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Nielson: U.S. Between A
Rock and a Hard Place Where its Options Are - At Best - Dire!
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“The U.S. is in an untenable position - between a
rock and a hard place - in an inescapable debt trap - where the options
are, at best, dire – either hyperinflation or a deflationary
depression! It would seem that all we can do is ride out the storm in a
boat laden with gold” said Jeff Nielson in a recent
speech* going on to say.
“The U.S.'s severe debt problems are exacerbated by
its $70 trillion in unfunded liabilities to fund the social 'entitlements'
of the mass of baby boomers who will be retiring by the tens of millions in
the next few decades and there is absolutely NO likelihood of the U.S.
government ever reducing those entitlements. Any attempt to do so would
cause severe economic disruptions and civil unrest.”
Nielson maintained that there are numerous practical
reasons why the U.S. will make no attempt to alleviate the dire
situation.
1. A Looming Pension
Crisis
His first reason was the looming pension crisis
“where it is estimated that U.S. pensions were underfunded by about
$3 trillion as of the end of 2008 and even after the recent rally in U.S.
equity markets that pension deficit still amounts to roughly $2 trillion.
Thus, even if the U.S. government could somehow make full pay-outs on the
entitlement programs which U.S. seniors will be relying upon, they would
still have to raise an additional $2 trillion just to maintain their
standard of living not to mention the consumption level which this consumer
economy relies upon for its very survival. Why? Because, with over 40% of
Americans having less than $10,000 in savings, Americans are more dependent
today on these entitlement programs than any other generation of Americans
in history.”
2. A Further Collapse in
House Prices
“With 75% of the ‘assets’ held by
retired and soon-to-be retired Americans consisting of real estate,”
said Nielson, “they will need to dump roughly $2 trillion of real
estate onto the U.S. market – the most over supplied real estate
market in history – in order to maintain their standard of living. To
preclude such an event the U.S. government has been desperate to
‘re-inflate’ the U.S. housing bubble – at any cost
– to buoy up American 'real estate' accounts and bail out the banks
holding the mortgages on houses in foreclosure. Nevertheless, I believe the
U.S. will see a second housing bubble because:
1. the U.S. Federal Reserve has taken
the interest rate all the way down to zero - and left it there.
2. millions of U.S. houses have either been held off the
market by U.S. banks or are tied-up in U.S. foreclosure proceedings. Both
such actions have artificially reduced “inventories” of unsold
homes by at least 50% putting in place a (very) temporary
‘bottom’ in prices.
3. the U.S. government agencies which are responsible for
90% of all new mortgages, have, once again, lowered their lending
standards. In fact, when the government buyers’ ‘credit’
is factored in, more than half of all U.S. homes purchased in 2009 had zero
down-payments.
4. the Federal Reserve has been buying up every U.S.
mortgage bond in sight given the record default rates which currently exist
in the U.S. In fact, more than 25% of all U.S. mortgage holders have
“underwater” mortgages and 15% of all U.S. mortgages are
currently in default and/or foreclosure - an all-time record.
5. buying all these bonds with newly-printed dollars has
temporarily kept U.S. mortgage rates several percent lower than they would
have been without this hidden and very expensive taxpayer subsidy. This has
resulted in the Federal Reserve absorbing more than $2 trillion of bonds
and securities which - to be polite - are of extremely dubious value and
the moment the Fed stops buying up all these debt instruments, U.S.
mortgage rates will shoot higher.”
Nielson made the point that with all of the aforementioned
“occurring at a time when millions of option ARM mortgages are about
to reset, and more than 40% of the millions of Americans holding these
mortgages have been making minimum payments, it follows that when these
mortgages reset, borrowers could see their monthly payments not merely
increasing by 40% or 50% per month, but by up to several times their
current payments.”
“In addition”, Nielson went on, “These
millions of mortgage resets are occurring at the same time that long term
unemployment in the U.S. is at its highest level in at least 70 years, and
U.S. ‘real’ housing inventories are at their highest levels
ever. As such, once this second collapse begins, there will be no means of
stabilizing the market because, as I see it;
1. Interest rates can literally only
go higher
2. U.S. homeowners have less equity in
their homes than at any time in history
3. Retiring baby boomers will have to dump $1 to $2
trillion of real estate onto this market just to partially fund their
under-funded retirements - and much more than that if entitlement programs
should have their benefits slashed.”
Nielson maintained that the above “will not only
undermine the U.S. housing market for many years to come, but any
reductions in U.S. entitlement programs will directly make the next
collapse of the U.S. housing sector that much more severe – because
it would force the sale of much more real estate.”
3. The Future Cost of
Interest Payments and “Unfunded Liabilities”
Nielson reminded his audience that “the Obama
government has already admitted that over the course of this decade more
than 50% of every new dollar of debt will be consumed in interest payments
on old debt. Those interest payments, alone, will exceed $1 trillion/per
year before the end of this decade. Added to this will be roughly $2
trillion per year of “unfunded liabilities”, which will now
have to be funded. This means that over the course of this decade, the U.S.
government will have to come up with an additional $3 trillion/year –
above and beyond all current spending programs. This will roughly double
U.S. government spending, and roughly quadruple current deficits.
Even the largest tax increases in history could only fund,
at most, about 10% of this spending-gap. This means either cutting
trillions per year in government spending which would be impossible to do,
or simply printing-up trillions and trillions of new dollars to pretend to
‘pay’ those bills. This, in turn, guarantees
hyperinflation.”
4. The On-going Political
Paralysis
“The budgetary constraints which I have just
discussed,” said Nielson, “have all been of the
‘economic’ variety but it is U.S. political constraints which
are an even bigger obstacle in beginning to address the massive,
triple-problem of U.S. insolvency: debts, deficits, and
liabilities.”
Nielson pointed out that “decades of gerrymandering
have transformed roughly 80% of U.S. electoral districts into the permanent
holdings of one or the other of the two U.S. political parties. As such,
the candidates of the favoured party are essentially guaranteed seat for
life and this eliminates any incentive for them to produce positive results
for their own constituents - other than bringing home the
‘pork’. As a result, partisan politics has taken precedence
over any, and all, other considerations in the U.S. and regretfully, the #1
rule of partisan politics is to never allow the party in power to
accomplish anything good of significance.
The one exception to this scenario of total indifference
is the American Association for Retired Persons (AARP) which is not only
the largest voting bloc in the U.S., but it is comprised of the only
segment of the U.S. electorate which has a consistently high
“turn-out” in every election. Not surprisingly, their two most
important issues are Social Security and Medicare - the two social programs
which are 100% certain to bankrupt the U.S. economy. Barring a complete
“metamorphosis” of the entire U.S. political system, these
“unfunded liabilities” are essentially carved in stone, since
they are the only issues where doing something unpopular could threaten the
security of the sitting politician and this leaves current and future U.S.
governments with nothing but terrible options.”
Nielson maintained that the current
situation demands that the government either:
1. Fully ‘fund’ all these entitlement programs
by printing up countless trillions of new dollars – which is the only
possible way to cover those entitlements 100% or
2. Slash
entitlements - and lose their own cushy positions – which would suck
trillions of dollars out of the economy and result in a debt-implosion
which would “make the death of the former Soviet Union look like a
picnic.”
“If the U.S. does not commit to one or the other of
these actions the U.S. will likely suffer the worst of both worlds -
hyperinflationary depression”, he concluded.
5. The Preference for
Hyperinflation
Nielson sees hyperinflation as more than just soaring
prices. He sees it as “a crisis of confidence with respect to the
currency in question, and the beginning of a death-spiral for that
currency” going on to say: “When a currency starts to rapidly
lose value the government is forced to print up vast quantities of new
currency to subsidize the depleted wealth of its citizens – so they
literally do not starve to death. Then, that excessive money printing leads
to an even more rapid rate of devaluation for the currency, and this
vicious circle gets more and more severe. In virtually every example in
history, such currencies effectively go to zero.”
Nielson maintained that “hyperinflation likely is
the inevitable course on which the U.S. is headed. Not only is the Federal
Reserve under extreme pressure to continue to print countless trillions of
new dollars, but hyperinflation ‘solves’ the twin problems of
massive, current debts and completely unpayable entitlement programs. The
debts would get ‘paid’ and the entitlements would be
‘funded’. That being said, the paper money used to do this
would have only a minute fraction of its former value because, since
hyperinflation causes a currency to move toward zero, all debts and
liabilities expressed in that currency also become effectively worthless.
As such, a very strong argument can be made that the U.S. will choose the
informal ‘default’ of a hyperinflation, rather than suffer a
formal default – and a resultant debt-implosion.”
Nielson laid out in no uncertain terms that “History
is clear: the devastation of hyperinflation will destroy the wealth of
average Americans to an even greater degree than through suffering the
ravages of a deflationary implosion - although the former would preserve
the “paper empire” of the Wall Street banks who have been
dictating U.S. economic policy. As such, is there really any doubt as to
what direction the government, unduly influenced by the country's financial
oligarchy, is going to take?”
6. The Current Deflationary
Environment
In order to delay inflation from ravaging the U.S.
economy, however, Nielson believes that “the U.S. government is
currently playing a very dangerous game - essentially starving the entire
U.S. economy of capital. Bank lending is falling at the fastest rate in
U.S. history because the banks are refusing to lend money to U.S.
businesses, despite their promises to do the exact opposite. They prefer to
keep most of the bail-out money ‘on deposit’ at the Federal
Reserve in what is literally nothing more than a ‘savings
account’. That’s where the Federal Reserve has been
‘borrowing’ the money to buy up trillions of dollars of
worthless U.S. mortgage bonds. The rest of the bankers’ money is then
used to ‘play the markets’ with their proprietary
trading”, concluded Nielson.
7. The Lack of a Vibrant
Economy
Nielson believes that those who insist that the
‘mighty’ U.S. economy will ‘bounce back’ as it
always has in the past - that the U.S. will “grow” its way out
of its huge debt/deficit crisis – don’t seem to realize, with
more than 50% of every new dollar of U.S. debt simply being interest
payments on the old debt, that the U.S. economy will not be able to grow
much, if at all - let alone at the above-average rate which is required
just to produce enough revenues to service all that debt.
The U.S. economy is supposedly growing at more than a 5%
rate, which is equivalent to an “economic boom” for any economy
other than China’s, said Nielson but “to borrow an old line:
“where’s the beef?” U.S. government revenues for all
three levels of government are plummeting downward at an accelerating rate,
so how can the economy be “booming” if no one is generating any
tax receipts for the government? The fact is that, with the U.S. carrying
the heaviest debt-load in its history, and an ever-larger portion of every
dollar consumed just paying interest, the overall U.S. economy would have
to be operating at a higher rate of activity than has been
‘normal’ in the past just to achieve average growth. Can
anyone really suggest that the U.S. economy is currently stronger than
normal?”
A Debt Trap in the
Making
Nielson concluded his remarks by saying, “With the
U.S. economy currently carrying over $60 trillion in total public/private
debt just raising U.S. interest rates only 1% would drain an extra $600
billion per year out of the U.S. economy in additional interest payments
– an equivalent drop of 5% in U.S. GDP – and that would be the
case even before factoring in the ‘multiplier effect’ of
sucking that much money out of the economy - and every 1% hike would
inflict a similar, but compounded, amount of damage on the U.S. economy.
Frankly, it is very likely that even a 1% increase in current U.S. interest
rates would be enough to send the U.S. economy into an immediate
deflationary spiral.”
Conclusion
Nielson concluded in another article I
wrote recently about his views that, “In a
deflationary implosion or a hyperinflation scenario, some (and perhaps all)
paper currencies will go to zero. In contrast… gold and
silver will represent the ultimate “stores of value” –
and thus the best protection from the events which lie ahead.”
All the more reason, given Nielson’s opening remarks that,
“The U.S. is in an untenable position - between a rock and a hard
place - in an inescapable debt trap - where the options are, at best,
dire” that we “ride out the storm in a boat (portfolio) laden
with gold.” As to exactly what percentage of gold you should have in
your portfolio to protect yourself from such an eventuality see.
Lorimer Wilson
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Lorimer Wilson is the Editor of both www.FinancialArticleS
ummariesToday.com and www.munKNEE.com. He can be reached by
sending an email to editor@munknee.com