Earlier this week, in an article entitled "The Perfect Storm", I noted how a confluence of factors could portend serious consequences for the American Economy. I focused primarily on the tumbling U.S. dollar and the spiking cost of oil and gasoline.
In this installment I'll try to outline, in further detail, the numerous other red flags that are threatening our economic well being and way of life.
The harsh reality is that our economy has been a sort of house of cards for quite some time; it has been built on a bad foundation and a lot of delusion.
Incredibly, 72% of the U.S. economy is based on consumer spending. This has numerous problems associated with it.
The kind of spending that Americans have been engaging in for decades had to come to an eventual end. That's because most of us were spending money we didn't have and burdening ourselves with ever-greater debt. Americans don't save money any more; instead we spend it all. In fact, our national savings rate has been negative for the past couple of years.
The spending frenzy of this decade was based largely on the premise that home values would continue to increase indefinitely. And many Americans seemed to believe that double-digit annual appreciation was a norm that would go on forever. False.
By now we all know the resulting story; people bought homes they couldn't afford based on this mistaken notion, with the belief they could then flip these homes for a handsome profit or use the appreciation and resulting equity to refinance. Millions were using their homes like an ATM in order to fuel their obsessive spending. Then it all fell apart.
Now millions of people have lost, or are about to lose, their homes, while banks and other mortgage lenders have been caught holding the bag. This has led to a credit crisis in which banks are hesitant to lend, or in some cases don't even have the means to lend.
Bear Stearns, the nation's fifth largest investment bank, just collapsed under the weight of bad mortgages -- or mortgage securities -- and was bought out in a fire sale by rival JP Morgan. The venerable financial institution was acquired for just 1 percent of it was worth only 16 days earlier.
Bear is not alone in its troubles. Other financial institutions – Lehman Brothers, Citigroup, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley – have had to write off billions in losses and seek billions more from foreign investors.
The fear is that the implosion of this financial giant could create a domino effect and set off a tidal wave of defaults in the banking industry. The Fed would be significantly challenged in any effort to avert this, though it would surely try. Who wants to jump on a sinking ship?
Quite naturally, all of this has made businesses very leery and they have recently stopped hiring. Though the unemployment rate of 4.8% is still historically low, there is plenty of reason for concern. The economy unexpectedly cut 63,000 jobs in February -- the most in five years -- after declining by 22,000 in January. These job losses could further weaken consumer spending.
And the number of jobs being created is not keeping up with population growth. Economists say the U.S. needs to add about 250,000 jobs per month to keep pace. That's not even close to happening. Another concern is that, according to the Department of Labor, the jobs that have been created in recent years pay, on average, $9000 less per year than the jobs that have been lost.
One of the fundamental problems with our runaway spending habits is that we buy almost everything from overseas. Relatively speaking, we don't make much here in America anymore. This creates a significant challenge for exports and makes our massive $58 billion trade deficit essentially inevitable. If we don't sell much abroad, where will we continue to get the money to buy all this stuff? In fact, U.S. exporters account for only 12% of the economy. And the Business Roundtable reports that just 10% of all U.S. jobs currently depend on exports.
Despite Asia's red-hot growth, consumers in China and India accounted for only $1.6 billion of the world's spending in 2007, a tiny fraction of the $9.5 trillion spent by Americans.
Only 7% of the world's oil is produced in the U.S., yet crude is traded in U.S. dollars. Other oil producing nations get paid for it in U.S. dollars, which are worth less and less each week. That means that these nations make less per barrel as the dollar drops -- unless they charge more. Though the market -- not individual countries -- sets the price, controlling production does affect price. That's the sort of power that OPEC wields.
Since oil prices affect truckers who transport our goods, the heating in factories, businesses and homes, as well as product packaging, even those who don't own or drive a car are indirectly affected.
Since raising interest rates makes borrowing money more difficult for businesses and individuals, it therefore slows inflation. That's how the Fed controls the economy. But raising interest rates also serves to push the dollar down even further because the return on the dollar declines. Why invest in dollars if you can get a better return elsewhere? If you still think the dollar is worth investing in simply for patriotic reasons, try telling that to foreign governments and investment funds.
In the previous installment, I noted the absolutely massive costs of two simultaneous wars; $12 billion per month, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.
And the total cost of these wars is now expected to exceed $2 trillion, according to a professor of economics at Columbia and his associate, a Harvard lecturer. If credentials are important here, the Columbia professor is a Nobel Prize winner and the former chief economist of the World Bank, and the Harvard professor has a PhD in economics. In short, these people know what they're talking about and we ought to listen and be concerned.
According to the pair, the costs of our engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan will exceed the costs of both World War II and the Vietnam conflict. That's rather stunning. And what this means for the U.S. economy in the long-term is quite sobering, if not downright frightening.
As it stands, the U.S. already has a staggering $9.4 trillion debt, which amounts to $31,000 for every single man, woman, and child in this country. Since Americans don't save money any more, or have any significant means to invest, our government is reliant on foreign governments – like China, Japan, and Saudi Arabia – to buy our bonds and other Treasury notes in order to finance our massive and out of control spending. These are simply IOUs that will eventually have to be repaid.
Before these wars even started, our government didn't have the means to pay for its future obligations, according to David Walker, the nation's top accountant. Walker, who just resigned his position as the Comptroller General of the United States, says the Medicare program is on course to possibly bankrupt the U.S. treasury.
The problem is that people keep living longer, and medical costs keep rising at twice the rate of inflation. The U.S. spends 50% more of its economy on health care than any nation on earth, says Walker.
As he sees it, the survival of the republic is at stake.
"I would argue that the most serious threat to the United States is not someone hiding in a cave in Afghanistan or Pakistan but our own fiscal irresponsibility," he told 60 Minutes.
Walker isn't just some hysterical, partisan government bureaucrat. The Government Accountability Office website says he "has earned a reputation for professional, objective, fact-based, and nonpartisan reviews of government issues and operations."
And this expert says the US. cannot afford the massive entitlement programs promised to 78 million Baby Boomers who, over the next 20 years, will become dependents of U.S. taxpayers.
At present, the government is already borrowing money to pay for the healthcare of its senior citizens. According to Walker, the system is unsustainable. The only way out, he says, is through additional taxes, restructuring the entitlement programs, or from cutting other spending.
That last suggestion would be rather difficult. Right now, 80% of the federal budget is allocated to just five areas; Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, the military, and interest on the national debt.
What gives credibility to Walker's projections and analysis is that virtually everyone on the left and the right agrees with him. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and ranking Republicans and Democrats on the Senate Budget Committee back his assessments. Everyone knows he's right, they're just afraid to admit it publicly.
But even with Walker's testimony and warnings, and a fiscal problem that everyone in Washington acknowledges, Congress still behaves like a drunken sailor on shore leave. It just keeps raising the federal debt limit so that it can continue spending money it doesn't have, which only serves to drive us continually further into debt. Each year since 1969, Congress has spent more money than it has taken in.
These costs are already being repaid to the governments who've lent us many billions, and the interest payments on that debt account for the fifth biggest piece of the federal budget. Call it money for nothing.
In Fiscal-Year 2007, the U. S. Government spent $430 Billion of our tax dollars on interest payments to the holders of the National Debt. Again, most of them are foreign governments. Compare that to the budgets of NASA - $15 Billion; the Department of Transportation - $56 Billion; and the Department of Education- $61 Billion.
So what does this all mean? Well, I hate to sound alarmist, but it doesn't look good. This is a very ugly picture and we have a government that has ignored these manifold problems for many years.
Politicians are afraid of giving voters bad news for fear of getting voted out of office. Who's ever won an election by telling people he or she plans to raise taxes or cut entitlement benefits?
Our reliance on foreign oil is a very old problem that has been ignored for decades. We have an insane energy policy essentially written by Big Oil and Big Energy. This doesn't serve the public good. How about a focus on clean, renewable energy and energy independence?
The massive size of our national debt, and our continuous federal deficits, has been ignored for decades. This is a form of national suicide.
And our massive trade deficit has also been ignored for years. Meanwhile our leaders have asked us to soothe ourselves by buying as much as we possibly can, amassing ever-greater personal debt along the way.
And this mortgage meltdown, which has turned into a full-fledged institutional crisis, was entirely avoidable. No-money-down loans? Stated-income loans? Interest-only loans? How was this stuff ever allowed? It's because some in government think that any regulation is a bad thing and that we're all better off without it. But capitalism without regulation just leads some to some sort of Darwinian nightmare in which only the strongest – or the richest, or the most cunning – survive.
What can we do about our do-nothing Congress?
Well, Democracy is participatory sport, not a spectator sport. It's time for everyone on the sidelines to get in the game.
Call your Senators and Representatives. Write them letters and let them know that you are aware of our bewildering array of economic problems and that you expect them to take action. If you don't know who your representatives are, find out!
Write a letter to the editor of your local paper.
Join a citizens group that is dedicated to progress and to making our politicians accountable to the people. It's time we hold their feet to the fire. In order to be considered leaders, our elected representatives must actually lead.
Get out and vote. Hold your government accountable! Ultimately, we end up with the government we deserve.
And let's just hope, for the sake of us all, that it's not too late to right the ship. We've taken our greatness, and our place in the world, for granted for far too long. It's not a right, or a guarantee. It has to be earned and maintained.
None of the fixes will be easy, but we can't hide our heads in the sand any longer. Our government must know that we are aware, and that they can't try to hide these problems from us, or ignore them, any more. And then we have to be ready for some rather bitter medicine. The taste will be harsh, but it will save us in the end.
- Sean M. Kennedy
Sean is an L.A-based freelance writer who has written on a wide variety of news and current events topics, from politics and social issues, to health and wellness, to money, business, sports and music.
His work has been featured in various magazines and newspapers, including Baseball Digest and the Portsmouth Herald.
Copyright © 2008 Sean M. Kennedy. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without the author's consent.


Comments: 12
I don't really know what my politicians are going to be able to do about our current situation. Our national problems (barring the war) seem primarily rooted in the fact that industry leaders are choosing to have their manufacturing done overseas, to import cheaper foreign labor to fill jobs over here, and to import cheaper goods made outside our borders.
Shoring up social security, providing health care options, the ability for people to pay on their debt, government coffers growing; all would be greatly helped if manufacturing would return to our country and focus on hiring locals to fill positions.
And, BTW, social security for Baby Boomers is an entitlement earned. Baby Boomers have been having money taken out of our checks to support social security since we first started taking jobs. If Baby Boomers do not receive social security in their aged years, then we will have been screwed over by The Greatest Generation, whose comfy-cozy retirement was paid for by us.
If social security is abolished, it is a sure bet that the same amount of money will continue to be taken out of our pay. The government will just slap a new withholding label on it.
It's hard to believe that our government had a sizable surplus just a mere eight years ago.
It's probably time for us as individuals/families to get back to cottage industries. What product or service have you got that your neighbor (local or online) is willing to buy or trade for? We've got to get back to basics. And I think that the "perfect storm" which motivates us toward that end is called "correction." Many will fall by the wayside. As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord.
Please continue your excellent, enlightening analysis of our situation as it unfolds.
The dollar will be rated in BTUs (heating value) in the near future. Soon, it will not even buy food or fuel at any price.
In this day of Internet email, I write my guys all the time. It is so easy to do now, and you don't even need a stamp! Surprisingly, some always write back too. It's more than just sending a rant, I ask questions on why they voted a certain way etc. Sometimes they convince me, other times not, but at least I feel I've been heard; both educational and kind of fun too in a way... ;-)
Just wanted to stop in to tell you congratulations for being featured on Gather's homepage right now!
Here's a 10 rating & have a nice day. :o)