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[Marxism] The Economic Crisis: No, this will not be a Normal Cyclical Recovery
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13109
Philip Tetlock, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, spent
two decades tracking 82,000 predictions made by 284 experts. His findings,
reported in his book, “Expert Political Judgment,” are that, on average, the
expert's predictions were only a bit better than random guessing would have
been. He writes, “It made virtually no difference whether participants had
doctorates, whether they were economists, political scientists, journalists or
historians, whether they had policy experience or access to classified
information, or whether they had logged many or few years of experience.”
The only consistent attribute was fame, and the relationship was inverse. The
more famous experts made worse predictions than the unknown forecasters did.
Dean Baker [http://www.prospect.org/csnc/blogs/beat_the_press] has often
pointed out that the media, when reporting on a forecast made by a prominent
economist, should (but never does) quality the prediction with a list of
previous predictions made by the expert that were wrong. But economists, even
when their predictions are right, have a way of basing their predictions on
sheer nonsense.
For instance, Roger Altman
[http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3d89a930-220d-11de-8380-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1]
predicts that this will not be a normal cyclical recovery. Although it is
likely that this is correct, his article is a mishmash of nonsense. Altman
writes that, "we saw a housing and credit market collapse that caused enormous
losses among households and banks. The result was a steep drop in discretionary
consumer spending and a halt to lending. To see why recovery will be slow, we
can look at the balance sheet damage. For households, net worth peaked in
mid-2007 at $64,400bn (€47,750, £43,449bn) but fell to $51,500bn at the end of
2008, a swift 20 per cent fall. With average family income at $50,000, and
falling in real terms since 2000, a 20 per cent drop in net worth is big –
especially when household debt reached 130 per cent of income in 2008. This
debt derived from Americans spending more than their income, reflecting the
positive wealth effect. Households felt wealthier, despite pressure on incomes,
because home and financial asset values were rising. Now that wealth effect has
reversed with a vengeance, the crisis and unemployment have frightened
households into raising savings rates for the first time in years. They had
been stagnant at 1-2 per cent of income but have surged to nearly 5 per cent.
With reduced incomes, only cutting discretionary spending can produce higher
savings. This explains why personal consumption expenditures fell at record
rates at the end of 2008."
Where and when Altman and other economists acquired the ability to read the
minds of people is unknown. Sometime in the past, apparently, some charlatan
sold the economic profession a boxcar bull of crystal balls. So instead of
asking people why they spent more than they earned, these economists peer into
a reflective glass and see only themselves.
Even my anecdotal experience contradicts Altman. Throughout the past decade, in
conversations with fellow workers, neighbors, friends, and relatives, not one
single time have I heard anyone boast about his/her increased feelings of
wealth. They did, however, complain about the increased costs of essential
products and services and the lowering of the real-dollar value of their
incomes. They did not borrow because they felt wealthier; they borrowed to
supplement their declining incomes in an inflationary economy. And bankers
enabled them, encouraged them, to do it by offering easy loans with low
payments without ever revealing the true costs of those loans.
Consumers borrowed not because they felt wealthier, they borrowed because they
needed the money. And when the Ponzi bankers' schemes brought down the economy,
repaying the loans became impossible, job losses eliminated incomes, and
consumer purchasing declined. Unless jobs are generated that provide sufficient
income to regenerate a consuming economy, this will not be a normal cyclical
recovery.
It, however, is not obvious that such jobs will materialize. Over the last
quarter century, American business has moved myriad higher paying jobs to
foreign countries which depend upon American consumers to purchase the products
produced for the American companies that moved their manufacturing overseas.
Even Obama says that these jobs are not coming back. The infrastructure to
recreate these jobs no longer exists in America. The businesses that still
provide such jobs are asking, in some cases requiring, workers to work for
lower wages. The lost jobs and lowered wages mean lower consumption for the
unforeseeable future. When the big three automobile companies reduce their
workforces and pay lower wages, they are, in reality, reducing the market not
only for automobiles but also for products and services of all kinds.
So how can bankers be expected to increase lending? Who will the credit worthy
borrowers be? Certainly not the people without jobs or with reduced incomes or
with reduced credit scores because of recent defaults. Certainly not businesses
with fewer sales and lower profits. The lending will not materialize no matter
how the failing banks are recapitalized. Furthermore, the number of jobs that
need to be created for a recovery is a multiple of the number lost if the wages
paid by the new jobs is less than those paid by the lost jobs. So no, this will
not be a normal cyclical recovery.
Some economists have begun to speak of another "jobless recovery." I can't even
imagine what that could mean? About three quarters of the American economy was
driven by consumption. Without a regeneration of the levels of consumption
needed to drive this portion of the economy, nothing that can truly be called a
recovery can happen. The way out of this crisis is not to recapitalize the
banks, but rather to recapitalize consumers. Given the political ideologies
active in the United States of America, I doubt that that will ever happen.
After all, the business of America is business, not the welfare of its people.
Economists and politicians are blaming this crisis on faulty practices carried
out by the financial industry. And no one has pointed how retirement investment
plans such as 401Ks regularly pumped money into the stock market and
contributed to the bubble. These practices may have precipitated the crisis,
but given the assault on the wages of working class Americans and the shifting
of higher-paying jobs to foreign countries, an economic collapse, sooner or
later, was inevitable. Anyone who can perform simple arithmetical calculations
should have known it.
When a nation consigns its people to working for meager wages, its prosperity
is doomed. The Congress, at the behest of corporate lobbyists, wrote into
legislation the rules that permitted companies to offshore jobs, reduce real
wages, and permit risky financial practices. Therein lies the root cause of
this crisis. People merely do what the law allows. Without a prosperous people,
America cannot be a prosperous nation. So welcome America to the third-world.
John Kozy is a retired professor of philosophy and logic who blogs on social,
political, and economic issues. After serving in the U.S. Army during the
Korean War, he spent 20 years as a university professor and another 20 years
working as a writer. He has published a textbook in formal logic commercially,
in academic journals and a small number of commercial magazines, and has
written a number of guest editorials for newspapers. His on-line pieces can be
found on http://www.jkozy.com/ and he can be emailed from that site's
homepage.
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