Father of Reaganomics: Nothing Can Be Done To Save Economy
This morning I came across an interesting article by Paul Craig Roberts in the Coastal Post. Who is Dr. Roberts? He is an economist who served as an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration, and is known as the “Father of Reaganomics.” Outside of the public sector, he was a former editor and columnist for the Wall Street Journal and Business Week.
What initially caught my eye was the title of the article- “The Impending Destruction Of The U.S. Economy.” No use beating around the bush. But he did manage to beat up the Bush administration and other policymakers in Washington for their mishandling of the U.S. economy. Dr. Roberts wrote:
Hubris and arrogance are too ensconced in Washington for policymakers to be aware of the economic policy trap in which they have placed the U.S. economy. If the subprime mortgage meltdown is half as bad as predicted, low U.S. interest rates will be required in order to contain the crisis. But if the dollar’s plight is half as bad as predicted, high U.S. interest rates will be required if foreigners are to continue to hold dollars and to finance U.S. budget and trade deficits.
Which will Washington sacrifice, the domestic financial system and overextended homeowners or its ability to finance deficits?
The answer seems obvious. Everything will be sacrificed in order to protect Washington’s ability to borrow abroad. Without this, Washington cannot conduct its wars of aggression, and Americans cannot continue to consume $800 billion dollars more each year than the economy produces.
Nice job, Washington!
However, this line of credit is threatened. According to Roberts:
No country wants to hold a depreciating asset, and no country wants to acquire more depreciating assets. In order to reassure itself, Wall Street claims that foreign countries are locked into accumulating dollars in order to protect the value of their existing dollar holdings. But this is utter nonsense. The U.S. dollar has lost 60 percent of its value during the current administration. Obviously, countries are not locked into accumulating dollars…
Japan and China - indeed, the entire world - realize that they cannot continue forever to give Americans real goods and services in exchange for depreciating paper dollars. China is endeavoring to turn its development inward and to rely on its potentially huge domestic market. Japan is pinning hopes on participating in Asia’s economic development.
The dollar’s decline has resulted from foreigners accumulating new dollars at a lower rate. They still accumulate dollars, but fewer…
Foreigners have continued to accumulate dollars in the expectation that sooner or later Washington would address its trade and budget deficits. However, now these deficits seem to have passed the point of no return.
Faced with the realization that the twin deficits will not be addressed, will foreigners finally stop accumulating dollars and/or significantly reduce dollar holdings, causing a dollar crash?
Dr. Roberts explained why the twin deficits could no longer be fixed:
The sharp decline in the dollar has not closed the trade deficit by increasing exports and decreasing imports. Offshoring prevents the possibility of exports reducing the trade deficit, and Americans are now dependent on imports (including offshored production) for which there are no longer any domestically produced alternatives. The U.S. trade deficit will close when foreigners cease to finance it.
The budget deficit cannot be closed by taxation without driving up unemployment and poverty…
In the 21st century, the U.S. economy has been driven by consumers going deeper in debt. Consumption fueled by increases in indebtedness received its greatest boost from Fed chairman Alan Greenspan’s low interest rate policy. Greenspan covered up the adverse effects of offshoring on the U.S. economy by engineering a housing boom. The boom created employment in construction and financial firms and pushed up home prices, thus creating equity for consumers to spend to keep consumer demand growing.
This source of U.S. economic growth is exhausted and imploding. The full consequences of the housing bust remain to be realized. American consumers lack discretionary income and can pay higher taxes only by reducing their consumption. The service industries, which have provided the only source of new jobs in the 21st century, are already experiencing falling demand. A tax increase would cause widespread distress.
The old-school Republican had this to say about our precarious position:
Sphere: Related ContentSuperpower America is a ship of fools in denial of their plight. While offshoring kills American economic prospects, “free-market economists” sing its praises. While war imposes enormous costs on a bankrupt country, neoconservatives call for more war and Republicans and Democrats appropriate war funds, abroad….
We have arrived at the point where it is no longer bold to say that nothing now can be done. Unless the rest of the world decides to underwrite our economic rescue, the chips will fall where they may.








March 18th, 2008 at 9:35 pm
GOD save us all keep your faith in JESUS and WE shall overcome The meek shall inherit the Earth
March 20th, 2008 at 10:17 pm
Thanks for the inspirational comment jtbbud. I’m afraid that we’re probably going to need some divine intervention…
April 21st, 2008 at 6:08 am
Come on, get real. It is about time that we adjust, to live more equally to the WORLD…
April 21st, 2008 at 9:56 am
Thanks for the comment brian. I agree with what you say. Now, if only there was a way to convince others. And make the process painless.
Too much to ask?