S. Lerner
Sun, 31 Oct 1999 10:01:19 -0800
>X-Sender: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Mime-Version: 1.0 >X-Priority: 1 (Highest) >Date: Sat, 30 Oct 1999 00:57:00 -0500 >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >From: Tim Rourke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Mailing-List: list [EMAIL PROTECTED]; contact [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Delivered-To: mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Precedence: bulk >List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >Reply-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: [mincome] Economic Commentary > >From: Tim Rourke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Danny Cox) > >>From the Longwaves list: > > >Special to The Sunday Examiner by Rick Ackerman >The dismal science will never be the same if Dr. Kurt Richebacher's >dire predictions for the global economy should come to pass. >The former chief economist and managing partner at Germany's Dresdner >Bank says a deflationary collapse lies ahead that will ravage the >world's bourses and usher in a dark period of austerity and financial >discipline. >Probably not one economist in fifty shares his views, at least not >publicly. Richebacher, now living in France, says many of his American >colleagues have been seduced into ignorance and complicity by Wall >Street's billions as well as by their love affair with mathematical >models that shun fundamental laws of economics. >Where they see a New Era of productivity growth and industrial >efficiency, he sees duplicitous bookkeeping and manufacturing's steep >decline. They talk of a booming U.S. economy, he sees a profitless >mirage. They worship capitalism's bold risk-takers, he scorns them for >recklessly piling leverage to the sky. >Someone's going to be wrong, but judge for yourself who. >Like the theories of Copernicus 500 years before him, Dr. Richebacher's >logic strikes one as no less sound and compelling than the Polish >scientist's once-heretical notion that the earth revolves around the >sun. >Richebacher asserts, for one, that the U.S. investment boom in >computers borders on statistical hoax. It began in 1995 with the >government's implementation of a "hedonic" price index designed to >capture both the falling prices and the rapid rise of computational >power of each new computer. >This is akin to measuring GM's auto sales by tallying the horsepower of >all the engines in its cars, says Richebacher. >Applied to the computer business, it has exaggerated investment levels >exponentially. For example, during the 12-month period ended March 31 >the business sector increased its net investment in computers from >$91.8 billion to $97.2 billion, accounting for a paltry 1.3% of nominal >GDP growth. >But when government statisticians multiply that $5.4 billion increase >by their hedonic supercharger, the figure swells to $146 billion. >This has worked wonders on America's bottom line, boosting the computer >sector's nominal 1.3% contribution toward GDP growth for the period to >49%, and the 4% contribution for the years 1996-1998 to 38%. For the >first half of 1999, the effect has been even more pronounced, giving >the computer industry a whopping 93% share of GDP growth. >Remove the computer industry from the ledger, however, and the vastly >larger rest of the economy had actual growth of just 2.5% during the >three-year period versus a reported 4%. Meanwhile, last year's >expansion would have been a middling 2%, and the uptick in productivity >that has recently cheered economists would fade to insignificance. >The obvious question is, how could the computer industry, with barely >more than 1% of the total workforce and plunging product prices, be >responsible for what most economists read as a dramatic improvement in >America's standard of living? >The answer is that it could not. And has not. Hedonic accounting makes >the computer sector look like an economic hero, but any statistically >significant improvement in our standard of living would necessarily >have to come from the spreading use of computers across the entire >economy. >Computers are indeed everywhere, but evidence that they have >substantially boosted U.S. productivity remains elusive to say the >least, says Richebacher. >In this assertion he has corroborating testimony from no less an >authority than Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan. >In a 1997 speech in Frankfurt, Germany, Greenspan acknowledged that a >straightforward interpretation of certain service-economy data suggests >that productivity -- output per man hour -- has actually been falling >for more than two decades. >Greenspan called this implausible, offering the explanation that prices >may have been mismeasured. But whatever the reason for the anomaly, the >Fed chairman is obviously at pains to convince us that he and his staff >of PhDs truly understand how to measure productivity accurately. >If productivity growth in recent years has been largely illusory, the >spectacular expansion of credit during that same time has been all too >real, warns Richebacher (pronounced REESH-a-baisher). >It didn't happen by accident. The economist says the Fed started the >real orgy last fall with a series of rate cuts intended to shore up >some hedge funds that had gotten in way over their heads by amassing >huge positions in leveraged credit instruments. >The Fed's massive gift to debtors quickly found its way into the >mortgage markets, where homeowners ran up new borrowings in 1998 to >more than $1.5 trillion, nearly two-thirds of it in refinancings. >The hot money spread like lava into the financial system. Fannie Mae >and Freddie Mac, quasi-governmental agencies which buy up mortgage >loans, expanded their balance sheets four times as quickly as they had >the previous year, with $220 billion of growth versus $61 billion in >1997. >This put an estimated $15,000 into the pocket of each re-fi customer, >kicking off a spending binge that pumped housing and stock prices to >record heights. >It also created a financial bubble whose collapse Richebacher says we >will eventually have to reckon with. >He says the four classic elements of a bubble are all present and most >obvious: 1) money and credit have been expanding vastly in excess of >both savings and GDP growth; 2) inflationary pressures are being >channeled toward, and concentrated in, asset prices; 3) low inflation >has kept monetary policy too loose, and 4) soaring asset prices have >overstimulated domestic borrowing and spending. >The Richebacher Letter circulates widely among top-level financial >decision-makers, probably because it is so good at poking holes in the >prevailing wisdom. What has he been saying lately? Just this: >* Profit performance in the U.S. economy has been appalling during the >stock market's steep rise of the last several years, but accounting >gimmicks designed to please Wall Street have masked the weakness. >Compared to a year ago, profits per share on the S&P 500 have >declined from $39.72 to 37.71, and on the S&P Industrial Index from >$42.13 to $38.37. Over that time, as all investors know, the S&P 500 >Index of stocks has risen spectacularly. >* The trade deficit, which sent $233.4 billion abroad last year, is the >biggest profit-killer in the economy. It has been offset, albeit >precariously, by a household sector that has consumed manically with >borrowed dollars and dissavings. >* The bulls believe the Fed will keep the credit machine running full >speed if the economy starts to falter. But "full speed" is not enough, >since sustaining growth in the economy and the stock market will >require ever-larger credit injections. With the personal savings rate >already in negative territory, it is by now manifestly impossible to >increase dissavings to the extent necessary to produce continued >economic growth. >* The "profit miracle" of the 1990s is nonsense. What kicked the stock >market into high gear earlier in the decade was mainly the one-time >effect of lower borrowing costs induced by a recklessly generous Fed. >Profits have weakened since in absolute terms and egregiously relative >to soaring share prices. >* The widespread use of stock options to compensate employees has >caused corporate earnings to be grossly overstated, since the options >reduce the amount of wages charged against profits. If properly >accounted for, stock options would have lowered aggregate published >profits by 56% in 1997 and 50% in 1998, according to figures >Richebacher cites from Smithers & Co., a London-based research >institute. >* Derivatives can insure individual market participants against risk, >but not system as a whole. Ultimately they have spurred higher >risk-taking through leverage, exposing the global financial system to >the prospect of devastating failure. >Richebacher, who counts former Fed chairman Paul Volcker among his >close friends, says U.S. economists of the 1960s would more readily >have recognized these problems and acted stridently to counteract them. >Public discussion was still influenced back then by staid economists >who represented the banks and who knew their theory. The current crop, >however, is "really a part of Wall Street's sales force to sell >shares." >In contrast with European economists, their theoretical thinking is >"not too deep," and in recent years has been completely eclipsed by >mathematical models that fail miserably in reckoning with the crucial >variable of human behavior. >The current level of thinking is "unbelievable," he says. "How can you >simply overlook a negative savings rate and mountainous trade deficit" >in saying the economy is healthy and robust? >"There is almost no one left in America to pose critical questions >about economic fundamentals," he laments. "The only miracle about the >American economy is the consumer's amazing propensity to borrow" -- a >fact which Richebacher says has delayed a day of reckoning. >Even if there were someone raising such questions, one might ask, would >anyone be listening? >*** >Inquiries concerning The Richebacher Letter should be directed to the >following e-mail address: Richebacher@agora-inc, or to Agora >Publishing, 1217 Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21201. Tel: 800 433-1528. > >To subscribe to bearslist, send a blank >message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >--------------------------- ONElist Sponsor ---------------------------- > >** Get 300 FREE Personalized Address Labels from iPrint.com! *** ><a href=" http://clickme.onelist.com/ad/iprint15 ">FREE OFFER</a> >Offer for new iPrint.com customers only. Shipping as low as $1.45. > >------------------------------------------------------------------------ >