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Written by Dagny D'Anconia
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| Wednesday, 11
February 2009 |
Dot.com stocks and tulips are not the only things that can
lead to financial bubbles. Governments can also be the focus
of financial mania. Our global credit crisis is in reality a
government bubble in the process of popping.
There are signs when a bubble exists:
1) On the face of it, a bubble looks illogical. You
wonder are people crazy or are you just too old fashioned to
understand. After all "It is hard to argue with success."
People who buy into it are afraid of missing out when their
friends and relatives are all benefiting. There is a herd
instinct.
2) Money keeps flowing in to the system to keep it
afloat. In this sense any bubble is a form of a Ponzi or
pyramid scheme. The early adopters are kept profitable at the
expense of the ones that later follow the fad. Even though
there is no con-man mastermind behind it, the dynamic of the
invisible hand is still at work as surely as if there were a
con-man running it.
3) A bubble may have made some sense at the start, with
some new product or technology at the root of it. However from
that small and rational start the phenomenon takes on a life of
its own. At that point the ramp up becomes near exponential.
The way markets are classically "supposed" to work is
through a negative feedback on prices. If something is
"overpriced" less people are willing to pay and the price comes
down. Sometimes this negative feedback doesn't work, and the
higher the price goes, the more people are willing to pay it. A
positive feedback loop is created.
If a price surge is in progress and that has the
psychological effect of validating itself, then a bubble is
poised to form. There have been positive feedback bubbles for
prices in real estate, tulips, beanie babies, dot.com stocks,
and a myriad of other irrational exhuberances.
4) There is available time or income to keep the scheme
going. Thus prosperity, large amounts of credit, and people
with too much time on their hands can get their resources sucked
up into a bubble mentality.
In our bubble, the banks were making absurd amounts of
credit available in the belief that the Federal government would
bail them out. Government also compelled banks to offer bad
loans to key constituencies.
Our government also made grandiose promises to provide
Social Security, Medicare etc.. Other nations were willing to
keep reinvesting in American debt and dollars, perpetuating the
bubble. All this was made possible because people believed in
the greatness of the American government.
5) All bubbles come to an end when the liquidity is no
longer available. After a certain point the bubble cannot be
stopped by outside forces, but it does stop when the available
resources are no longer available. It is like a fire that rages
until the fuel is spent.
By all these measures, we have a Government Bubble that is
popping. . The stimulus package being approved now would raise
the government's commitment to
9.7 trillion dollars - enough to pay off 90% of the home
mortgages in America.
The rate at which the government is sucking up money has
gone exponential. Under the name of "stimulus" and "bailout"
they give money they don't have to their political cronies with
only a fig leaf of a cover story. The conservatives are
impotent to stop the phenomenon. The Grace Commission clearly
sounded the alarm decades ago to no avail.
If you look at the rise in spending it is clear that it
has gone on unabated, crossing Republican and Democrat
Congresses and Administrations without any distinction. The
phenomenon is beyond the political realm. The government bubble
is an economic phenomenon that transcends politics.

Government revenue has become a positive feedback loop. Big
government has become so financially successful that it is
irresistible. Government money is indirectly and directly
controlling the outcomes of elections through funding of
pro-big-government schemes, corruption, and constituencies such
as ACORN. The outcome of the election was economically
preordained by the dynamics of the bubble. It had to be won by
a big spending liberal.
It would be rational for the American government to see
the financial abyss and cut taxes and spending, but this is
something they cannot do. They cannot because this phenomenon
is beyond politics and beyond reason. They can't stop
what they are doing. Their power base demands it. The
Democrats and RINO's were elected/selected because they were
determined to do it. The voters demanded it. They are doomed
to go over the cliff.
As you and I watch the unfolding of the Obama phenomenon,
where pseudo-benevolent Leftists and Big Government are touted
as the answer to all ills, we feel like we have been watching a
mass lunacy. We have the classic feelings one has watching a
bubble inflate.
It has been frightening to see the madness of the crowd,
the religious fervor of the faithful, the persecution of the
heretics, the obscene absorption of power and money. It is
a strange comfort that their insane vision for the future cannot
be realized. With infinite money we all would have become
slaves an ever growing state. Instead we will experience the
government bubble pop.
Based on the Grace Commission findings, the bubble was
predicted to pop back in 1995. The impending financial disaster
was clearly laid out in the book
Bankruptcy 1995.
It was only the infusion of liquidity from foreign nations
such as China and Japan that held off the day of reckoning.
The authors could not believe that foreign nations would
continue to buy T-bills - but they did.
Economically it was an absurd thing, but politically it
made sense: Countries like Japan and China thought they could
gain control and dominance of America by financial means instead
of military ones. Thus the authors of Bankruptcy 1995
were correct about the phenomenon, but off on the date.
Many have been wondering what can stop the insane
juggernaut that is the Obama gravy train. The truth is after a
certain point nothing can stop a bubble but itself.
Just like bubbles that formed before, this government bubble
could not be stopped by even the most determined and courageous
patriots among us.
When the liquidity runs out, the bubble pops and thus ends
on its own. The liquidity is now near running out. The
Democrat-controlled Federal government is inevitably heading
into more extravagance and unsustainability.
California is within weeks, perhaps days, of a financial
disaster and it is not alone. Britain, Iceland, South Korea,
and Spain are also in dire trouble. China and Russia are both
in financially difficult and thus politically unstable
situations.
Headlines now state "Downturn accelerates as it circles the
globe. Economies worse off than analysts predicted just weeks
ago."
A bubble is a form of a Ponzi scheme and all the Ponzi
schemes are now collapsing. These range from our huge Social
Security pyramid to smaller Madoff type scams:
"These [Ponzi] schemes rely on new people to be found and
people aren't investing. People are hurting. And because people
are hurting, they are seeking redemptions from what they think
are these legitimate schemes," a Ponzi
investigator said. "Between not having new investors and
having old investors redeem, the Ponzi schemes are just
collapsing."
This means people relying on the government for their
retirement funds will feel as betrayed as the Madoff investors.
Bankruptcy 1995 cites many examples of
similar government bubbles: "The charts [of Bolivia, Argentina
and Brazil] show that in all three countries hyperinflation was
preceded by a period of deflation. What the charts don't
disclose is that the deflation in each of these countries began
with plunging real estate values and then spread, a scenario
similar to the one that we are experiencing today [written in
1992]."
In the past such bubbles popping were heralded by a drop
in real estate values, followed by brief deflation, followed by
inflation. Judging by their examples we would appear to be near
the end of deflation and on our way to inflation.
California offers us a spyglass into the future. "As goes
California so goes the nation" and this is even more true in
this case because what is politically doable in California is
likely to be doable in Washington DC.
California is hoping for a
21.8 billion bailout from the Federal Government to delay
the inevitable. Nevertheless in California notice has been
given that tax refund checks will be "delayed". Imagine the
effect this will have on the filing of tax returns. Everyone
will wait until April 15th and then the real drop in tax
revenues will suddenly become apparent. Here is the
latest on
what will be cut first:
"Controller John Chiang, who acts as the state's
accountant, said he will have no choice but to delay $3.7
billion in [tax refund] payments next month because the
state is running out of cash. Doing so, he said, would buy
the state a few more weeks before its accounts run dry. The
state is on the brink of issuing IOUs as it faces a $41.6
billion shortfall over the next year-and-a-half. ...
A severe drop in revenue from sales, property and
capital gains taxes has left the state's main bank account
depleted. The state has not had a positive cash balance
since July 12, 2007, Chiang said. The state had been
relying on borrowing from special funds and Wall Street
investors, but those options are no longer available.
Chiang said his office must continue $6.6 billion in
education and debt payments next month but will defer money
for tax refunds, student aid, social services and mental
health programs... Paul McIntosh, executive director of the
California State Association of Counties, said many counties
already are low on reserves and may have to shut down
welfare offices or end drug and mental health treatment
programs at a time when applications are up 22 percent
statewide."
You know how crazy California is. How will the
Obamessiah's adoring masses react when their mental health
programs, special services, and student aid are cut? Folks with
tax refunds seized will quietly fume and worry, but the others
will take to the streets. What happens when there are
additional expenses from these street protests and quasi riots?
Will there be cutbacks in schools, police, and medical
payments?
You can see where this is headed. Like any bubble, the
disillusioned people are left with broken promises and worthless
empty symbols of what might have been. When the police are
stretched too thin, bad things happen. We will have to fend for
ourselves and not look to the government for our rescue. While
we can handle that, imagine how people will react who cannot
even imagine a world without government keeping order.
When a government bubble pops, the value of government
suddenly drops. With a few rebounds and jerks in opinion along
the way, people gradually find contempt for the whole idea of
investing in government either emotionally or financially.
Government will become, to the masses, the bad joke it was to us
all along. Few will trust it and most who do will be thought of
as a deluded. This will probably happen world wide.
What can we do to prepare? The first thing we can do is
be aware of the bubble. Accept the inevitable and profit if we
can. Once we are at the top we can try to arrange our affairs
so that government has as little impact directly and indirectly
on us as possible. We should strive to look like an already
squeezed turnip to the government and live as frugally and
productively as possible.
Predicting how severe it will be is hard. We can see the
inevitable direction, but not the depth of the pop or the
recovery. Germany in 1923, Austria in 1922, Britain in 1979, and
Argentina in 1989 provide examples of government euphoria,
followed by deflation, followed by inflation. There was rampant
corruption, lowered productivity and a lower standard of
living. Recovery only followed cuts in government spending.
Britain was suffering from its own popped bubble when
Margaret Thatcher rose to power. Her tough approach to cut
spending earned her the name "Iron Lady" and she was the first
woman to lead a major party in Britain.
The Financial Times of London in 1992 credits Thatcher for
saving England from remaining "the laughing stock of the Western
World." Bankruptcy 1995 presciently notes in 1992 "If
the United States has its own Margaret Thatcher, we haven't
elected him or her to national office yet." Perhaps our Sarah
Palin will become America's Iron Lady.
Today's situation is somewhat different from Britain in
the 1980's. Not only is the United States government bubble
popping; Many other countries who subsidized the delay from
1995 to the present are seeing their own collapse and
deflation. To some extent America has been too big to be
allowed to fail until now. International financial policies
complicate the timing and results as many currencies, markets
and housing markets fall and inflate at different speeds.
This bubble of government makes all other economic bubbles
that have come before seem puny by comparison. Furthermore,
this bubble is uniquely world wide. As liquidity is running out
and credit is drying up, many nations are in a chain reaction
realizing the hot air on which their financial and political
systems stand.
In any case the dreams of Obama, the RINOs, and the
Democrats will become painfully deflated as the era of big
government comes to a close. We will witness a breathtaking
global spectacle of fear, loss, shock, and anger as the
government bubble pops.
It may seem odd in this political climate to say big
government will soon be a thing of the past, but it is. Like a
decapitated chicken running mindlessly down the road, it just
hasn't stopped moving yet. |
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