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Why the Economy Is Gloomier Than We Are
It's hard to know when dealing with the mainstream media at what point simple propaganda passes over into sheer idiocy. Case in point: yesterday's Washington Post. A piece by Neil Irwin, "Why We're Gloomier Than The Economy," puzzles about the fact that Americans' collective attitude toward the economy is so negative.
He notes that consumer confidence is at its lowest level in almost 30 years but then flogs the standard repertoire of government statistics to suggest that the economy is, in fact, fine. Official inflation is relatively low. Official unemployment is relatively low. Official GDP is growing. What's the problem? The intimation is that the pall of gloom hanging over things is really just a bunch of crybabies who can't hack it today's dynamic world.
We can't know for sure if Irwin is simply carrying water for his corporate masters, trying to paint lipstick on a pig that, embarrassingly, persists in going "oink." If he were, he'd be among worthies, what with Ben Bernanke, Henry Paulson, and even Big George himself regularly opining how the economy is "fundamentally sound," on "solid footing," and with its perennially recurrent crises perennially "contained." This is the "perception-is-reality" school of propaganda at its most condescending.
Or, Irwin and the Post may actually believe, like Voltaire's Dr. Pangloss, that "things are perfect and getting better all the time," that a swelling tide of prosperity is lifting the economy to new heights, buoying the vast middle class to that elevated plateau of nouveau riche gentility that Bush used to tout (but doesn't any more) in his "ownership society" speeches. Perhaps he is of that Thomas Friedman/David Brooks billionaire/millionaire ilk of noblesse oblige declaimers who feel that the proper, orderly response to a little financial headwind is to discreetly let go one of the downstairs maids or pastry chefs.
Whatever the cause of Irwin's misapprehension, it is worthwhile cataloging -- for him, for the Post, and for all the rest of the ranks of oblivious officialdom -- just some of the reasons mainstream Americans are so gloomy about the economy. Readers are asked to understand the space limitations that compel only a partial and suggestive rendering. So, to wit:
- Real income for the median male worker is still below what it was in 1973.
- Even after seven years of "growing GDP," real median incomes for all workers are still below where they were before the last recession, in 2001. And they're headed down again.
- The ratio of debt-to-income for the average American has doubled over the past 30 years, from 65% to 135%, as families have struggled to maintain lifestyles once promised as part of the social contract but now beyond their means.
- Some 77 million Baby Boomers stand on the threshold of retirement with half of them having no savings whatsoever. A full 40% of all income earners have a net worth of zero.
- The price of oil has more than quintupled since George Bush took office. Its rise is coursing through all other goods in the economy that use oil as inputs -- which is to say virtually everything. This is effectively extracting hundreds of billions of dollars of wealth and income from middle class consumers and transferring it to the oil companies and sheikdoms in the Middle East.
- Housing prices, the repository of most of middle America's wealth, are plummeting at rates that now rival those of the Great Depression. They have fallen 20% from their 2006 highs and appear headed for another 20% fall, assuming they don't overshoot the historical trend on their way down.
- Mortgage rates are rising, assuring a still more accelerated decline.
- Foreclosures represent half or more of all home sales in some areas of the country.
- As a result of the housing bust, some $4 trillion in consumer wealth has been destroyed with another $4 trillion still to go.
- The percentage of equity that Americans own in their homes has fallen below 50%, the lowest level since World War II.
- More than $1 trillion in global banking system assets have reportedly been wiped out in the housing bust. Only $300 billion have been reported to date. When the rest are reported, they will cause a shrinkage in lending capacity on the order of $5+ trillion. That's a significant hit for an economy solely dependent on the issuance of ever new debt for its growth.
- Three million high-wage manufacturing jobs have been exported in the past seven years. Some have been replaced by jobs for waitresses and bartenders, home health-care workers and greeters at WalMart, all other jobs with low pay and no benefits. Most have simply disappeared.
- Automobile sales are going off a cliff and, with them, jobs and wages throughout the manufacturing sector. With gas prices likely to stay high, General Motors and Ford are history, zombies, walking dead. The market knows this. Toyota could buy GM lock stock and barrel with less than a third of the cash it has in the bank.
- Unemployment is rising.
- The duration of time on unemployment is rising.
- Foodstamp usage is at a record high.
- Consumer spending, currently at 72% of GDP, is significantly above its historic trend of 67%. As it returns to trend as a result of the above forces, the contraction in the economy will become even worse.
- Sober, steady economists from both parties, such as Larry Summers, a Democrat, and Martin Feldstein, a Republican, say we're facing "the worst recession since the Great Depression."
- In other words, millions of people are seeing their wealth wiped out, their incomes destroyed, with no assets, no recourse to borrowing, no safety net, and retirement with another 20 years of statistical lifespan staring them in the face.
- Meanwhile, the U.S. borrows $2.5 billion every day from the rest of the world -- 85% of the entire world's net savings. When foreigners, burned once too often by U.S. financial scams or its implicit repudiation of its debts through naked dollar devaluation, decide to quit lending, the effect will be catastrophic. Interest rates will skyrocket as the government desperately bids for funds just to keep its lights on.
As I said, this is just a partial and suggestive list of problems facing consumers who are vastly overextended and facing a desperate, dramatically poorer future. They may not see them all. They may not understand every one. But they get the drift.
At the same time, people see the Federal Reserve bailing out failed investment banks, committing openly to bail out any others arbitrarily deemed "too big to fail," lending commercial banks money at less than 1% so they can re-lend it to maxed-out credit card holders at 27%. They see stratospheric increases in incomes for the already obscenely bloated and the disparity in wealth distribution reaching its highest levels since before 1929.
They see the trillions of dollars fawningly lavished on weapons makers and pharmaceutical manufacturers, all at their expense, and the billions of dollars sloshed through the political system every year, all to keep these good times rolling -- at least for the Neil Irwins and the Washington Posts of the world.
People aren't stupid, though the lapdogs of power must continually try to convince them that they are. There is a palpable gloom about the economy. It's real. It's deep. It's growing. The only question is whether the mainstream media, owned by the very beneficiaries of the calamity they themselves helped construct, can deflect attention from it artfully enough and blame for it long enough to throw the next election to the Republicans so they can do it all over again. It's your choice.




36 Comments so far
Show AllWelcome to the outcome of Reagan's Alzheimer's economics system. What really annoys me to no end is that I, a trained musician, saw this coming decades ago, while the trained economists either were too stupid to see anything else coming, or were bought off to tell lies about how this was going to work out. How is that possible, that those whose educations were in how money actually is supposed to work didn't see it and scream to the high heavens that this was a disaster waiting to happen?
The fix was in, people rushed to help out the dottering old fool, Reagan, and didn't even bother to think or research the history of this country at all. We have been here before, you know, and it took decades or undoing bad policies and a world war to get us out of it. And the worst part is, once we get through this intentional financial suicide, we will fix things, then once it's out of mind again, the country will make that same mistake all over again. And people like me will have to deal with it all over again.
LEARN YOUR HISTORY. It's the only chance you have of survival without this kind of thing happening again and again. And shame on the MSM for allowing this to happen while they parroted the official lies the entire time. May a net neutral internet drive them all into obscurity and non importance.
What do you expect from the MSM. The truth?
There has been a class war waged, albeit undeclared, in this country for decades. Actually centuries, but for a while the government turned on the side of the average person.
And as with every war the first casualty is truth.
Look at how things panned out. After the civil way a couple of supreme court decisions (particularly pertaining to the 14th ammendment) began the syphoning of wealth toward the top few percent. This continued, unabated and in fact aided by the government and courts, for about 6 decades, until the great depression saw those not quite at the top throwing themselves out of the windows of their alters.
The administrations at the time and leading up to it, the Coolidge, Harding, etc, were all strict free market types, and the free market ended up in free-fall.
FDR's new deal policies changed the system radically, and once again the truth has been a casualty. There are those that would tell you that FDR actually prolonged the depression by his policies, but we can vey clearly see which administrations' policies got us into the depression, and which got us out of it. There are those that would tell us it was WWII that ended the depression, but macro theory knows that military spending has the WORST economic mulitplier effect (for every dollar spent it trickles through the economy 20-fold except for military which is much less), and we've seen how this war is effecting the economy.
So here we are again, and the same people at the top are trying to sell their crap, only this time instead of reading it in newspapers it is splashed across every bought-and-paid-for news network, and on every available billboard, til it's almost tattooed on the inside of our eyelids.
It's time to nationalize oil, energy and health care. The reason is because they are the crucial infrastructures that benefit most from economies of scale and that make no sense in having mulitple infrastructures (like utilities, would it make sense to have 3 or 4 companies stringing electric cables all over the city?).
The neos will cry "socialism", but it's not, it's common sense-ism. Besides, what worse? Socialism (root is social) or capitalism (root is money)?
Is anybody else tired of getting the finger from the invisible hand?
It would be interesting to know what Neil Irwin's annual income is, that could explain his viewpoint.
The Eagles cover a lot of valid points in the song: Frail Grasp On The Big Picture
http://www.lyrics007.com/print.php?id=TmpjME1qWTQ
"Well ain't it a shame 'bout our short little memory
We never seem to learn the lessons of history
We keep making the same mistakes - over and over and over and over again
And then we wonder why we're in the shape we're in
Good ol' boys down at the bar
Peanuts and politics
They think they know it all
They don't know much of nothin'
Even if one of 'em was to read a newspaper, cover to cover
That ain't what's going on
Journalism dead and gone
Frail grasp on the big picture
Light fading and the fog is getting thicker
Frail grasp on the big picture
Dark ages"
A little more: "And we pray to our lord, who we know is American
He reigns from on high
He speaks to us through middlemen
And he shepherds his flock
We sing out and praise his name
He supports us in war
He presides over football games
And the right will prevail
All our troubles will be resolved
We hold faith above all
Unless there's money or sex involved"
TV and fear have dropped the sissies of America to their knees. For the powers to do what they want with the sissies of America.
SAD !!
Neil Irwin is right, because he still pretends to believe Cheney/Bush "officials" would never lie about the economy, even though they lied everything from WMDs to illegal spying on Americans to NYC air quality to sacrificing golf.
But Labor and Treasury - they're the exceptions to the Cheney/Bush "always lie" code of conduct, right Neil? Wonder if Bernanke has a team of financial "message force multipliers" like the Pentagon, already fanning out across Big Corp Media to assure We The People all is great and wonderful and super and if it wasn't for those damn anti-capitalist liberals...
the official increase in the CPI, official unemployment index, etc. are lies. how can food and gas prices not be counted, that's Bu$hit.
WJM: "LEARN YOUR HISTORY. It's the only chance you have of survival without this kind of thing happening again and again. And shame on the MSM for allowing this to happen while they parroted the official lies the entire time. May a net neutral internet drive them all into obscurity and non importance."
I have just one word to say about your comment. Amen!
It would seem that we could avoid repeating the mistakes of our own recent past with the use of just a
tiny bit of history and common sense. Unforunately, both of these, especially the latter, seem to be in very short supply in today's U.S. of A.
see "Reverse Henry Fordism" - http://www.smirkingchimp.com/thread/15332
Geez, Freeman,
And I thought I was a pessimist!
I'm reading Kevin Phillips' "Bad Money" right now. Same sort of analysis.
We are in deep shit, and our rulers are shoveling more on top while they extract the gold from our teeth. (Hmm, now there's an asset I hadn't thought of selling off yet!)
WJM June 19th, 2008 12:43 pm
What really annoys me ... is that I ... saw this coming decades ago.
If that isn't the truth. what's next? I wonder.
I'm reading Kevin Phillips' "Bad Money" right now. Same sort of analysis.
If you don't want to read his book, read his article last month in Harper's magazine. When a conservative tells you the toilet is overflowing . . . we should listen.
It's a glorious turn of events for the planet's ecosystem. Gluttony shall be on the decline. The only way the consumer masses are going to stop driving multi-ton vehicles hundreds of miles to 8000sqft homes and eating food from half way around the globe is if they can't afford to. If they can keep affording to, they will, and we'll be in much deeper doo-doo. It's not like we're all gonna die, we're just gonna hafta stop living so damn large. Unsustainable. Something had to give, I'm glad it's the economy and not the ecosystem.
Why is "Official GDP is growing"? Because CEOs from mega-corporations, like Exxon, are making off with more and more money all the time.
WJM June 19th, 2008 12:43 pm
"What really annoys me to no end is that I, a trained musician, saw this coming decades ago..."
When I was in high school, in the late eighties, I knew something was wrong when the false marker that many people use to gauge the health of the economy, Dow Jones Industrial Average, started making wild swings of hundreds of points in both directions. I said then we were headed for something really bad; and 1987's "crash" was nothing compared to what is in the near future. I'm only surprised at how long it has taken to reach it.
Read Riane Eisler's Real Wealth of Nations...
There you'll learn your big picture history....and know that there is another option....
Hold on..the ride is going to get bumpy!
www.realwealtheconomy.com
www.partnershipway.org
Very informative article, however I take issue with the following
statement :"when the foreigners decide to quit lending, the effect
will be catastrophic".
The foreigners just cannot quit lending to USA because they have substantial investment in USA assets and also their economies depend
on exporting to USA.
It is not wise to harm a business where all your savings are invested in
its stocks and bonds and to whom you sell most of your products!!
qbaldsmoove and frank1569 have nailed it.
A class war to undo the great American re-distribution (New Deal) was plotted by our Military-Industrial complex and friends. WW2 was way too profitable to stop _that_ squeeze on the taxpayer. The taxpayer has had no choice: Pay your 30% via the IRS or go to jail! It's been an Orwellian nightmare ever since. The Russians, our once-allies "became" our bete noir. Trillions were spent to keep that McCarthy bugaboo away. Once the USSR imploded under its own bloated military spending (to keep _us_ from invading/nuking them!), the neo-cons invented the War on Terror to keep the phobic taxpayers' money to throw at our R&D military messiahs and their bankers.
Bridges collapse, universities go broke and over-tax students, infrastructures crumble but W's endless war goes on and on.
Why? Just so our corporations can continue to access oil under foreign dunes _and_ profit handsomely while our taxes provide the army muscle...
Some racket.
Meanwhile our culture remains fixated on our oil and gasoline junkies, our autos, whose time has come and gone. And our representatives subsidize this addiction instead of metro mass transit systems. What a waste.
Credit banking run by "private enterprise,(the Fed)" doubtless, kills any nation, especially a democracy--and creates a rather nasty and indifferent ruling class.
Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson spin in their graves.
Big_Money: "The only way the consumer masses are going to stop driving multi-ton vehicles hundreds of miles to 8000sqft homes and eating food from half way around the globe is if they can't afford to. If they can keep affording to, they will, and we'll be in much deeper doo-doo. It's not like we're all gonna die, we're just gonna hafta stop living so damn large."
Unfortunatey, that may not be true. When the rich can afford less, the poor can afford even lesser. It's hard to cut down when you live on pinto beans and cornbread.
SOCRATES2: Good post, and I was also going to say KUDOS to: QBALDSMOOVE & FRANK1569.
BIG MONEY: What makes you so sure it's either/or?
The rosy picture is brought to us by the same cabal that insists we're "winning" in Iraq and there's ostensible PROGRESS in that senselessly broken hell hole.
Keep in mind the "confidence men" running the U.S. like CEOS of a large corporation rendering its most precious assets into fire sale tokens, that they must SAY it's all GOOD to keep "brand America" going strong.
Foreigners may be propping up our investments (and banking firms), but just as the wise leaders of South America came to see through the big con game and decide to tough it out and break free, OTHERS can do likewise. The U.S. has ABUSED its wealth, privilege and blessings and in its greed taken what belonged to other lands too often. It would be ONE thing if as others have noted, not only our domestic history heeded intelligent choices now, but that evidence of foreign imperialistic exploits caused enough people of conscience to break through the impossible hold the military industrial complex exerts--like a dark cancer--over our nation's economy and SOUL.
It seems to me Mother Nature is now doing her utmost to break the chains... U.S. leadership has embraced "the dark side" and the majority of what appears as black ink on our national ledger is based in the blood of outsiders. It's a SIN against nature, Creator and humanity. The lords of karma only tolerate so much... and God-dess knows from holocausts, to inquisitions, to slavery, to the U.S. policy of pre-emptive war... a lot IS tolerated before the elementals rebel and CHAOS rears.
I've been on qbalds side for years. Electric gas water and healthcare should be nationalized. These should not be for profit industries. I think making that change will go a long way to sustainable economics.
Since the banks are doing so well, borrowing cheap and making outrageous amounts of money on credit card lending, maybe it is time that you bought some stocks in banks. Washington Mutual was at $45 within the last year and now it is under $7. So buy! A trade is only $7 with a Scottrade account which anyone can open. Buy bank stocks if you think that they are doing so well and will not be allowed to fail.
You managed to buy that big screen TV didn't you? You could sell that on craigslist and buy several shares of Exxon Mobil Corp. Then YOU could make some money from the high oil prices.
But you won't.
"It's hard to cut down when you live on pinto beans and cornbread."
Then let 'em starve or revolt ; the French , Russians , Chinese and Cubans did it in that order and incidently going from aristocracies to socialism , not the other way around .
You know what's really amazing to consider, is the likelihood of so many calamities all hanging over our heads at once. How the hell did 'we' manage that?
qbaldsmoove said: "It's time to nationalize oil, energy and health care. The reason is because they are the crucial infrastructures that benefit most from economies of scale and that make no sense in having mulitple infrastructures (like utilities, would it make sense to have 3 or 4 companies stringing electric cables all over the city?)....The neos will cry "socialism", but it's not, it's common sense-ism...Is anybody else tired of getting the finger from the invisible hand?"
Very well said and I agree whole-heartedly. Nationalize energy and health? Isn't that what Europe did? And what is their currency doing to ours, despite our natural abundance of oil/coal resources? It would be simpler to choose the status quo if these sectors hadn't become oligopolies decades ago. The few remaining corporations in each sector, meet in a room together, shake hands, agree to increase their salaries, pay off Congress, and scr*w the little guy (ironically, NOT because they like doing that, but because its just a WHOLE lot easier than actually competing). Yeah, thats capitalism at work... NOT!!!
... say we're facing "the worst recession since the Great Depression."
Worse: The total collapse of American society ...
... and if Bush is not impeached, then it probably will get even more weird ugly.
I ain't worried. NPR keeps repeating endlessly that inflation is under control.....pretty pathetic reporting!
www.StudentsForTheEarth.org
Enn June: You know what's really amazing to consider, is the likelihood of so many calamities all hanging over our heads at once. How the hell did 'we' manage that?
Thought about it myself. I think there is a single answer--procrastination/denial. We have put off: dealing with climate change when Congress was warned in late '80s, dealing with peak oil which Hubert first published in 1956 (as a fully developed theory), dealing with need for health care reform though Truman tried to get it through the congress in the 40's,failed to respond to whole host of social indicators which have been in decline for decades, (with some exception) have failed to exercise fiscal restraint--have even told by high level officials that deficits no longer matter.
So the more interesting question is why all this dilly dally around such important issues? Has there been a right wing take over of our media (and minds) via a well orchestrated effort by the Coors, Mellons, and others via so called "think" tanks--one historian thinks so, and that it was in response to the social revolution in the 60s.
One fundamental indicator of economic distress is the record number of personal bankruptcy filings - it appears that over 1 million filings will occur this year, reflecting a steadily rising number of people who simply can no longer keep their heads above water. I have pasted a link to the nonpartican American Bankruptcy Institute below.
It is essenatial to remeber that the economic indicators which Mr. Freeman utilzes are the proximate, forseeable and necessary consequences of the American capitalist model. I am not using 'capitalism' in a negative or value driven manner but think we/Americans should be discussing whether a capitalist model is really the best method we can implement for the creation and allocation of resources. Not only human distress but environmental destruction are almost required under a free market system of economic values.
We know, from other nations' experience, that democracy and civil participation can thrive absent free market/post-modern/capitalist structures, yet we/Americans seem to believe that if we challange the viability of capitalism we are also rejecting democracy. Ann Ryan is smiling.
Michael
http://www.abiworld.org/Content/NavigationMenu/NewsRoom/BankruptcyintheNews/Bankruptcy_in_the_N1.htm
What a Well-Written article!
Duck that arrow you who rape and plunder our country!
Thanks R. Freeman.
"...the standard repertoire of government statistics to suggest that the economy is, in fact, fine. Official inflation is relatively low. Official unemployment is relatively low...."
How can inflation be relatively low, when major components
of most family budgets - such as transportation fuel and
food prices - are sky high? I have heard that these items
are not included in the "core" inflation figure because they
are so "volatile" (meaning they always seem to increase).
This sounds like a political appointee decision, whose real
purpose is to disinform, and to dampen annual cost-of-living increases in entitlement programs such as Social Security.
The offical unemployment rate is even more suspect. I have seen credible analysis clearly demonstrate that the true unemployment rate is actually 2 to 3 times higher than
official rates, not to mention the underemployed (such as
former factory workers now flipping burgers & "telemarketing")
Again, it all depends on how some "appointee" is defining it.
Thank You Robert Freeman!!!
Sure the economy is great. The 20% that own 80% of the assets are making money hand over fist. The hardship to the 80% who are sharing that shrinking 20% of the assets don't even register. Old joke, statistics are like a bikini, what they reveal is interesting but what they conceal is crucial.
Back in the early 70s I knew a 32 yr old former Air Force officer who served in Korea during that war. He had an unopened six-pack of Coors beer (cans) in his refrigerator for over 15 years. He'd gotten the beer while stationed in Colorado with the Air Force. He didn't want to drink it because it was the "best beer in the entire world" and he couldn't get it in Florida, where he then lived. Over the years he's also morphed into a fundie Christian in addition to being a flag-waving right-wing Bush loving bigot. Now he's of retirement age and living on Social Security. He told me: "If the liberals insist upon sending me money every month, I'll take it."
david.peace2002:
It makes perfect sense that you, as a musician, would see-and feel-clearly where others (economists and their ilk) would see naught.
Being an artist/musician, you're sensitive to any changes in a given milieu... unlike tunnelvisoned materialists like the aformentioned economists, et al whose financial sensitivities are as worthless as maggot infested meat...
It's been my belief that the ONLY people who are fit to govern this country (USA) are people of refined sensitivities such as artists and true psychics.
When left to the "tender mercies" of the untrustworthy capitalist warmongers, nations are bled dry and its citizens fleeced; which is why they should never be permitted to wield the levers of power.
The root of this whole mess can be traced back to the early 70s when another disastrous presidency took place. Nixon established relations with the EVIL empire China and started the ball rolling with American factories moving to China where not one American corporation existed before,now 35 years later there are thousands of American Factories in China.
because like any religion capitalism works if we believe hard enough. we will get that pie in the sky as long as we follow the orders of the priesthood and pray and work harder. you are not believing hard enough so therefore that gloomy countenance. things will be fine- just beleive.
WMJ.........Our last vestige of freedom, the internet, will be gone in 3 years. 'Internet 2' has been officially announced. You didn't think 'THEY' would let go on the continual exposure of their crimes did you?
Get to know Alex Jones. Check out the website WWW.InfoWars. com. Listen to his show and understand the BIG picture.
America loves to be in control. We didn't much like those OPEC people controlling the price of oil back when it was $20.00 and stable, so we started to invest our money in Oil futures and then came the American speculators who thought they were smarter than the Oil giants. Now, we have jumped from 20 to 40 to 80 to 130 -- How high can it go? Well let's have these idiots just keep speculating, we'll see.
OPEC must really love us, they don't even have to meet anymore to fix the price, cause the Americans are now in control. I wonder if we get kick-backs for all of those dollors that fill their banks?