State-Wrecked: The Corruption of Capitalism in America--Part III
By DAVID A. STOCKMANNew York Times
Published: March 30, 2013
. . . While the Fed fiddles, Congress burns. Self-titled fiscal hawks like
Paul D. Ryan, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, are terrified
of telling the truth: that the 10-year deficit is actually $15 trillion
to $20 trillion, far larger than the Congressional Budget Office’s
estimate of $7 trillion. Its latest forecast, which imagines 16.4
million new jobs in the next decade, compared with only 2.5 million in
the last 10 years, is only one of the more extreme examples of
Washington’s delusions.
Even a supposedly “bold” measure — linking the cost-of-living adjustment
for Social Security payments to a different kind of inflation index —
would save just $200 billion over a decade, amounting to hardly 1
percent of the problem. Mr. Ryan’s latest budget shamelessly gives
Social Security and Medicare a 10-year pass, notwithstanding that a fair
portion of their nearly $19 trillion cost over that decade would go to
the affluent elderly. At the same time, his proposal for draconian 30
percent cuts over a decade on the $7 trillion safety net — Medicaid,
food stamps and the earned-income tax credit — is another front in the
G.O.P.’s war against the 99 percent.
Without any changes, over the next decade or so, the gross federal debt,
now nearly $17 trillion, will hurtle toward $30 trillion and soar to
150 percent of gross domestic product from around 105 percent today.
Since our constitutional stasis rules out any prospect of a “grand
bargain,” the nation’s fiscal collapse will play out incrementally, like
a Greek/Cypriot tragedy, in carefully choreographed crises over debt
ceilings, continuing resolutions and temporary budgetary patches.
The future is bleak. The greatest construction boom in recorded history —
China’s money dump on infrastructure over the last 15 years — is
slowing. Brazil, India, Russia, Turkey, South Africa and all the other
growing middle-income nations cannot make up for the shortfall in
demand. The American machinery of monetary and fiscal stimulus has
reached its limits. Japan is sinking into old-age bankruptcy and Europe
into welfare-state senescence. The new rulers enthroned in Beijing last
year know that after two decades of wild lending, speculation and
building, even they will face a day of reckoning, too.
THE state-wreck ahead is a far cry from the “Great Moderation”
proclaimed in 2004 by Mr. Bernanke, who predicted that prosperity would
be everlasting because the Fed had tamed the business cycle and, as
late as March 2007, testified
that the impact of the subprime meltdown “seems likely to be
contained.” Instead of moderation, what’s at hand is a Great
Deformation, arising from a rogue central bank that has abetted the Wall
Street casino, crucified savers on a cross of zero interest rates and
fueled a global commodity bubble that erodes Main Street living
standards through rising food and energy prices — a form of inflation
that the Fed fecklessly disregards in calculating inflation.
These policies have brought America to an end-stage metastasis. The way
out would be so radical it can’t happen. It would necessitate a sweeping
divorce of the state and the market economy. It would require a
renunciation of crony capitalism and its first cousin: Keynesian
economics in all its forms. The state would need to get out of the
business of imperial hubris, economic uplift and social insurance and
shift its focus to managing and financing an effective, affordable,
means-tested safety net.
All this would require drastic deflation of the realm of politics and
the abolition of incumbency itself, because the machinery of the state
and the machinery of re-election have become conterminous. Prying them
apart would entail sweeping constitutional surgery: amendments to give
the president and members of Congress a single six-year term, with no
re-election; providing 100 percent public financing for candidates;
strictly limiting the duration of campaigns (say, to eight weeks); and
prohibiting, for life, lobbying by anyone who has been on a legislative
or executive payroll. It would also require overturning Citizens United
and mandating that Congress pass a balanced budget, or face an automatic
sequester of spending.
It would also require purging the corrosive financialization that has
turned the economy into a giant casino since the 1970s. This would mean
putting the great Wall Street banks out in the cold to compete as
at-risk free enterprises, without access to cheap Fed loans or deposit
insurance. Banks would be able to take deposits and make commercial
loans, but be banned from trading, underwriting and money management in
all its forms.
It would require, finally, benching the Fed’s central planners, and
restoring the central bank’s original mission: to provide liquidity in
times of crisis but never to buy government debt or try to micromanage
the economy. Getting the Fed out of the financial markets is the only
way to put free markets and genuine wealth creation back into
capitalism.
That, of course, will never happen because there are trillions of
dollars of assets, from Shanghai skyscrapers to Fortune 1000 stocks to
the latest housing market “recovery,” artificially propped up by the
Fed’s interest-rate repression. The United States is broke — fiscally,
morally, intellectually — and the Fed has incited a global currency war
(Japan just signed up, the Brazilians and Chinese are angry, and the
German-dominated euro zone is crumbling) that will soon overwhelm it.
When the latest bubble pops, there will be nothing to stop the collapse.
If this sounds like advice to get out of the markets and hide out in
cash, it is.
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