Irwin Stelzer
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Now we know what it must have been like for the manager of a Soviet steel mill called before Joe Stalin to explain why he had not met his production quota. We know that not because we have gained access to still-secret Russian archives, but because we watched top automaker executives abase themselves before Congress in an attempt to get $34 billion (£23.2 billion) in emergency loans, in addition to the $25 billion already promised to subsidise the development of greener vehicles.
First comes praise for the leader. The executives began by thanking Congress for guiding them in the preparation of their long-term restructuring plans. Second come signs that contrition is real. The executives will work without pay - well, for $1 per year - and sell off their corporate jets. Third come excuses. No, it was not bad management but the decline in sales that brought out the begging bowls. Finally, veiled threats - workers will be laid off, families will turn against the government, the entire economy will be adversely affected unless the loans are made.
Uncle Joe probably puffed his pipe and then had the manager shot; congressmen huffed and puffed, preened before the cameras, and will dole out enough money to tide the companies over until the new president and Congress are installed next month. After that, bailout cash will come in instalments, with the companies required to meet performance targets to keep the cash flowing.
Which is only the latest indication that power has shifted from New York to Washington, from bankers and markets to Congress and the president. Consider the saga of Treasury secretary Hank Paulson, who came to Washington after a stint as chief of New York-based Goldman Sachs, a firm now reporting billions in losses after abandoning its investment-banking business model to become a government-sheltered commercial bank. Once the man who raised private-sector capital from his perch atop a Wall Street skyscraper, he now distributes billions in taxpayer funds to private-sector businesses from the Treasury.
If the display of forelock-tugging by Detroit industrialists is not depressing enough, there are reports from all parts of the world to add to America’s gloom. On the international scene, Islamic terrorists slaughter innocent people in Mumbai, targeting especially Brits, Americans and Jews; Vladimir Putin shreds the Monroe Doctrine by sailing his ancient warships into South American waters; Germany’s Angela Merkel, leader of Europe’s largest economy, decides she is not enthusiastic about joining a worldwide stimulus effort; China adopts the beggar-thy-neighbour policy of guiding its currency down to support its export industries; and parts of Africa remain killing grounds.
On the national level, the economy has lost almost 2m jobs this year - more than half a million last month alone. Only the decision by thousands to leave the labour market has kept the unemployment rate from rising to more than 6.7%. House prices continue to decline, share prices engage in nerve-jolting gyrations, millions more Americans rely on food stamps, and retailers gird for a Christmas with sales made at profit-destroying discounts.
The Federal Reserve Board’s recent summary of business activity reports that “overall economic activity weakened across all Federal Reserve districts . . .” Retail sales are down, “tourism spending was subdued . . . reports on the service sector were stelzer@aol.com generally negative . . . manufacturing activity declined . . . new orders were soft . . . commercial real estate declined . . . lending contracted . . .”
For a fuller dose of gloom, look at the latest report from the Institute of Supply Management: service-sector activity is at its lowest level since the survey began in 1997, and manufacturing activity is at a 26-year low.
Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke did nothing to dissipate the gloom when he summarised the US housing market. Some 15%-20% of borrowers are “under water” - the outstanding amount of their mortgages exceeds the reduced value of their homes. One-in-five sub-prime mortgages is “seriously delinquent”. By year end, 2¼m homes will have been repossessed by lenders. Throw in a sharp drop in the construction sector and the picture is one of unrelieved gloom.
Well, almost. Petrol prices have fallen from $4 per gallon to less than $2, and some experts predict further falls to $1 by year end. Every $1 drop adds about $140 billion annually to consumers’ buying power. Perhaps more important, the Fed’s decision to purchase as much as $600 billion in mortgage-backed securities has driven mortgage rates down and led to a spurt in refinancing applications and applications for financing of new home purchases. The Mortgage Bankers Association says applications rose by the largest amount since it began compiling records in 1990.
Other credit markets should also ease a bit when the Fed begins to purchase $200 billion in securities backed by student loans, car loans, credit-card debt and small-business loans. Indeed, credit markets could be calming down.
But there just isn’t enough silver around to line all the clouds that are in clear view. In the longer term, however, the outlook just might be brighter. Much depends on whether government involvement in what was the private sector proves to be permanent.
If so, we will have such paragons as New York senator Charles Schumer telling the car companies what sort of cars to make - his taste runs to battery-driven hybrids that run only 40 miles without a charge and require large subsidies to make them even marginally acceptable to consumers. Or other politicians telling banks that benefit from government funds how to allocate capital, with lower-income Americans and politically well-connected businesses the most likely beneficiaries.
If politicians remain in the saddle and ride the private sector, the entrepreneurs who have powered America’s growth in the past will be displaced by lobbyists with access to the government honeypot. Bad news, that.
Irwin Stelzer is a business adviser and director of economic policy studies at the Hudson Institute.
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