While David Stockman stated early this
year with resolute certainty that the debt ceiling debate would blow
congress up and send the nation reeling over the financial precipice, I
avoided jumping on the debt-ceiling bandwagon. While I was convinced
major rifts in the economy would start to show up in the summer, I was
not convinced they would have anything to do with the debt ceiling
debate. If there is anything you can be certain of this in endless
recovery-mode economy, it is that the US will just keep pushing its bags
of bonds up a hill until it can finally push no more. So, I figured
another punt down the road was more likely.
The Debt Ceiling Debate that Didn’t Happen
The reason I didn’t think that debate
would blow apart is that Republicans have more than once experienced the
political reality that comes from taking the nation to the brink of
default or of shutting down government. Each time that kind of thing has
happened, it has hurt Republicans far more than it has hurt Democrats. I
doubted establishment Repubs (the majority) had the stomach to take us
through another credit downgrade, though I’ve noted such an event was
possible.
Unsurprisingly to me, then, Congress
did the only thing it seems to be capable of any more and just kicked
that can a little further down the road with hardly a kerfuffle about
it. Hurricane Harvey made things a lot easier for congress to kick the
can again by providing a good excuse to dodge that unwanted debate on
the basis of massive human suffering that truly did need tending to.
Much-talked-about government shutdown put off for a better time
The debate was entirely avoided even as
the national debt broke over the $20 trillion mark this summer, keeping
US debt at more than 100% of GDP, which is the stratosphere we’ve been
in since 2011.
A
group of progressive economists affiliated with the University of
Massachusetts predicted in 2013 that a debt burden [that reaches 90% of
GDP for five years] would result in an annual growth rate of just 2.2
percent, which means economic stagnation. (
Reason.com)
We’re already well past that five-year
marker. Not surprisiing, then, that the Congressional Budgeting Office
expects economic growth to stay at 1.8% through 2027.
George
Will observed that the difference between 2 percent annual growth and 3
percent annual growth is the difference between a positive,
forward-looking country in which politics recede from everyday life and a
Hobbesian nightmare in which interest groups slug it out over a barely
growing pie. Note that he was talking about 2 percent annual growth,
which seems positively aspirational in the 21st century. (
Reason.com)
Nation caught in a debt trap
The biggest (or most likely threat)
from the national debt is what economists refer to as a debt trap. The
nation can be considered caught in a debt trap if the Federal Reserve
loses the ability to raise interest because the rise in interest would
immediately drown the economy or cause the nation to default on its
debt. So long as interest rates are low, the US government can afford
its huge debt; however, we are now at a point where, if interest rates
rise to historically normal levels, we’re in big trouble. That
means we are in, at least, enough of a debt trap that interest rates can
never be allowed to normalize.
Several debt traps are shaping up besides the one formed from government debt. One is the corporate debt trap,
where corporations have kept earnings per share high by taking out huge
piles of debt year after year to buy back shares. If businesses have to
refinance all this debt at a higher interest rate, they could be in big
trouble. We hear over and over that today’s high stock valuations are
justified by the fact that earnings keep growing; but it is not top-line
revenue that is growing, it is earnings per share, and most of that
“growth” is due to corporations taking out debt in order to buy back
shares and thus reduce the number of shares over which those earnings
are divided. If interest rises, corporations will no longer be able to
afford to buy back shares on debt, and that support for the market will
crash. They might not even be able to afford to pay off the debt they
have already taken on. So, there is another reason the Fed can never
allow interest to normalize by historic standards.
Yet
another debt trap now exists in personal credit where many households
have reached peak debt. Household debt maxed out this summer above the
level it had hit at the peak of the 2007 credit bubble — one more of
those big signs of trouble in the economy that I said we could
anticipate seeing by the time summer rolled around.
Income, in the meantime, has not
improved in order to support this higher level of debt, now at a level
that already proved unsupportable in the past. That puts the US back in
the unstable position where households that already carry all the debt
they can afford can be suddenly sunk if they have any variable-interest
credit cards or an adjustable-rate mortgage. That is yet another reason
the Fed can never allow interest rates to normalize.
Harvard economist Kenneth Rogoff warns that a sudden spike in interest rates is the biggest threat to the global economy….
People
have got used to ultra-low interest rates…. “If something was to
happen that pushes interest rates up, we could see a lot of soft
spots — places where there is high debt — start to unravel,”Rogoff said. (
NewsMax)
It should be no surprise, then, that
the number of credit-card accounts moving into delinquency swung upward
for the third consecutive quarter this summer, a nine-month trend not
seen since the bottom of the 2009 crisis. Yet another summertime crack
in the economy — one that is not large yet but will become large quickly
if the Fed allows interest to move upward any more than it already has.
In short, the national economy is
riddled with high debt everywhere, which leaves every area of the
economy with little wiggle room. So, the one certain thing about the
huge piles of debt that have built up in the last few years is that we
have reached the point where they are actually starting to box the Fed
in to where raising interest to combat inflation will not be possible
because it will cause damage throughout the economy. The tide has
already closed in around the Fed to where it can no longer move to
normalize interest in any direction without going deeper into rising
waters.
S&P’s chief economist, Beth Ann
Bovino, wrote recently that “failure to raise the debt limit would
likely be more catastrophic to the economy than the 2008 failure of
Lehman Brothers and would erase any of the gains of the subsequent
recovery.”
The Great Recession is still with us
If you want to get a sense of how the
debt trap affects the nation’s real net worth, consider what the total
gross domestic product of the United States looks like if you subtract
all that debt that we’ve added each year in order to create that
product:
Note:
Federal Reserve Economic Data sheets express GDP in billions while
Federal Debt is expressed in millions, so in this chart they multiply
their data numbers for GDP by 1,000 in order to express both in terms of
the number of millions (there being a thousand millions in every
billion).
That is essentially the debt trap in a
snapshot. And that’s just subtracting the federal debt from GDP. What
would it look like if we subtracted out all the business debt that was
piled up in the creation of our total domestic product and all the
personal debt? You can see the picture looked positive right up until
the Great Recession hit, and it has deteriorated precipitously ever
since.
Based on this picture we have remained
in a huge depression since the financial crisis. I have been saying all
along that we are still in the Great Recession, which is why I called my
blog
The Great Recession Blog.
The Great Recession still defines our present economy. We never exited;
we just propped the economy up (created positive GDP) with mountains of
debt (federal and corporate) so that we cannot feel how deep that
depression really is; but the debt trap will suck us into this abyss as
soon we can no longer sustain the creation of that debt. We have not
powered out, as the Fed planned. If we had, GDP would be growing faster
than debt.
We are essentially at that point of
stark realization now as the Federal Reserve reduces its reinvestment in
government debt (bonds) this month. (A process slated to start slow but
to become huge by the end of 2018.) Until now, when a government bond
matured during this past decade of Fed stimulus so that the government
became responsible for repaying the bond principle to the Fed, the
government just issued another bond, and the Fed bought that. The new
issuance gave the government the money it needed to pay off the first
bond. Now that the Fed is backing away from buying new government bonds
(starting to divest), the government will be forced to find other
financiers.
That will most likely raise the
interest the US government has to pay in order to attract new buyers of
its bonds, making the national debt less and less sustainable. What
happens, then, to GDP as the government finds it harder to maintain its
huge deficit spending that is propping up GDP (because the things
government buys with that debt have always been included in GDP
calculations)?
This unwinding scenario, of course,
depends on what happens in the rest of the world because the US doesnt
finance all of its debt internally. If Europe, for example, starts to
collapse ahead of the US (as it now contemplates its own unwind), the US
could once again prove to be the best looking horse in the glue factory
and, so, still find ready foreign buyers at low interest for bonds that
have to be issued to someone other than the Fed now that the Fed (the
buyer of last resort) is backing away from repurchasing. That could
purchase the US yet, again, a little more time. (That could just as
easily swing the other way, of course, with the US collapsing first,
sending money fleeing to Europe.)
Another way to look at our present
situation since the Great Recession began — in order to see that its new
economy stays with us — can be seen in this chart:
The trend line in GDP per capita (with
government deficit spending still included in the calculation of GDP)
broke off at the start of the Great Reession, and it clearly never
recovered. It relentlessly sputters along at a decreased rate of growth.
Moreover, it has only been maintained at that much lower trend because
of the massive amounts of government debt and Fed stimulus. So, what
happens to the new trend line when when that money is withdrawn from the
economy and interest is allowed to rise?
The bags full of bonds we are pushing
up the hill will become significantly heavier if interest rises and will
exhaust us, and the present change in Fed repurchasing is a big enough
change to tip that balance (given that the amount on the balance sheet
the Fed is planning to now unwind is equal to more than 20% of GDP).
That is why Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase warned that we’ve never seen
anything on the scale of what is about to happen and had better be
careful.
One essential truth underlying this
blog has always been that you cannot dig your way out of a debt-based
financial crash by digging the debt trap deeper and deeper. I called my
own site The Great Recession Blog because I believe the most
fundamental truth about our current economy is that we are still in the
Great Recession. It broke us for good in that we have not recovered from
that event even with massive amounts of stimulus (beyond anything the
world has ever attempted). GDP looks marginally acceptable but only on
the surface and is clearly continuously now on a lower trend. Underneath
it all is a yawning pit of debt, more than capable of swallowing our
entire economy.