Now, stagflation is here. —Economic growth is slowing down,
M3 money supply numbers, as a measure of overall liquidity in the economy, are in the double digits range, the
yield curve has
inverted and become negative (short term rates higher than longer term
rates) and the U.S. dollar has become one the weakest currencies in the
world. All this as American twin deficits (balance of trade and federal
government budget deficits) are at record levels. —As I pointed out
last year, " A lower currency translates into more imported inflation
and makes it difficult to maintain low interest rates," even if, in due
time, it will improve the trade balance. This means that, for all
practical purposes, monetary policy is also severely constrained in
what it can now accomplish. For all of 2007,
inflation
hit 4.1 percent, which is two-thirds more than in 2006 when inflation
registered at 2.5 percent. Moreover, the surge in wholesale prices
announces even higher inflation in the months ahead.
With inflation being on the rise and
real interest rates
already in negative territory, aggressive monetary stimulus would
likely be counterproductive, because too low interest rates would
encourage capital outflows, pushing the dollar further down, and
translating into more imported inflation. On top of that, one has to
remember that monetary policy shifts take at least nine to twelve
months before impacting the real economy. One has also to keep in mind
that the U.S. operates, more and more, in an international environment,
and is less and less capable of influencing the domestic economy by
manipulating one variable only, such as the interest rate.
Of course, the Fed could have played a better preventive regulatory
role if it had intervened in 2003-04 to reign in the unsound banking
lending practices that have led to the subprime debacle. But the milk
is out of the bottle now, and nothing can erase the damage done to the
housing construction sector and other parts of the economy because of
this lack of oversight.
After seven years of continuous indulging, of borrowing and debt
building, the U.S. federal government is also in a fiscal bind and will
find it difficult to effectively counteract the slowdown in the
economy. Indeed, over the last seven years, the Bush-Cheney
administration has run fiscal deficits on the average of $461.29
billion each year, for a grand total of $3,229 billion of cumulative of
on-budget deficits.
This makes it harder to embark upon a new round of deficit spending to stimulate the economy. For one,
fiscal policy shifts
have even a longer time horizon before impacting the real economy.
Secondly, the coming slowdown and recession will worsen an already high
federal government deficit, as government receipts decline with the
rise in unemployment and the drop in income growth. On the spending
side, the Iraq war, in particular, is a black hole that siphons off
more than $100 billion each year, with no end in sight. Oil prices are
also very high, partly because of high world demand, partly because of
geopolitical instability and partly because of the lowered dollar.
After seven years of foreign policy madness and of empire building on a
mountain of debt, and of public indulging and private gouging, the
financial crisis and credit crunch, the plummeting dollar, the high
price for oil will all contribute to the 2008 economic slowdown, which
is likely to turn into a
recession, during the first half of the year, if it is not already into one since last December. The downturn in the
world stock markets
during this month is another clear indication that something is wrong,
not only with the U.S. economy, but also with the world economy.
All that would seem to be very bad news for George W. Bush's
Republicans, just as it was bad news for the Democratic Carter
administration in the late '70s. Indeed, over the last century, the
U.S. economy has been in a recession four times in the early part of a
presidential election year, according to the National Bureau of
Economic Research. In each of those years — 1920, 1932, 1960 and 1980 —
the party of the incumbent president lost the election.