INTERNATIONAL. I first came to national attention back in 2008 and
2009 when the housing and credit markets imploded. I became known as the
guy that other market “experts” laughed at when I warned of trouble
brewing in the seemingly indestructible American economy.
After the wheels ground to a halt in mid-2008, people noticed that my
book Crash Proof, originally released in early 2007, read like a
detailed preview of many of the events that eventually unfolded.
Three
years later I am now catching heat from many who assume that my
predictions actually fell short. They argue that I was able to
anticipate the crash but that I severely underestimated the resiliency
of the American economy. They admit that we took an “unexpected” blow to
the chin, and that it left a lingering bruise, but they argue that we
never hit the canvas like I predicted we would.
However, they
mistakenly assumed that the crash I was warning about was solely a
housing led credit bubble. While that was part of it, I never saw it
ending there. The crash that most concerned me was the one that would
result from the government’s response to the initial crisis. My concern
was not that our economy would succumb to the disease that I had
diagnosed, but instead would be taken down by the “cure” that the
government unleashed to combat it.
When the government’s
delaying tactic, which involves continuous borrowing and money printing
is no longer tenable, the dollar could collapse, interest rates and
consumer prices could soar and the U.S. economy could implode. That’s
the real crash that I was warning about, and the one we all need to be
worried about now.
This is the subject of my new book “The Real
Crash: America’s Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and Your
Country.” For now it is just a prophecy but as with my first book, it
soon may be regarded as history. Unfortunately, the policies of both the
Bush and Obama administrations, and the Ben Bernanke led Federal
Reserve, have vastly raised the chances that my catastrophic view will
come to pass.
However, it’s not all gloom and doom — I devote a large majority of
the book to solutions. The real crash may be inevitable, but what we do
in response is not. We can follow on the path that I recommend back to
prosperity, or we can continue on our current course which I believe
will lead to economic ruin.
When looking back from a point in
the future, I believe that the years immediately after the credit
collapse of 2008 will stand out as a period of dangerous economic
negligence. We have bought ourselves some time by sweeping enormous
problems under the rug. Through a combination of political cowardice,
economic ignorance, and false confidence, we are digging ourselves into a
hole so deep that it may take generations to crawl out.
Most
people assume that half way through 2012 we have made some important
positive strides since flirting with the brink of economic catastrophe
in the dark days of 2008. Although no one is wildly celebrating the
below trend 2 to 3 percent GDP growth, we are continuously reminded that
we have turned the corner and that our situation is better than many
other regions around the world. But what has really changed?
Immediately
prior to the crash, the United States economy was experiencing
unprecedented consumer debt levels, persistently high trade deficits,
historically large government budget deficits, high-energy prices, and a
moribund manufacturing sector. Four years later, all of these problems
have gotten worse.
And unlike four years ago, we are now saddled with the highest
unemployment rate in generations and levels of public debt that would
have been unimaginable then. Yes we are no longer technically in
recession. But I believe that is just an illusion created by perhaps the
cheapest, and most obvious, trick ever devised.
I had argued
that our economic growth prior to the crisis was largely a function of
the real estate bubble. When that bubble popped, I knew that the economy
would have to shrink. And that’s just what happened. From 2008 to 2009
our national GDP (of around $14 trillion) contracted by $212 billion.
To prevent any further dips, the government aggressively spent,
borrowing heavily to do so. To the relief of just about everyone, these
moves did stop the nominal contraction. From 2010 to 2011 the U.S. GDP
expanded by $502 billion, and from 2011 to 2012 it added an additional
$508 billion. All told, from the end of 2008 the U.S. economy added a
cumulative $798 billion in GDP. But those gains came at a very high
price.
The combined federal deficits for the same time frame
come in at a staggering $4.2 trillion! In 2009 alone the feds chalked up
a chart breaking $1.4 trillion in debt (the deficit was a mere $161
billion in 2007). In other words, we borrowed five times more than we
grew.
This “strategy” for growth is no different from an individual who
loses half his income, but continues to spend by running up credit card
debt. Could this be described as economic growth? But that’s just how we
are describing our current economy, and for the large part, expert
economists, politicians, investors, and academics all agree.
I
felt certain before writing Crash Proof that the government would never
let the economy contract far enough to restore balance and
sustainability. I knew the spending and deficits would head off the
charts. I thought those realities would push down the dollar and cause
foreign creditors to shun American government debt. However, I did not
factor in the reprieve we have gotten from the false perception that
Europe is in even worse shape than we.
As the curtain eventually
falls on the drama unfolding in Europe, the world will refocus its
attention on the more spectacular events in the U.S. The sovereign debt
crisis that is now playing out in Europe will cross the Atlantic, and
when it opens here The Real Crash may indeed finally begin. The average
American will have a front row seat but will hardly enjoy the show.
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