Greenspan's Bubble Greenspan's Bubble: What Hath Alan Wrought? by Bill Bonner The Daily Reckoning London, England Wednesday, November 23, 2005 Bill Bonner examines the career of Alan Greenspan and discusses how he changed the entire US economy into "a monstrous economic Bubble." --------------------- Inside jokes in the staged economy...“I’m not an economist, but I play one on TV...
Wal-Mart now wears the crown that used to sit atop GM’s head...the difference between creating wealth and using it up...
Gold! Gold! Gold!...we’re only at the beginning...and more!
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Instead, most of the rubes in the audience sit on the edge of their seats, convinced that they are watching a heroic epic rather than a low farce. The trouble is that the spectators are beginning to squirm in their seats. Real wages went down in 2004 by 2.3%. Estimates have them going down this year, too. On stage, the comedians tell us that there is no inflation worth mentioning. But the crowd is not so sure. They’ve noticed that the things they must buy are getting more expensive. Gasoline is $2 a gallon. Health care is at least 10% higher than a year ago. And where in the nation can you buy a house for less than twice what you paid five years ago? Many of the theatregoers have noticed something else, to good jobs are hard to find. G.M. is cutting 30,000 employees. Delphi is knocking 24,000 off the payroll. Ford is laying off workers, too - 3,000 of them. On stage, we’re told not to worry about it. “America’s dynamic economy is the greatest job creation machine ever built,” says one actor, impersonating an economist. But if so many new jobs were being created, why are people earning less money? Globalization is a great thing; we do not doubt it. But its virtue is a curse to most of America’s lumpen working stiffs. Here in London, we see how quickly labor rates adjust to opportunity. After weeks of neglect, our little maisonette needed a cleaning. So, we called Estella, recently of Columbia, now of Brixton. In Paris, the housekeeping is done by people from the East - from Poland or Bulgaria, working in a gray area of pan-European labor regulation. As near as we can tell, here in London, the floors are swept by a vast underground of men and women from Latin America, who are paid in cash, no questions asked. This past Saturday, Estella labored for all of five hours and demanded 45 pounds in payment - about $85. Having come from Latin America recently, this seemed provocatively expensive; it was as much as she might earn in an entire week in her home country. But in London, we have yet to encounter a price for anything that seemed reasonable. A pity we couldn’t outsource the cleaning work. As time and technology advance, however, the world is discovering more and more things that can be outsourced. Automobile manufacturing, for example...and call centers...and legal work (a friend is opening an office in Bangalore to do American legal firms’ back-office work)...and many, many other things that used to be done in America. As more and more of this work finds lower-cost labor to its liking, what does that leave at home? We can clean each other’s houses! Or, we can sell each other things that are made in China! Emblematic of the shift of the American economy from production to consumption is the ascension of Wal-Mart to the throne of national commerce. Wal-Mart now wears the crown that used to top G.M.’s head. Wal-Mart also now notices what Henry Ford noticed nearly a century ag the more money you pay your workers, the more they can buy from you. Ford hiked wages in his factories to the un-heard level of $5 a day. Now, Wal-Mart supports an increase in the minimum wage to well over $5 an hour. The increase would cost the company millions, but it would also force its competitors to pay more, too. The move would put more money in low-wage worker’s pockets (which they could empty, no doubt, at Wal-Mart). But there is a big difference between raising wages in industry, and raising them in retail; there’s an even bigger difference between willingly increasing your own costs, and forcing everyone to do so (through minimum wage laws). It is the difference between creating wealth, and using it up. It is the difference between an economy on the way up, and one trying to dig in its heels on the way down. It is the difference between an honest man on a factory floor, and a windy mountebank on a gilded stage. More news from our team at The Rude Awakening... -------------- Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin, reporting from opposite sides of the Atlantic: "Quack economists at the Bureau of Labor Statistics do to numbers what guards at Guantanamo did to prisoners. They rough them up so badly, they are ready to say anything..." For the rest of this story, and for more market insights, see today’s issue of The Rude Awakening: Torture, Abuse and Deception --------------- Bill Bonner, back in London with more opinions... *** Gold, Gold, Gold! Again, the yellow metal rose yesterday. It is now so far above our $450 buying target that we can barely see it. Our friend Steve Sjuggerud wrote yesterday to tell us what idiots we are. He begins by quoting us, "Right now, we rather regret it. Because gold has, so far, been unwilling to correct to our current buying target: $450. This leaves us to wonder whether we should buy at the market price - whatever it is - or continue waiting." Then, he offers advice: Bill...stop wondering. Buy. Gold is cheap. “Adjusted for inflation, gold today is at the same price it was 30 years ago. Gold peaked at above $1,400 an ounce in 1980, adjusted for inflation. So we're two-thirds below the price 25 years ago. “Bill, you're quibbling over 6% here. When gold's at $500...or $600...you'll wish you hadn't. “Look, there isn't much value to be found around the world right now. Stocks aren't particularly cheap, real estate is getting ridiculous in most places, and you sure won't get rich in bonds. When things are like this, gold looks better and better as a safe store of wealth. “We're in a bull market in gold. It's a secular bull market, which is just a fancy way of saying the general uptrend will stay in place for many years. And we're only near the beginning.” *** Resource Trader Alert’s Kevin Kerr chimes in: “The market for raw resources is raging. Because of China. Because of India. Because of surging oil demand and plunging energy supplies and the crushing effect of hurricanes on offshore U.S. oil. “Huge events can create huge tension in commodity prices. Hurricane Katrina caused 17 different commodities to spike...and pushed the Commodities Research Bureau index to its highest level since November 1980. “Oil prices shot up 70% just after the storm. Over 27% of America's coffee beans got stuck in New Orleans ports. Over 750,000 bags of coffee were destroyed, sending coffee prices up 10%. Sugar cane crops were destroyed. Over 1 million feet of stored wood were destroyed, sending lumber prices up 7%. Nearly half the zinc stockpile for the London Metals Exchange was destroyed in New Orleans warehouses.” Jim Rogers, who made his own fortune in the resource market and who teamed up with George Soros to launch the hugely successful Quantum Fund even says, "People who have always ignored and scoffed at commodities can no longer afford to do so." [Ed. Note: Because of the skyrocketing world demand for just about every raw resource on Earth, along with big events (like hurricanes), as tragic as they are for the people involved, tear wide open a whole new run of opportunity for smart resource traders. If you're in the right place at the right time, you can get very rich. That's a trend Kevin Kerr intends to monetize for you with the help of his private Resource Trader Alert service... Resource Trader’s Thanksgiving Special - Only 5 Days Left! --- Advertisement --- Double and Triple Gains with Stock Split Strategies!!
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