Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold



    Guest post by Brett Buchanan from It'sNotRealMoney

    When I recently read the Wegelin & Co. Investment Commentary 265 dated August 24, 2009, it became clear to me that what would appear to be a nation where public and private borrowing has simply spiraled out of control is in fact much worse than it appears. In reading the report I skimmed down to Section 5, titled The USA’s Achilles Heel. As I read the section it became abundantly apparent that amidst all the bailout and stimulus money flying around there is an even greater story, a devastating one, the likes of which has not found its way into the main stream media. The story goes like this.
    From the Wegelin & Co. Investment Commentary - A look at who are the most important creditors of America’s highly indebted public finances reveals something truly remarkable. It is the public authorities themselves! A study by Sprott Asset Management, a Canadian asset management firm distinguished for its intelligent macroeconomic analyses, showed that in 2008 over 4 trillion of the total outstanding public debt of some 10 trillion, or around 40 percent, was in the hands of so-called “intragovernmental holdings”. These holdings include social welfare institutions, whose assets, accumulated in order to be (halfway) able to meet future liabilities, are invested in special Treasury debt instruments, known as “intragovernmental bonds”. In other words, the paying recipient of, say, Medicare, the American health service, is an indirect source of finance for the Treasury. Unusual, remarkable, or rather, alarming? Debtors are now simultaneously creditors.

    WegelinDistributionOfUSDebt

    Many Americans are aware that our government has been tapping the tills of Social Security and Medicare but the methods by which they are doing it are so destructive the ramifications are nearly unimaginable. The Wegelin report states emphatically that our nation’s public trust funds – trusts that are theoretically funded by US taxpayer dollars and government (deficit) borrowings – are in fact holders of 40% of outstanding US Treasury debt (see chart above). Think about that. A parallel scenario would be one man taking out a credit card to pay another man back for money loaned to the first man from the second man’s credit card – but in reality they’re both using the same credit card. And they keep doing it over and over and over. I actually laughed when I wrapped my mind around that one.
    These “intragovernmental bonds” are certainly not assets of genuine intrinsic value. Were we to consolidate both balance sheets – that of the Treasury and that of the institution concerned – it would produce a tautologous situation that would result in the total loss of value of the social welfare trust’s assets if the Treasury were in a position to avail itself of the capital market to an even greater extent.

    It is no wonder that the Obama administration would fight so hard to grow this nation’s health care system to megalithic proportions. In doing so they would create yet another mechanism by which to mask the transfer of government deficits behind the veil of shadow accounting. Clinton used similar methods to create ’shadow’ surpluses by shifting social security tax receipts as income (credits) with no offsetting debit for future liability. Viola’. Surplus. Just like magic. Now Obama is headed down the same shadowy path. While the fate of Obama’s health care plan is yet to be determined, if it were to pass into legislation one thing is for certain – the US taxpayer would suffer unnecessary costs when public funds are mismanaged through shadow accounting.

    And of course, as always, on the sideline stands the Federal Reserve – no doubt cheerleading for a new source of public fund manipulation so as to push private losses onto the public balance sheet. If the Obama health care plan fails to pass in Congress the ultimate culmination of this crisis will come sooner rather than later as the Fed and Treasury will have one less slush fund to tap.

    My take-away from the Wegelin & Co. report is this – when the music stops who will be left standing? Foreign holders of our debt? Or perhaps the American citizenry? Therein lies the real crisis yet to unfold. Someone is going to stiffed.

    The Wegelin report is titled, Farewell America. While I hope this title is either premature or incorrect altogether, I fear my hopes are naive. Perhaps a more appropriate title might have been, Farewell Trust – because If there’s one thing this crisis has taught me, maybe all of us, it’s that trust, the foundation on which all capitalism is born, is gone.
    Well, well, well, Walter Burien doesn't seem so nuts after all...
    Attached Files

  • #2
    Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

    Excellent post!

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

      Sometimes you have to back up and look. Anyone who looked at the Social Security deals knew that there was "a problem". This is why the concept of finance has become a cancer on problem solving and not a benefit. If the Boomers and take their the Social Security surplus and invested it directly in Medical Infrastructure, Doctors, and Nursers we would have something. But, no, they pissed it away on SUVs, McMansions, and Condos and what they had left over they put in "securities" trying to buffer the consumption into their old age. Led by Republican bull shit artists who told them the private equity markets were a better place to "invest" all that money via tax cuts. Yes, Democrats are to blame as well but they haven't had a new idea besides going to the moon since the 30's.

      But let's forget the pass and grow up. Governments build infrastructure and set priorities very well. Free markets do not. Free markets distribute and optimize very well. Governments do not. NEITHER have any interest in telling you or the rest of us the truth only what YOU want to hear!

      The American People wanted their cake and eat it too. And boy did they eat.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

        Originally posted by sunskyfan View Post
        Yes, Democrats are to blame as well but they haven't had a new idea besides going to the moon since the 30's.
        Unified budget...:rolleyes:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

          My take-away from the Wegelin & Co. report is this – when the music stops who will be left standing? Foreign holders of our debt? Or perhaps the American citizenry? Therein lies the real crisis yet to unfold. Someone is going to stiffed.
          Here's a thesis several people have mentioned here before. If the federal government will be the major holder of T-Bills, (and by proxy...us), shouldn't we take on all the debt we can afford? Leverage land, gold and energy holdings. Wait...wait...Ka-Poom. Thanks, can I back up the trash truck and pay this off?

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

            Many Americans are aware that our government has been tapping the tills of Social Security and Medicare but the methods by which they are doing it are so destructive the ramifications are nearly unimaginable. The Wegelin report states emphatically that our nation’s public trust funds – trusts that are theoretically funded by US taxpayer dollars and government (deficit) borrowings – are in fact holders of 40% of outstanding US Treasury debt (see chart above). Think about that. A parallel scenario would be one man taking out a credit card to pay another man back for money loaned to the first man from the second man’s credit card – but in reality they’re both using the same credit card. And they keep doing it over and over and over. I actually laughed when I wrapped my mind around that one.
            He forgets to mention the banksters that are raking billions in interest payments on both sides of the transaction. There is a winner and there is a loser in this, he just can't see the forest because of all the trees...
            Every interest bearing loan is mathematically impossible to pay back.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

              Originally posted by santafe2
              Here's a thesis several people have mentioned here before. If the federal government will be the major holder of T-Bills, (and by proxy...us), shouldn't we take on all the debt we can afford? Leverage land, gold and energy holdings. Wait...wait...Ka-Poom. Thanks, can I back up the trash truck and pay this off?
              As I told my friend in 2007 while vainly trying to tell him to hold off his $1.5M Silicon Valley house purchase: inflation is coming. Even likely extremely high-/hyper-inflation.

              Taking on a monster debt in order to secure a real property seems like a good idea, but remember that inflation zeroes out both your debt AND your cash.

              Sure, it is possible to outgrow the inflation. But it is far safer to use said capabilities to simply grow your cash.

              Certainly leveraging just your own house - especially a house you have both the cash to pay off and the intent to stay in forever, is safer. But then again, not if we're talking about a $1.5M, 1600 square foot, 1954 built house that would be worth no more than 1/3 of that value almost anywhere else in the world or US.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                Originally posted by sunskyfan View Post
                Governments build infrastructure and set priorities very well.
                HA HA HA HA HA HAHA HAHAHA HAHA HA HA HA

                I knew I was lacking something. I needed a government bureaucrat to set my priorities in life. She'll know much better than me what my energies are best directed towards, and then once she's decided that for me, she'll "let" me go work in the free market to achieve them.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                  When YOU have built an aircraft carrier and YOU have built a highway system we'll talk. Government sets the priorities in an economy whether you like it or not. When corporations set priorities under the guise of free markets do you think they are concerned with YOU. The question is how do we set make government priorities coherent with YOUR needs and enable a free market to realize those solutions.

                  The old conservative rhetoric won't solve anything though it does satisfy outrage.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                    Originally posted by Mn_Mark View Post
                    HA HA HA HA HA HAHA HAHAHA HAHA HA HA HA
                    When it works properly sunskyfan is absolutely correct, gov's do infrastructure and national priorities very well, all to often though your reaction is the correct one.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                      Originally posted by sunskyfan View Post
                      When YOU have built an aircraft carrier and YOU have built a highway system we'll talk. Government sets the priorities in an economy whether you like it or not. When corporations set priorities under the guise of free markets do you think they are concerned with YOU. The question is how do we set make government priorities coherent with YOUR needs and enable a free market to realize those solutions.

                      The old conservative rhetoric won't solve anything though it does satisfy outrage.
                      How do you know they do a good job building aircraft carriers and highway systems or that these are the most efficient use of public capital at any given time? What's your benchmark? How could the government possibly know exactly what my needs are? And, if they're different than my neighbor's how can it judge whose needs are more important. When governments set priorities under the guise of public good do you think they are any more concerned with YOU than is the private corporation seeking to maximize profit? Do government workers naturally have a more elevated level of sympathy and egalitarianism relative to the rest of us?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                        The government can't know what your needs are. The government can only formulate collective policy that will be supported by the people it governs. Government workers are like any other worker in that they are carrying out policy. Those who look at a system and reject it based on exceptional anecdote will never accomplish anything except deconstructing the world around them. This has been essentially the effect of conservatism the past 40 years. We have now created a world where something only happens somewhere else due to choosing to focus on optimization and maximizing distance from problems.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                          Originally posted by Mn_Mark View Post
                          HA HA HA HA HA HAHA HAHAHA HAHA HA HA HA

                          I knew I was lacking something. I needed a government bureaucrat to set my priorities in life. She'll know much better than me what my energies are best directed towards, and then once she's decided that for me, she'll "let" me go work in the free market to achieve them.
                          The OP has to ride the NYC subway sometime. A few lines have nice new trains, but most stations are barely unchanged from a century ago and probably half the trains were built before I was born and I am 30!
                          Last edited by Serge_Tomiko; October 13, 2009, 07:20 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                            Originally posted by sunskyfan View Post
                            Governments build infrastructure and set priorities very well. Free markets do not. Free markets distribute and optimize very well. Governments do not.
                            I generally agree with what you're saying but I would say it this way: In the US, it's the job of government to set priorities and build infrastructure on which those priorities will be achieved. It is the job of business to understand the priorities and the infrastructure and evaluate the best course of action for the company. The goal of private enterprise is to make as much money as possible within the construct laid out by the government.

                            As we know, government has all but abdicated their responsibility for so many years that business runs both ends of the game and it only works well for certain businesses. Most of our politicians are simply pimps for big business and anyone who thinks this is a liberal/conservative issue is naive.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: The Real Crisis Yet To Unfold

                              Originally posted by sunskyfan View Post
                              Those who look at a system and reject it based on exceptional anecdote will never accomplish anything except deconstructing the world around them.
                              If it wasn't for those type of people, you would still be living as a colony of GB, still have slavery, segregation ect.. you think those who did not reject the system beyond what was seen as at the time as "exceptional ancedote" changed anything?.
                              "that each simple substance has relations which express all the others"

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X