialization. His book, Killing the Host,
which I recommended to you, tells the complete
story. Briefly, financialization is the process by
which creditors capitalize an economy’s economic
surplus into interest payments to themselves.
Perhaps an example would be a corporation that goes
into debt in order to buy back its shares. The
corporation achieves a temporary boost in its share
prices at the cost of years of interest payments
that drain the corporation of profits and deflate
its share price.
Michael
Hudson stresses the conversion of the rental value
of real estate into mortgage payments. He emphasizes
that classical economists wanted to base taxation
not on production, but on economic rent. Economic
rent is value due to location or to a monopoly
position. For example, beachfront property has a
higher price because of location. The difference in
value between beachfront and nonbeachfront property
is economic rent, not a produced value. An
unregulated monopoly can charge a price for a
service that is higher than the price that would
bring that service unto the market.
The
proposal to tax economic rent does not mean taxing
you on the rent that you pay your landlord or taxing
your landlord on the rent that you pay him such that
he ceases to provide the housing. By economic rent
Hudson means, for example, the rise in land values
due to public infrastructure projects such as roads
and subway systems. The rise in the value of land
opened by a new road and housing and in commercial
space along a new subway line is not due to any
action of the property owners. This rise in value
could be taxed in order to pay for the project
instead of taxing the income of the population in
general. Instead, the rise in land values raises
appraisals and the amount that creditors are willing
to lend on the property. New purchasers and existing
owners can borrow more on the property, and the
larger mortgages divert the increased land valuation
into interest payments to creditors. Lenders end up
as the major beneficiaries of public projects that
raise real estate prices.
Similarly,
unless the economy is financialized to such an
extent that mortgage debt can no longer be serviced,
when central banks lower interest rates property
values rise, and this rise can be capitalized into a
larger mortgage.
Another
example would be property tax reductions and
legislation such as California’s Proposition 13 that
freeze in whole or part the property tax base. The
rise in real estate values that escape taxation are
capitalized into larger mortgages. New buyers do not
benefit. The beneficiaries are the lenders who
capture the rise in real estate prices in interest
payments.
Taxing
economic rent would prevent the financial system
from capitalizing the rent into debt instruments
that pay interest to the financial sector.
Considering the amount of rents available to be
taxed, taxing rents would free production from
income and sales taxation, thus lowering consumer
prices and freeing labor and productive capital from
taxation.
With so
much of land rent already capitalized into debt
instruments shifting the tax burden to economic rent
would be challenging. Nevertheless, Hudson’s
analysis shows that financialization, not wage
suppression, is the main instrument of exploitation
and takes place via the financial system’s
conversion of income streams into interest payments
on debt.
I remember
when mortgage service was restricted to one-quarter
of household income. Today mortgage service can eat
up half of household income. This extraordinary
growth crowds out the production of goods and
services as less of household income is available
for other purchases.
Michael
Hudson and I bring a total indictment of the
neoliberal economics profession, “junk economists”
as Hudson calls them.
Dr. Paul
Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the
Treasury for Economic Policy and associate editor of
the Wall Street Journal. He was columnist for
Business Week, Scripps Howard News Service, and
Creators Syndicate. He has had many university
appointments. His internet columns have attracted a
worldwide following. Roberts' latest books are
The Failure
of Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution
of the West,
How America
Was Lost,
and
The
Neoconservative Threat to World Order.
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