Recession Advice

[center]Are Consumers Driving Us into Recession?

by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.[/center]

With recession looming or already here, the time has arrived for finding scapegoats. Expect a long list of these. Here is the target of the day: tightfisted consumers. A decline in personal consumption, writes the New York Times, “would be the first since 1991, and it would almost certainly push the entire economy into a recession in the middle of an election year.” (Americans Cut Back Sharply on Spending - The New York Times)

This recalls Bush’s advice after 9-11, when he assumed the mantle of the nation’s personal financial planner. He told everyone to go out and spend money so the economy could avoid recession. Even then, there was confusion about whether he was right or wrong. Some sensible voices pointed out that economic expansion is based not on spending but on capital expansion rooted in savings. That is to say, the only path to future prosperity is delaying current consumption in favor of future investment.

One only needs to think of the household budget here to see the point. If you are planning for the future for your family, what is the wisest course? Does one go into debt as much as possible, buy the largest house and the biggest car, throw lavish parties, hand out all existing liquid funds to friends and strangers? Based on the view that consumption is the way to avoid economic problems, this would indeed be the right course.

But this also defies everything we know about family finance. The path to a secure prosperity is delaying consumption. One should spend as little as possible and save as much as possible for the future, and let that money be used in the service of investments that yield a solid rate of return. Those who have chosen a different path now see the folly: they are being burned in the soft housing market, for example.

The lesson is also true for the nation at large, because the logic doesn’t magically change when moving from the family budget to the national stage. Just because something involves “macroeconomics” doesn’t mean that we should throw out all good sense. But that is precisely what people have done with regard to the economy, since J.M. Keynes somehow convinced the world that up is down and left is right.

In a recession or a crisis, the right approach for individuals is to save. So too for the national economy. A looming recession will prompt a pullback in consumer spending as a rational response to the perception of economic troubles. This action does not cause the economy to fall into recession any more than more spending can save it from recession. The downturn is a fact that cannot be avoided. We don’t blame umbrellas for floods, and, in the same way, we shouldn’t blame tightfisted consumers for recessions.

There is no question that this is what is happening. American Express reports that the rate of spending by its cardholders fell 4% in December. Surveys of consumer satisfaction with the economy report a 15-year low. Retailers report that December was a “bloodbath” (NYT’s words) for them, with sales growing at the slowest rate in seven years. Market watchers are mostly concerned that high-income buyers are bailing out.

Again, it is critical to keep cause and effect in mind. The pullback on spending is not going to cause a recession. If we think about the long term, this is not a dangerous trend but a hopeful one. The more people pull back and save, the more the foundation is laid for a recovery after the current correction takes its course.

To see that requires that we take a long view. Government, however, seems constitutionally incapable of seeing the long term, much less doing the right thing to prepare for it. Making matters worse, this is that dreaded event called an election year. Prettying things up to make the economy palatable to voters is priority number one.

What does this mean? More monetary expansion. More government spending. We can fully expect that the Bush administration could resort to its old program of sending checks out to every American family with the proviso that the money has to be spent, not saved.

No doubt that many people would be thrilled by this. But look beneath the surface. Government has no money to spend on anything that it doesn’t extract from the pockets of you and me and the whole American public. This is easy enough to see concerning taxes. It is not so easy to see when the government runs up debt that is guaranteed by the printing presses.

The monetary issue can be understood by analogy to orange juice. The more water you add, the less substance it has. If you keep adding, eventually you come to the point when you can no longer tell that it was ever orange. This is the same with money. If you print enough – literally or electronically through the credit markets – it will continue to lose value. If money grew on trees, it would be about as valuable as autumn leaves.

So long as we have a central bank, government will be tempted to take the easy path of easy money. There do not need to be any secret phone calls from the White House to the Fed. The culture of policymaking itself is capable of broadcasting the right signals to all important players.

In any case, it is a myth that the Fed makes policy independent of political pressure. It is subject to the screams and hollers for looser credit in the same way that bureaucracies are responsive to demands for more regulation. It is what it is most suited to do in any case.

Yes, government can increase consumption, but by doing so it does nothing to care for the long term. The long-term health of a nation is not different from that of a household budget. Tough times require cutbacks and a beefing up of savings.

So let’s not demonize the consuming public for doing what it should be doing. It’s a good rule of thumb that when the government tells you to spend money, close your wallet.

can’t blame me, I spent an ass-load of money this past year.

Hey, if it’s safe for the government to spend money it doesn’t have, it’s got to be safe for me too, right?

[quote]MrRezister wrote:
Hey, if it’s safe for the government to spend money it doesn’t have, it’s got to be safe for me too, right?[/quote]

That depends.

How many people can you safely force to fork over money if you go broke?

There is one problem I have with the proclaimed "end of western civilization/great recession/depression etc. This horse has been beat to the death… too many times.

Still, I’m curious how America will manage it’s national debt in the next 15 years. (I’m very optimistic, though.)

[quote]Schwarzfahrer wrote:
There is one problem I have with the proclaimed "end of western civilization/great recession/depression etc. This horse has been beat to the death… too many times.

[/quote]

And it only happened once or twice so why bother.

Ha-ha!

[quote]lixy wrote:

Ha-ha![/quote]

That is entirely useless.

Bush already has spent money like a trunken sailor.

That ship has sailed long ago.

More like a wife with a credit card. Or daughter with her fathers credit card. Or any woman with a credit card.

It should be pointed out that we are not in a recession. The economy has slowed, but that does not mean a recession.

Recession clouds darken 2007 outlook
December 2006

US recession could cause world wide recession
May 2006
http://www.forbes.com/markets/feeds/afx/2006/05/04/afx2720443.html

Recession Fears Lowers Stocks
August 30, 2005

Economists say record oil is already taking a bite out of growth; some fear recession will follow
October 18, 2004
http://money.cnn.com/2004/10/18/news/economy/oil_shock/

Unfortunately I do agree with Schwartzenfluffernutter that the US debt is going to be a real problem, especially with the Baby Boom generation starting to retire this year, and Socialist Security (Ponzi) having to pony up money that is not there.

[quote]The Mage wrote:
More like a wife with a credit card. Or daughter with her fathers credit card. Or any woman with a credit card.[/quote]

What’s wrong with the drunken sailor analogy? Not sexist enough for your taste?

Drunken sailors like to pick up fights, which end up often costing them dearly. Traditionally, they also get charmed by people of questionable morality whom they hand out their money to. Look closely; that’s precisely what your government is doing.

Wait.

You mean to tell me that Bush borrowing newly-printed money from a privately-owned central bank, at interest, to finance wars was a bad choice for America’s economy?

Dude. I totally didn’t see that one coming.

Oh wait. I did.

ElbowStrike

http://www.alternet.org/workplace/74262/?page=1

[quote]Ren wrote:
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/74262/?page=1

[/quote]

You mean to tell me that slashing taxes for the wealthy while increasing government spending doesn’t lead to prosperity?

I’m shocked. Absolutely shocked!


Duh.

The poorest people spend the highest proportion of their income. Slashing taxes on the bottom bracket leads to the greatest increases in consumption and therefore economic growth.

THEN there’s an incentive for people to invest.

Slashing taxes on the rich leaves more money open to investment with nowhere new to invest. The “investment class” just accumulates their returns and wealth accumulates in the hands of a few.

(edit)
Oh wait. In a wartime economy with a shaky future there IS one great place to invest all that paper-asset revenue: US Government securities!

…which the government can then use to debt-spend on military.

More money for the war machine, less money for the economy.
(/edit)

At best, it’s social welfare for the wealthy at the cost of hard-working taxpayers.

At worst, it’s corrupt government officials giving billions in taxpayer debt to pay their golfing buddies.

Tax cuts for working people are better across-the-board. They translate into the greatest increases in consumption. Dems are happy because you’re taking care of the poor, Reps are happy because the poor still have to work for their money, have an incentive to work harder, and the economy grows. Everybody’s happy.

ElbowStrike

The best short piece I’ve seen so far:

[i]Bush’s Stimulus Flop
By ALAN REYNOLDS
January 22, 2008; Page A19

A reporter on Fox News recently asked, “Which presidential candidate is most qualified to turn the economy around and avoid a recession?” The quick answer is: none.

No candidate will become president soon enough to matter, and to ask the question is to presume that recessions can and should be avoided. But some business mistakes require time to be fixed. Too many houses were built in some areas, so prices have to fall to discourage more building and encourage more buying. Some banks made too many bad loans, so they need to become more cautious. Besides, if presidents really knew how to avoid recessions, why do we keep having them?

Nonetheless, President George W. Bush is now joining the election-year rush to “give the economy a shot in the arm.” A shot of debt, that is.

All proposals for fiscal stimulus claim to “jump-start” the economy by having the government borrow money from Smith and give it to Jones. Unfortunately, Smith is paid interest on that IOU, which implies a higher tax burden on somebody. That future taxpayer is, as usual, the forgotten man. All the attention is instead focused on Jones – trying to get the Jones family to spend more on what Mr. Bush alluded to as “basic necessities.”

Investors know such consumer staples are the least cyclical component of the economy. The most recession-prone household purchases are those that can most easily be postponed, such as new homes, cars, appliances and furniture. Increasing the generosity of unemployment benefits, home heating subsidies, and food stamps is no help to such cyclical industries.

An indiscriminate spurt in “aggregate demand” is essentially irrelevant to longer-term economic problems concentrated in particular industries and particular areas. Food stamps don’t buy condos in Las Vegas or new cars from Detroit. Subsidies to lower-income households are also very difficult for Congress to take back and therefore unlikely to prove temporary.

Extending unemployment benefits “increases the average duration of unemployment by about two weeks,” according to the Congressional Budget Office. That is certainly no stimulus. The resulting higher unemployment rate then provides an ironic rationale for more spending, which hurts rather than helps. Transfer payments discourage work. Federal purchases absorb real resources such as skilled labor, real estate and equipment that would otherwise be available at a lower cost to private business.

Why all the political emphasis on promoting a one-year sales push for consumer staples? Recessions never began with a drop in consumer spending, except when credit controls were imposed (1980) and when price controls collapsed (1953, 1973).

The economy was in recession from March 2001 to November 2001, but consumer spending fell in only the first and last of those months, plus September. Real consumption last November was still 3% higher than a year before – not much below the post-1960 average increase of 3.6%.

We are nonetheless constantly told that consumer spending is the driving force behind economic growth or recession, simply because 70% of GDP is used to finance consumption. This demand-side fallacy arises from focusing on uses of income rather than sources. In reality, consumption depends on income and wealth, and income and wealth depends on business. If business is profitable, personal income from work and investments will rise and that will finance consumption.

Profits are partly dependent on sales volume, but also on margins. If a business is losing money on each widget, it won’t help to sell more widgets.

Many of the most important U.S. industries sell goods and services to other businesses worldwide, not to U.S. consumers. Many purchases of low-income consumers are, of course, imported. A one-time spurt in retail sales of foreign goods may please retailers, briefly, but cannot sustain the broader economy.

Mr. Bush put great emphasis on boosting consumer and business spending “this year.” Any such temporary boost is likely to shift the timing of such purchases forward – at the expense of next year.

Economists use the phrase “political business cycle” to describe the abuse of opportunistic fiscal gimmicks (usually transfer payments) to provide a temporary boost during presidential election years. The hangover is felt during the year after presidential elections. Recessions thus began in October 1949, July 1953, August 1957, December 1969, November 1973, July 1981, and March 2001.

Alan Auerbach of the University of California at Berkeley surveyed the effectiveness of U.S. fiscal policy in 2002, concluding that “discretionary policy has had a weak overall effect on output” and that there is “little evidence these effects have provided a significant contribution to economic stabilization, if in fact they have worked in the right direction at all.”

That conclusion became slightly more controversial after the 2001 tax rebate, which turned out to be well-timed as a matter of luck. But the 2001 rebate, unlike today’s proposals, was not temporary. It was an advance on tax refunds resulting from the reduction of the lowest tax rate to 10% from 15% on the first few thousand of taxable income – a reduction which still cuts every taxpaying couple’s tax bill by $600. We can’t conclude that temporary rebates will “work” (temporarily boost sales of consumer staples) on the basis of evidence from a tax cut that was not temporary. And we can’t conclude that rebates confined to those with modest incomes will work on the basis of a tax cut that was granted equally to every taxpayer – including the top 20% who account for 40% of total consumption.

If it is really a good idea to “stimulate demand,” there is no reasonable doubt the Fed can do that. By contrast, it is unlikely that doling out subsidies and transfer payments to favored political constituencies will be temporary, timely or effective. It is also unlikely that one-year tax rebates and investment incentives could accomplish more than to make the pre-election statistics look a little better at the expense of 2009. That’s the next president’s problem.

Suggesting politicians should refrain from tinkering with the economy seems like standing in front of a runaway train and yelling “Stop!” Politicians on both sides of the aisle are already fighting to buy votes by “targeting” tax cuts and spending schemes toward their constituencies.

With luck, the end result may be merely wasteful and ineffective. If Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke acts on the belief that fiscal gimmicks offer a viable alternative to monetary policy, however, then putting unwarranted faith in ephemeral fiscal nostrums could end up being much worse than useless.

Mr. Reynolds, a senior fellow with the Cato Institute, is the author of “Income and Wealth,” (Greenwood Press 2006).[/i]

[quote]ElbowStrike wrote:

Tax cuts for working people are better across-the-board. They translate into the greatest increases in consumption. Dems are happy because you’re taking care of the poor, Reps are happy because the poor still have to work for their money, have an incentive to work harder, and the economy grows. Everybody’s happy.

ElbowStrike[/quote]

Except for me because the money is spent and not saved which really grows economies in the long run.

The whole idea that massive spending is the road to wealth is highly questionable, especially when financed with debt.

[quote]ElbowStrike wrote:
Ren wrote:
http://www.alternet.org/workplace/74262/?page=1

You mean to tell me that slashing taxes for the wealthy while increasing government spending doesn’t lead to prosperity?

I’m shocked. Absolutely shocked!

[/quote]

The poor, meaning the 50% of Americans below the median, pay only 3% of income taxes collected. The wealthy pay most of the income tax.

Its hard to justify a tax cut for those who pay no taxes.

Look what they get for the 3% — roads, bridges, public health, schools, cops, on and on. Of course, many of those things are in bad condition or come out of other taxes, but they can’t complain about the price.

Labor exploits capital, the poor exploit the rich.


The Top 50% pay 96.54% of All Income Taxes

(The top 1% pay more than a third: 34.27%)

October 4, 2005

This is the data for calendar year 2003 just released in October 2005 by the Internal Revenue Service. The share of total income taxes paid by the top 1% of wage earners rose to 34.27% from 33.71% in 2002. Their income share (not just wages) rose from 16.12% to 16.77%. However, their average tax rate actually dropped from 27.25% down to 24.31%