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October 5th, 2009

The Economic Recovery That Isn’t

by Peter Schiff — Seeking Alpha

There is no “jobless recovery,” only senseless cheerleading…

For those market boosters who are prattling on about the possibility of a “jobless recovery,” I offer an invitation to join me for a breakfast of “fat-free bacon,” “eggless omelets,” and “no-carb bread.” As unappetizing as such a meal may sound, it would nevertheless offer more substance than the oxymoronic concept of an economic resurgence without job creation.

Those who do cling to the absurd belief that, absent exponential productivity gains, the economy can expand while workers are being laid off will undergo a massive test of their convictions now that it’s clear the employment picture is bleak. Friday’s weaker-than-expected report on non-farm payrolls revealed that employers shed 263,000 jobs in September. The losses propelled the headline unemployment rate to a 26-year high of 9.8%. U6, the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ most complete measure of unemployment, has risen to a dismal 17%.

This figure includes those people who want to work full time, but have simply given up looking, or who have accepted part-time work in the interim. As it is similar to the methodology used during the Great Depression, U6 offers better historical perspective on the severity of our current crisis.

Taken together with Thursday’s larger-than-expected pickup in unemployment claims (first time claims rose by 17,000 to 551,000), Friday’s report makes it certain that the job market is still contracting, even while some indicators like GDP and consumer confidence are moving in the opposite direction.

There is no question that the sense of panic has temporarily subsided. In recent interviews, Treasury Secretary Geithner has been almost giddy in his descriptions of the recovery – all the while crediting his own policies for averting disaster. Americans are once again taking the government’s bait by spending money they don’t have to buy things they can’t afford. Evidence of this trend was contained in data released earlier this week which showed that even while income growth was largely stagnant, U.S. consumers showed the biggest month-over-month increase in personal spending in ten years! With the same report showing a 25% drop in the savings rate, the source of the spending money is clear. But depleting savings and increasing borrowing does not a recovery make.

To really recuperate, the government must allow market forces to restructure our economy. The government and individuals must rein in their spending; we must replenish our stock of savings, allow interest rates to rise, asset prices to adjust to economic reality, insolvent businesses to fail, and wages to reflect productivity. To accomplish these goals, subsidies that distort market forces must be removed and regulations that undermine our competitiveness must be repealed.

None of this can be accomplished without a degree of short-term economic pain. However, if we endure it, the payback will be a real recovery with plenty of new jobs that don’t rely on government stimulus money. If we refuse to allow the economy to experience a real recession, we will never have the benefit of a real recovery. Instead, we get the “jobless recovery,” a veneer of apparently positive indicators that merely obscures the underlying rot.

Over the last few decades, our industrial job market has atrophied while service- and public-sector jobs have grown unsustainably. We must restore balance. New jobs will have to come from areas that produce goods; bloated service and government sectors must be allowed to shrink. By propping up the sectors that need to contract, and running staggering budget deficits, the government cuts off the capital necessary to fund sectors that need to expand.

In truth, many of the service-sector jobs that exist today, such as real estate sales, mortgage finance, home improvement, and auto sales, were created in an environment of ever-increasing home equity, rising stock prices, and almost unlimited access to cheap consumer credit. With home equity gone, stock markets flat, and credit depleted, Americans find themselves needing to save rather than spend. But Washington has put through policies that have counteracted our good instincts.

While we were focusing our economy on consumer spending, much of the rest of the world was saving for the future. As such, we must begin to produce more for export, so that we can sell goods to those who have the savings to pay for them. That is the only way we can repay our debts, replenish our savings, repair our infrastructure, and rebuild our industrial base…

Read more on Seeking Alpha

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2 comments to The Economic Recovery That Isn’t

  • The Military Industrial Complex can NOT be our largest exporter!

    http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/Video/playerIndex...

    "Building Bombs In America".

  • Before we can have any honest discussion of economics, we should understand that "money" or "credit" has no inherent value in and of itself. Money is something that is used to facilitate the trade of goods and services. Interest rates (which is the charge for the creation of money or credit over a set period of time) add no real value to the goods and services. The "dividend" is a much more accurate method of determining the return on investment for the loan of monies. The value of the dividend relates directly to the success of the borrower, and money lent stays in circulation until it is used up: an indefinite period of time.

    Because money and credit are social utilities that should be made available to all within a sovereign society, all private institutions that create money or credit should be made illegal by the sovereign authority. In the United States, the Constitution provided that Congress be the sole issuer of currency. Any legislation that provides for private institutions to create money is illegal and should be repealed. Fractional reserve banking should be outlawed.

    The government should appoint a commission of accountants who would be charged with setting up accurate bookkeeping as regards the sovereign currency. Money would then be issued as new goods and services are provided; then withdrawn from circulation as these goods and services are consumed. This would create a constant balance between the capacity to produce and the capacity to pay: that is between prices and purchasing power. Every citizen would be given a monthly dividend equal to a sum of money to fill the gap between prices and purchasing power. It would be equal in totality to the collective prices of consumable goods and services for sale.

    Economically, what is left of the United States must be rebuilt from the ground up. The flaw is not in the productivity of natural resources, or the availability of those resources, or lack of ingenuity, nor the ability to work. The flaw is, and has been, in the financial and monetary system, along with greedy, corrupt politicians.

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