Six down, six to go… trillion dollars!
By Ben Tanosborn
ccun.org, July 8, 2008
America’s economic misery index is fast climbing, yet most people still
discount the current state of economic affairs as an “oil crisis,” or a
“housing crush,” or a “credit crunch”… or simply one more “mild
recession” in the unavoidable cycles of economic life that tune up the
free marketplace in this mighty USA. And even our affable, if
short-sighted, noteworthy economists are turning to their econometric
models of old trying to forecast when and how we’ll start seeing the
next upturn. Incredible fools!
Those econometric models happen to be, as are the professionals making
use of them, in a world somewhere between highly outmoded and totally
obsolete. We insisted on creating an open global economy, one
which requires a compass to navigate about, yet we continue as old
sailors using the currents, the winds and occasionally some celestial
navigation. Our economy is in shambles and we fail to acknowledge
it, using the toil of our future generations to pay for our wars, our
pilfering ways and our over-consumption.
It isn’t just the near 10 trillion-dollars national debt that could
enslave us, but the other untold inconvenient economic truths, in a
properly quantified manner, that could add up to another 10 trillion
that would surely push us, in a global economy, into the purgatory of
Third World status.
Back in 2005 the ASCE (American Society of Civil Engineers) was telling
us of the horrific status of our infrastructure – aviation, bridges,
roads & transit, brownfields, dams & levees, drinking & wastewater and
inland waterways – one which they claimed to require 1.6
trillion-dollars to update-repair. A figure which by now is 20 to
25 percent understated. If to that we add future costs of massive
population relocations due to the anticipated effects of global warming,
together with the investment required to become energy-independent as a
nation. All in all, we could need as much as 10 trillion dollars.
And, of course, we are not even considering any shortfalls in the Social
Security and Medicare programs. And, definitely, we are not making
allowances for future wars
But if all of this weren’t enough Americans were left to contend in the
last year-and-a-half with “phony,” make-belief wealth greater than the
entire national debt.
By spring 2007, capitalist hot air had added at least 12 trillion
dollars of “wealth” in the valuation of assets to America’s high-flying
balloon-economy. Since then, as many as 6 trillion of that
fantasy-greed overvaluation has been erased; however, there are at least
another 6 trillion remaining in inflated values… in housing
(residential, single and multi-family); commercial construction; and
capital markets (combined publicly and privately-held ownership).
How long will it be before sanity returns and the hot air is all let
out? And will America return to an economic “normalcy” of sorts?
It’s anyone’s guess. It could take less than a year if American
politicians take a hands-off approach and let the free market forces
prevail; but that’s not the way our short-term self-serving politicians
operate. Chances are that half of those 6 trillion will be eroded
away in some visible form, with the other half diluted, or mixed, into
the inflation factor so it won’t seem as punishing, although the effect
on purchasing power for most will be the same; yes, inflation, that
court jester serving the rich that allows the few assets held by the
poor and middle class to be purloined from them… while at the same time
their earning power diminishes – as wage increases in a country with a
very weak labor movement, such as the United States, always trail the
rate of inflation.
We seem to be a nation of “short-termers,” who don’t seem to care about
consequences beyond “the today;” and it stands to reason that our
leaders and politicians would act the very same way. For years
many of my friends have equated our “superior” standard of living in a
simplistic way… stating that Europeans were paying 2 to 3 times as much
for gas at the pump than we were, shrugging their shoulders when I told
them that the difference was in taxes that would help keep those
nations’ infrastructure in repair, as well as maintain a vastly superior
system in healthcare, education and social welfare.
This recession, its existence still not acknowledged by some, will not
end with a return to normalcy; not the way normalcy has been defined up
to now. Not for Americans! Regardless how we like to
self-describe ourselves, we are no longer mighty Americans, not in
economic terms; not when it would take an investment in excess of
$50,000 per resident of this nation to give us all a fresh start.
Meantime our misery continues as we see wealth melt away from the phony
values we thought we had in our real estate holdings, stocks and bonds,
401k’s and pension funds; all while we continue to watch our almighty
dollar shrivel before other currencies of the world. Only 6
trillion dollars to go, keep the faith!
Ben Tanosborn
www.tanosborn.com
ben@tanosborn.com
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