-Caveat Lector-

Subj:    [FTC] USA: Running on Empty and Heading for Recession
Date:   12/9/98 8:30:45 AM Central Standard Time
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Linda Muller)
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Dear Friends,

"Unable to free themselves of Keynesian thinking, the failure of the Dow
drop to check consumption was interpreted as meaning that consumers
are convinced that the good times will keep on rolling and so maintained
their optimism and spending. Consumers never even noticed the Dow.
So long as their incomes appear secure they will just keep on
spending....."

>From "The New Austrailian" web site:
http://www.newaus.com.au/econ99us.html

FTC-Linda

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From:                   "Nelson,Damian A." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

America: Running on Empty and Heading for Recession

By Gerard Jackson No. 99,   7-13 Dec. 1998

First the bad news: America will go into recession. Now for the good
news: I expect this to happen under Clinton. (I don't hold him
responsible, I just consider it ironic justice.) The editorial in issue No. 92
(19-25 October 1998) predicted, using Austrian analysis, that the US
economy would slide into recession and that the symptoms were
already emerging. Despite claims to the contrary Greenspan's rate cuts
can do nothing to reverse the situation.

Let us first take a look at received economic wisdom (otherwise known
as Keynesian fallacies). According to this Greenspan's interest rate
cuts will stimulate the economy by increasing the level of spending
through credit expansion. That the US has been on a spending binge
which has helped fuel the stock market is certainly clear. What is not
clear to these economists is that this policy laid the foundations for the
coming recession. That most economists are unable to detect the true
link between the stock market and consumer spending was made
apparent when they expected the 20 per cent drop in the Dow between
July and December to curb consumer spending. The reason it did not is
because both are fuelled by the same source � the Fed. Consumer
spending is not, never has been and never will be, a function of stock
market prices.

Unable to free themselves of Keynesian thinking, the failure of the Dow
drop to check consumption was interpreted as meaning that consumers
are convinced that the good times will keep on rolling and so maintained
their optimism and spending. Consumers never even noticed the Dow.
So long as their incomes appear secure they will just keep on spending.
In fact, American consumers are spending so much the savings ratio
has turned negative, something that has not happened since the depths
of the Great Depression: for this you can thank Lord Keynes and his
disciples. Without savings the American economy � or any other
economy, for that matter � cannot accumulate capital. And it is capital
that raises living standards, not Federal manipulation of interest rates. In
other words, the American economy is running on empty. Concentrating
on consumption spending is a fatal mistake. Consumption does not
drive economies and is only a small part of total economic activity.* This
gross error has led some economic observers to speculate that the
booming service sector will be the "powerhouse" that will offset
slowdowns in any other part of the economy. Austrian analysis
comletely explodes this myth and we shall now see why.

The Austrians show that by forcing down the rate of interest the Federal
Reserve misleads businesses, especially in the higher stages of
production, into thinking that the fund of real capital has expanded. They
therefore embark on projects for which the capital goods necessary for
their completion do not exist. This makes itself felt through various
shortages and bottlenecks. As these start to appear many businesses
begin suffer a cost-price squeeze as prices are no longer sufficient to
maintain expansion or even cover factor costs. Nevertheless, the so-
called service sector, the one closest to consumption, undergoes a
boom with rising demand and employment. There is no paradox here.

Factors must be paid. Companies that responded to the low interest
rates used the addtional funds to bid up the prices of capital goods and
specific types of labor, which obviously raised their costs of production.
This additional expenditure translated into factor incomes which were
then spent on consumption goods. This in turn raised demand at the
consumption end of the production structure. The increased demand
made itself felt throughout the structure by bidding factors away from
the higher stages. To aggravate the situation savings actually became
negative, meaning that the social rate of time preference was leaving
nothing for investment. The pool of real funds had run dry. These higher-
stage investments will now turn out to be malinvestments, unsound
investments that will have to be liquidated. But before these investments
are abandoned they will start bleeding financially. Unable to cover their
costs of production they will have to cut outlays, sell their inventories for
what they can get and institute lay-off.

This is exactly what is happening: manufacturing and mining are
beginning to suffer a profit squeeze. Corporate profits are falling, lay-off
are on the rise, inventories are being run down and outlays are being
cut. Some financial commentators are claiming that the slowdown is
already as bad as the 1990-91 recession. And all of this without even a
credit squeeze. (The Austrians have always stressed that even without
a credit squeeze the crisis will still emerge.) Astute observers realise
that the crisis has nothing to do with Asia. However, unable to explain
it, especially in Keynesian terms, they are reduced to making
statements about the inevitable end of the investment cycle, trade
cycles, etc. In other words, they do not know. Even so, many still think
cutting interest rates, i.e., expanding the money supply, is the cure. It
ain't. It's the disease.

America is a dynamic and inventive country with a vibrant
entrepreneurial culture. What it needs is lower taxes, less regulation
and litigation, fewer meddling politicians and a healthy savings culture.
What it does not need � and this goes for any other country � is
Keynesianism.

*The problem is that gross domestic product figures leave out an
enormous amount of economic activity on the fallacious grounds that it
would be double counting to include it. In fact, the GDP is a value-added
concept and is  not really gross at all.
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