End Of The Bubble Bailouts
August 30, 2006 (A. Gary Shilling - Forbes Insight)
For a quarter-century, Americans’ spending binge has been fueled by a declining savings rate and increased borrowing. The savings rate of American consumers has fallen from 12% in the early 1980s to -1.7% today (see chart below). This means that, on average, consumer spending has risen about a half percentage point more than disposable, or after-tax, income per year for a quarter-century.
The fact that Americans are saving less and less of their after-tax income is only half the profligate consumer story. If someone borrows to buy a car, his savings rate declines because his outlays go up but his disposable income doesn’t. So the downward march in the personal savings rate is closely linked to the upward march in total consumer debt (mortgage, credit card, auto, etc.) in relation to disposable income (see chart below).
Robust consumer spending was fueled first by the soaring stock market of the 1990s and, more recently, by the housing bubble, as house prices departed from their normal close link to the Consumer Price Index (see chart below) and subsequently racked up huge appreciation for homeowners, who continued to save less and spend more.
With soaring stock portfolios now ancient history and leaping house prices about to be, no other sources, such as inheritance or pension fund withdrawals, are likely to fill the gap between robust consumer spending and weak income growth. Consumer retrenchment and the saving spree I’ve been expecting may finally be about to commence. And the effects on consumer behavior, especially on borrowing and discretionary spending, will be broad and deep.
AntiSpin: A. Gary Shilling, not to be confused with Mr. Irrational Exuberance, Robert Shiller, has been on this line about an asset bubbles driven economy almost as long as iTulip. Along with the rest of the contrarian crew, Gary also asks what's next after the housing bubble ends, and goes on in this Forbes piece to eliminate, one by one, every asset held by Americans that might in the future form the locus of policy efforts to sustain asset inflation based consumption.
Much as Bill Gross suggests in The End of History and the Last Bond Bull Market that the Finance-Based Economy will end along with the collapse of the housing bubble, Gary also appears to see the housing bubble as the last bubble in the 30 year Bubble Cycle-based economy. Gary also takes an End of History view of the asset inflation based consumption model of the US economy: savings will increase, consumption will decrease and presumably economic growth will stagnate or decline.
Our hypothesis is that as the housing bubble ends, the US goes into a relatively brief period of deflationary decline followed by a longer period of inflationary stagnation before the economy reforms into a production based economy. Here it's important not to under-estimate the resilience and inventiveness of American people and their country and look ahead to what the Right Economy might look like. To paraphrase Winston Churchill, America always winds up doing the right thing, but only after exhausting all other options. It is the coming period of exhausting bad options that iTulip is here to guide us through. But we also need to think about what the right options are, and readers can expect to see hypotheses about a positive long term future for America developed here as well.
August 30, 2006 (A. Gary Shilling - Forbes Insight)
For a quarter-century, Americans’ spending binge has been fueled by a declining savings rate and increased borrowing. The savings rate of American consumers has fallen from 12% in the early 1980s to -1.7% today (see chart below). This means that, on average, consumer spending has risen about a half percentage point more than disposable, or after-tax, income per year for a quarter-century.
The fact that Americans are saving less and less of their after-tax income is only half the profligate consumer story. If someone borrows to buy a car, his savings rate declines because his outlays go up but his disposable income doesn’t. So the downward march in the personal savings rate is closely linked to the upward march in total consumer debt (mortgage, credit card, auto, etc.) in relation to disposable income (see chart below).
Robust consumer spending was fueled first by the soaring stock market of the 1990s and, more recently, by the housing bubble, as house prices departed from their normal close link to the Consumer Price Index (see chart below) and subsequently racked up huge appreciation for homeowners, who continued to save less and spend more.
With soaring stock portfolios now ancient history and leaping house prices about to be, no other sources, such as inheritance or pension fund withdrawals, are likely to fill the gap between robust consumer spending and weak income growth. Consumer retrenchment and the saving spree I’ve been expecting may finally be about to commence. And the effects on consumer behavior, especially on borrowing and discretionary spending, will be broad and deep.
AntiSpin: A. Gary Shilling, not to be confused with Mr. Irrational Exuberance, Robert Shiller, has been on this line about an asset bubbles driven economy almost as long as iTulip. Along with the rest of the contrarian crew, Gary also asks what's next after the housing bubble ends, and goes on in this Forbes piece to eliminate, one by one, every asset held by Americans that might in the future form the locus of policy efforts to sustain asset inflation based consumption.
Much as Bill Gross suggests in The End of History and the Last Bond Bull Market that the Finance-Based Economy will end along with the collapse of the housing bubble, Gary also appears to see the housing bubble as the last bubble in the 30 year Bubble Cycle-based economy. Gary also takes an End of History view of the asset inflation based consumption model of the US economy: savings will increase, consumption will decrease and presumably economic growth will stagnate or decline.
Our hypothesis is that as the housing bubble ends, the US goes into a relatively brief period of deflationary decline followed by a longer period of inflationary stagnation before the economy reforms into a production based economy. Here it's important not to under-estimate the resilience and inventiveness of American people and their country and look ahead to what the Right Economy might look like. To paraphrase Winston Churchill, America always winds up doing the right thing, but only after exhausting all other options. It is the coming period of exhausting bad options that iTulip is here to guide us through. But we also need to think about what the right options are, and readers can expect to see hypotheses about a positive long term future for America developed here as well.
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