By Dudley P. Baker, Jr.
June 1 , 2006
www.preciousmetalswarrants.com
As I have mentioned in previous articles, I have the most informed, intelligent and savvy subscribers one could ask for. One of them, Lorimer Wilson, previously wrote me with his insights on âOur Worst Nightmare â the Puncture of the Current US Housing Bubble.â It was very well received when published by me recently and he has just sent me more information which I think you will find timely and of particular interest.
Together we have compiled a remarkable summary of the ominous warnings, dire predictions and perceived devastating consequences that the vast majority of economists, financial analysts, economic research firms and financial commentators are saying about our current economic situation and what is most likely to unfold in the months and years ahead. It is a must read to more clearly understand and appreciate the financial state of the union, the impact it will likely have on various investments, and how better to allocate ones assets.
Nobody has a crystal ball, but to just ignore the following warning signs and hope that everything will turn out okay would simply be foolish.
Below is Part 3 of Wilsonâs 6-part article.
Ominous Warnings and Dire Predictions of Worldâs Financial Experts â Part 3
God-Awful Fiscal Storm
Laurence Kotlikoff, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Economics at Boston University, Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and President of Economic Security Planning, Inc., has served as a consultant to the IMF and the World Bank, major U.S. companies and the governments of Russia and Britain and has also authored or co-authored 11 books of which his latest, co-authored with Scott Burns, âThe Coming Generational Storm,â is particularly troubling in its conclusions.
According to Kotlikoff and Burns, âif our government continues on the course it has set, weâll see skyrocketing tax rates, drastically lower retirement and health benefits, high inflation, a rapidly depreciating dollar, unemployment, and political instability. As they say, bad things happen to good countries, and we are heading into one God-awful fiscal storm, the full dimensions of which are hard to fathom.
To eliminate the fiscal gap between the governmentâs future receipts and future expenditures, assuming future generations faced the same net tax rates as current generations would require, in combination, a 17% increase in income taxes, a 24% increase in payroll taxes, a reduction in federal purchases by 26%, and a cut in Social Security and Medicare benefits by 11% by 2008. If such a combination was just not possible the same result could be achieved by immediately either raising federal income taxes by 69%, or raising payroll taxes by 95%, or permanently cutting federal discretionary spending by 106%, which, of course, is infeasible, or we could cut, immediately and permanently, Social Security and Medicare benefits by 45%. Talk about castor oil! Any delay would add significant cost as there would be interest on the accumulating debt.
Once the financial markets catch on to the depths of these problems, they will quickly dump their holdings of U.S. Treasury and other bonds. Precisely when the markets will wise up is hard to say, which is why long-term U.S. interest rates could start to soar at any time.â
Unwelcome Economic Spiral
Maya MacGuineas, President of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget and Director of the Fiscal Policy Program, has said âWe face tremendous fiscal challenges. We have no plan for how to eliminate the deficit and the Baby Boomersâ retirement, which will only make our fiscal situation deteriorate more quickly, is just around the corner. The political class has not yet woken up to the seriousness of these tremendous challenges. Will it be a financial market meltdown that finally forces their hand?
The United States is now heavily dependent on lenders from abroad to finance our massive levels of borrowing. Concern over Americaâs fiscal position would lead to a selling off of dollars, stocks and bonds, rising interest rates, the bursting of the housing bubble, and a slowdown in not just our economy, but the worldâs economy. Another unsettling scenario is that private rating agencies downgrade the US debt based on our high levels of borrowing and unfunded liabilities. A downgrade of the U.S.âs debt would surely cause bondholders to dump their debt, leading to an abrupt jump in interest rates and potentially setting off an unwelcome economic spiral.
Even if there is no financial crisis, or it is closer to a blip than a meltdown, ongoing budget deficits drain the economy of investment capital, lead to lower standards of living in the future and squeeze out other areas in the budget as interest payments mount. In short, deficits are a reflection of our spending more than we can afford and forcing our children to pay the bill. What is required to fix the situation is to raise taxes in the short-run and rein in entitlement spending in the long-run so that both are more in line with historical norms.â
A Time Bomb
Mike Hoy, an economics professor at the University of Guelph (Ontario, Canada) and a Ph.D graduate from the London School of Economics, âbelieves the public as a whole will be in for some very disappointing times. Over the last year there have been several events which have developed and continue to develop which, in my opinion, are the triggers that will bring an end to many of the commonly accepted practices of our government and financial system. The end result will change the future and the lives of everyone for as long as we live. I cannot emphasize enough the importance of understanding that the way of life the world has accepted as normal for the last two decades is nothing more than a time bomb whose fuse has now been lit. For those who do not understand or refuse to accept that the last two decades ushered in the end of the new economy rather than the beginning; then the fate of those caught in the path of this blast will not be pretty.