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  • Mall Cop

    The Second Stage

    Another Real Estate Crisis is About to Hit

    By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS
    For a picture of the US real estate crisis, imagine New Orleans wrecked by Hurricane Katrina, and before the waters even begin to recede, a second Katrina hits.

    The 1,120,000 lost US retail jobs in 2008 are a signal that the second stage of the real estate bust is about to hit the economy. This time it will be commercial real estate--shopping malls, strip malls, warehouses, and office buildings. As businesses close and rents decline, the ability to service the mortgages on the over-built commercial real estate disappears.

    The over-building was helped along by the irresponsibly low interest rates, but the main impetus came from the slide of the US saving rate to zero and the rise in household indebtedness. The shrinkage of savings and the increase in debt raised consumer spending to 72% of GDP. The proliferation of malls and the warehouses that service them reflect the rise in consumer spending as a share of GDP.

    Like the federal government, consumers spent more than they earned and borrowed to cover the difference. Obviously, this could not go on forever, and consumer debt has reached its limit.

    Shopping malls are losing anchor stores, and large chains are closing stores and even going out of business altogether. Developers who borrowed to finance commercial ventures are in trouble as are the holders of the mortgages, derivatives and other financial junk associated with the loans.

    The main source of the economic crisis is the infantile belief of US policymakers that an economy could be based on debt expansion. As offshoring moved jobs, incomes, and GDP out of the country, debt expanded to take the place of the missing income. When the offshored goods and services were brought back to be sold to Americans, the trade deficit rose, adding another level of financing for an economy that consumes more than it produces.

    The growth of debt has outpaced the growth of real output. Yet, the solution offered by Obama’s economic team is to expand debt further. This is not surprising as Obama’s economic team consists of the very people who brought on the debt crisis. Now they are going to make it worse.

    The unexamined question is: Who is going to finance the next wave of debt?

    The US budget deficit for fiscal year 2009 already appears to be on a path to $2 trillion, and that is before Obama’s stimulus program. What we are looking at is a $3 trillion budget deficit if Obama’s program is enacted in time to impact the economy this year.

    Foreign countries can finance a $500 billion US budget deficit out of their trade surpluses with the US. But foreigners do not have the funds to finance a US budget deficit in the trillions of dollars, and they would not finance such a deficit even if they had the funds. Foreigners are over-weighted in dollar holdings and prefer to lighten their holding than to add to them. America’s economic prospects are dim as are the dollar’s prospects as reserve currency. An annual budget deficit in the trillions of dollars makes the dollar’s prospects appear even dimmer.

    The federal government’s likely solution to the debt problem will be to monetize the debt, that is, the government will finance its deficit by printing money. Debt will be inflated away. But for those Americans without jobs or whose incomes do not rise with inflation, life will be cruel.

    Life is already cruel for Americans living on retirement savings. Not only has the stock market bust reduced their wealth by half, but also their remaining assets are producing no income. Interest rates are so low that debt instruments produce no income, and there are scant capital gains in the stock market. Retirees are living by consuming their capital.

    America’s economic policy of low interest rates and debt expansion bodes ill for everyone living off their savings. Their future prospects are even worse as high inflation will destroy the value of their savings, especially if held in cash or debt instruments, including “safe” US Treasuries.

    There are more intelligent ways to try to escape from the current crisis. However, the financial gangsters and their shills that Obama has put in charge of economic policy are thinking only of their own interest. What happens to the American people is not a concern.

    A compassionate government would handle the crisis in this way:

    The trillions of dollars in credit default swaps (CDS) should be declared null and void. These “swaps” are simply bets that financial instruments and companies will fail, and the bulk of the bets are made by people and institutions that do not hold the financial instruments or shares in the companies. The ideology that financial markets were self-regulating allowed illegal gambling free rein. There is no reason under the sun for taxpayers to bail out gamblers.

    The bailout money, instead of being given to favored financial institutions to finance their acquisition of other institutions, should be used to refinance the defaulting mortgages. This would slow, if not stop, the growing inventory of foreclosed properties that is driving down home prices.
    The mark-to-market rule should be suspended until the real values of the troubled properties and instruments can be determined. Suspension of the rule would prevent the failure of sound institutions and lessen the need for a bailout.

    Interest rates have to be raised in order to encourage saving and to provide incomes to retirees.

    To preserve the dollar’s status as reserve currency, a credible policy of reducing both budget and trade deficits must be announced. In the near term the budget deficit can be reduced by $500 billion by withdrawing from Iraq and Afghanistan and by cutting a bloated defense budget that represents the now unattainable goal of US world hegemony.

    The trade deficit can be significantly reduced by bringing offshored jobs back to America. One way to do this is to tax corporations according to the value added to their output that occurs in the US. Corporations that produce their products for US markets abroad would have high tax rates; those that produce domestically would have low tax rates.

    This approach to the economic crisis stands in marked contrast with the approach of the gangsters running US economic policy. The gangsters are using the crisis as an opportunity to steal from taxpayers and to finance their misdeeds and exorbitant salaries with Federal Reserve loans. Their shills among economists and the financial press tell the people that the solution is to fatten up the banks with funds so they will resume lending to an over-indebted public that will then return to the shopping malls.
    This unrealistic approach to a serious crisis indicates a leadership crisis on top of an economic crisis.

    Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration.

  • #2
    Re: Mall Cop

    Good article!

    What about people like me that are in college with no job that depend upon grants/loans to attend? :mad:

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Mall Cop

      Originally posted by BadJuju View Post
      Good article!

      What about people like me that are in college with no job that depend upon grants/loans to attend? :mad:
      Listening to the Wall Street Examiner podcast this morning they casually mentioned grown children moving back home and grandparents moving in with their grown children. You may find yourself in that mix.

      Shades of Ghostbusters:

      Dogs and Cats,
      Living Together....
      :eek:

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Mall Cop

        I will shoot myself in the damn head if I have to move back in with my parents after finally being able to break free next month. :mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Mall Cop

          Originally posted by BadJuju View Post
          I will shoot myself in the damn head if I have to move back in with my parents after finally being able to break free next month. :mad::mad::mad::mad::mad:
          I hope that solution is hyperbole, you're young and have lots of options in front of you. And just think of the stories you'll have to tell when you're old about getting through the 2nd Great Depression ;)

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Mall Cop

            It's hard to take seriously a lecture about debt from an assistant secretary of the treasury in an administration that gave new meaning to the word debt. His administration created 3 times more government debt than all the previous administrations combined, and increased the defense budget beyond anything seen other than in a time of war. And the effort to try and blame the Obama administration for this years budget deficit, and the future deficits caused by the previous mismanagement of the economy, of which he was a part, is hypocritical at best.

            That being said, I do agree with some of his proposals.
            I've advocated this in some other threads.
            The trillions of dollars in credit default swaps (CDS) should be declared null and void. These “swaps” are simply bets that financial instruments and companies will fail, and the bulk of the bets are made by people and institutions that do not hold the financial instruments or shares in the companies. The ideology that financial markets were self-regulating allowed illegal gambling free rein. There is no reason under the sun for taxpayers to bail out gamblers.
            The only thing I'd have a real problem with is:
            Interest rates have to be raised in order to encourage saving and to provide incomes to retirees.
            If you did this now, I think the collapse would be quick and unstoppable.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Mall Cop

              Originally posted by BadJuju View Post
              Good article!

              What about people like me that are in college with no job that depend upon grants/loans to attend? :mad:

              Government Service, my friend! (only job to be had right now)

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Mall Cop

                Originally posted by don View Post
                And just think of the stories you'll have to tell when you're old about getting through the 2nd Great Depression ;)
                I point this out to my 9 yr old on a daily baisis.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Mall Cop

                  Originally posted by don View Post
                  I hope that solution is hyperbole, you're young and have lots of options in front of you. And just think of the stories you'll have to tell when you're old about getting through the 2nd Great Depression ;)
                  Heh, indeed! I am mainly concerned about my social life, which has been non-existent for the past few years. This was supposed to be my breakout year. I guess I'll just have to make the most of the time I'll have over the next year to enjoy as much as I can while I live by myself. :p I have about $6,500 to finance my life over the next year. Do you think it would be worthwhile to convert part of it to gold/silver to hedge against inflation and to extend my bachelorhood for a while longer?
                  Last edited by BadJuju; January 22, 2009, 01:03 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Mall Cop

                    Any empty strip or shopping mall parking lots in suburbia that aren't constantly patrolled by mall cops will unofficially be transformed into skateboard parks. We can bank on that.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Mall Cop

                      Originally posted by BadJuju View Post
                      Heh, indeed! I am mainly concerned about my social life, which has been non-existent for the past few years. This was supposed to be my breakout year. I guess I'll just have to make the most of the time I'll have over the next year to enjoy as much as I can while I live by myself. :p I have about $6,500 to finance my life over the next year. Do you think it would be worthwhile to convert part of it to gold/silver to hedge against inflation and to extend my bachelorhood for a while longer?
                      At your age I would hedge gold/beer

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Mall Cop

                        Originally posted by jtabeb View Post
                        Government Service, my friend! (only job to be had right now)
                        Given the indiscriminate and extraordinarily foolish way so much future US tax revenue is currently being squandered, it would seem you good folks are all in "Government Service" already. Your children, and their children too. :rolleyes:

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Mall Cop

                          Originally posted by we_are_toast View Post
                          It's hard to take seriously a lecture about debt from an assistant secretary of the treasury in an administration that gave new meaning to the word debt. His administration created 3 times more government debt than all the previous administrations combined, and increased the defense budget beyond anything seen other than in a time of war. And the effort to try and blame the Obama administration for this years budget deficit, and the future deficits caused by the previous mismanagement of the economy, of which he was a part, is hypocritical at best.

                          That being said, I do agree with some of his proposals.
                          I've advocated this in some other threads.
                          The only thing I'd have a real problem with is:
                          If you did this now, I think the collapse would be quick and unstoppable.
                          I've been reading him for a couple of years, and I have the impression that he has changed and is constantly learning, mainly due to the interent and it's alternative news sources.

                          Moreover, the reported job losses are likely understated. Noted statistician John Williams (shadowstats.com) reports that biases in measurement have understated the job loss over the last 12 months by 1,150,000 jobs. Williams reports the unemployment rate as it was measured prior to “reforms” designed to minimize the measured rate of unemployment. According to the methodology used in 1980, the US unemployment rate in December 2008 reached 17.5 percent.

                          Yes, “our” government lies to us about economic statistics, just as it lies to us about “terrorists,” “weapons of mass destruction,” “building freedom and democracy in the Middle East,” and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

                          An objective person would be hard pressed to find any statement made by the US government that is reliable.
                          http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts01122009.html

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Mall Cop

                            Originally posted by BadJuju View Post
                            Good article!

                            What about people like me that are in college with no job that depend upon grants/loans to attend? :mad:
                            Grants and subsidized loans mostly come from federal money, right? It sounds like that will be included in Obama's stimulus package, so perhaps you will still be able to attend through the downturn. I'd be concerned about non-subsidized loans at variable interest, and getting a job after graduation. I strongly concur with jtabeb regarding federal service as being a good place to look for a job in this environment.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Mall Cop

                              Originally posted by jtabeb View Post
                              Government Service, my friend! (only job to be had right now)
                              When you say Govt Service do you mean the armed forces? I was looking at civil jobs recently because I don't think the university I am at is stable, but then again it seems as things get worse depending on how well establishments were run during the good years will determine their ability to weather the storm or the degree to which they can i should say.

                              Comment

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