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US faces lost decade

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US faces lost decade

Postby wisconsin_cur » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 11:37:22

Telegraph: US Faces Lost Decade

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he US could be facing a "lost decade" like that suffered by Japan in the 1990s as the markets fail to respond to interest rate cuts and the US Federal Reserve runs out of options, the head of one of the leading private equity firms said today.


I think this is what Mr. Bill has been warning us about.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')r Collins, whose firm has significant expertise in Japan after leading the buyout and turnaround of Japan Telecom, said he believed a "sharp repricing of assets" was the most likely outcome.

But he said: "My fear is that we will prolong it and suffer a death of a thousand cuts after we have exhausted all the options."

"Even without a recession and with all of the policy tools available we still have hundreds of billions of dollars of losses."

Japan has only recently emerged from a period of zero interest rates.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby Concerned » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 12:55:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wisconsin_cur', '[')url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/02/28/bcnusrates12.xml]Telegraph: US Faces Lost Decade[/url]

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he US could be facing a "lost decade" like that suffered by Japan in the 1990s as the markets fail to respond to interest rate cuts and the US Federal Reserve runs out of options, the head of one of the leading private equity firms said today.


I think this is what Mr. Bill has been warning us about.



Decade?

Japan has yet to recover from the credit bubble of 1989 thats getting on to twenty years or 1/5 of a century.

Mises (Austrian economist) said paper money always reverts to it's true value. :)

Enjoy the unwinding, Im already enjoying all the excuses flying around.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby LoneSnark » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 13:19:42

Well, sure, Japan never really returned to prosperity, but it didn't lose the 19 years. Japan's unemployment rate is high by Japanese standards, but low by European standards. In that time it has kept up investment in technology and still posesses one of the most advanced export sectors on the planet.

That said, I doubt the U.S. is capable of suffering as Japan has suffered. In Japan, banks have the right to ask nicely for their investors to sit quietly for the public good. In America, there is no such right: investors can liquidate their bank whenever they want.

So, the Anglo system is prone to boom and bust: as assets falter bombs go off in institutions, deflation is severe (by modern standards), unemployment shoots up, and then after a year the dust settles and greed reasserts itself, as the economy roars back to life.

In all seriousness, I'm not sure which system the average person should prefer; a long slow recession or spurts of boom and collapse?
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby canis_lupus » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 14:12:44

My younger brother (who is a sage and whom I call with all questions economic) feels that the best thing for us is a severe recession once a generation so we don't forget the lessons.

Up until they passed away, all my grandparents talked about the Great Depression all the time. They saved everything -- aluminum foil, salt and pepper packets from fast food joints, glass jars. When asked why, they simply said, "we might need it someday."

I wonder how much effect John and Mary Sixpack have on the booms as opposed to how they are affected by the busts...

Interesting question, Snark.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby Tyler_JC » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 14:44:06

The Japanese Lost Decade is mostly a myth.

It was terrible for investors in Japan but for the average Japanese person, it wasn't the end of the world. They certainly didn't experience a decline in their standards of living that compared to the decline in stock market valuation.

Image

Productivity growth in the 1990s was comparable to the rest of the developed world.

Image

GDP growth was slow but not horrible, especially considering the slow growing (shrinking?) working population .

Image

It was the Japanese stock markets and housing markets that collapsed over that period.

Image

Interesting and tragic correlation (causation?) in this chart. The Japanese unemployment rate increased dramatically in the 1990s...but it's still lower than the unemployment rate of all of Europe and much of the United States.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby heroineworshipper » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 15:31:19

Based on the straight number from bls.gov & the GDP, there was no growth since 2000. Only inflation. Also this period was when the bottom of the generation X birth rate entered its peak earning years. We expect better things from generation Y.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby cube » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 15:58:55

Why is it that whenever anything bad happens people write "financial articles" proclaiming "the market has failed"?

There is no economic/political system that can create a perfect economic world where investors never lose money and consumer goods always cost a dime a dozen. We live in an inherently chaotic world where things go up and down in cycles.

The most asinine example I could remember was when the general public blamed the oil industry and the president for high gas prices after Hurricane Katrina a couple years back. :roll:
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby MD » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 16:11:49

Comparing our situation to Japan's in the 90's is wishful thinking. They had carry-trade, work-ethic and a strong alliance with a growing America.

You think China is going to rescue US now? -- Think again

Work-ethic in America? -- We haven't nearly enough horses-on-task to carry our pigs-on-trough these days. (bacon sammich, anyone?)

As for the carry trade: I'm not sure I fully understand how they managed to make that work, but they appeared to. -- All we have are new bubbles...

Lost decade?

Try lost century.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby mkwin » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 16:13:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o, the Anglo system is prone to boom and bust: as assets falter bombs go off in institutions, deflation is severe (by modern standards), unemployment shoots up, and then after a year the dust settles and greed reasserts itself, as the economy roars back to life


It is not that the anglo system (freemarket?) is prone to booms and busts, it the centrally planned systems never boom in the first place.

It is doubtful the US will get a deflationary problem as bad as the Japanese experience. The Japanese failed to cut rates until years after the first problems began to arise, the company structures were monolithic, and many were kept alive by government bailouts. So you had what was termed 'zombie' corporations, i.e. inefficient and bankrupt companies kept alive. The Japanese are also relatively conservative; their tendency to save prolonged the deflationary spiral. Americans are less prone to save, to put things mildly; so when things begin to improve it is likely they will be spending again.

This crash is actually the best thing that could happen from a peak oil perspective. If you believe, like I do, that the peak will be hit in the 2012-2015 period, the world will be in a far better position to deal with peak oil with the excesses of the boom years deflated away, banks recapitalized and household and businesses behaving more conservatively. 7 years without cheap credit will mean less pain when peak oil arrives and accelerates.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby Concerned » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 17:13:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', '
')In all seriousness, I'm not sure which system the average person should prefer; a long slow recession or spurts of boom and collapse?


A totally different system http://www.ied.info/ where the billions can participate and not just at the indentured servant factory/farm slave level.

The guys are somewhat cornucopian

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Eliminate the monopolization of land, technology, and finance capital through applying Henry George’s principles of full and equal rights, equalize pay for equally productive work both within internal economies and between trading nations, and sharing productive jobs through reducing the employed workweek to 2 to 3 days per week.


Still no discussion or recognition of unending growth on a finite planet as being a problem. Then again they are "economists" :)
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby Concerned » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 17:39:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o, the Anglo system is prone to boom and bust: as assets falter bombs go off in institutions, deflation is severe (by modern standards), unemployment shoots up, and then after a year the dust settles and greed reasserts itself, as the economy roars back to life

It is not that the anglo system (freemarket?) is prone to booms and busts, it the centrally planned systems never boom in the first place.

Russia went from a peasant society and under went FORCED industrialization. Starting with 4% of the capital of the US it built a modern (albeit totalitarian moving toward authoritarian) civilization. The boom in living standard was massive, rail laid, road paved, phones, electricity etc..

Under communist Russia the population was growing not shrinking due to alcoholism and suicide compared to shock therapy capitalism today.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')This crash is actually the best thing that could happen from a peak oil perspective. If you believe, like I do, that the peak will be hit in the 2012-2015 period, the world will be in a far better position to deal with peak oil with the excesses of the boom years deflated away, banks recapitalized and household and businesses behaving more conservatively. 7 years without cheap credit will mean less pain when peak oil arrives and accelerates.


I think Peak Oil is here and this might be the first of the ratchet down in our standard of living. For me this is the beginning of the a new dawn that we just can't keep getting something for nothing.

I would not categorize current events as a crash just yet. If the US goes into a depression it will likely take China then the rest of the world with it. This would certainly take the edge off oil demand.

Oil is one of those things that people will give up last and as Simmons says at 20c a cup still incredibly cheap. If the price of oil goes down due to a recession then it becomes an even bigger bargain.

My bet is asset price deflation and inflation of essentials food and energy will become a feature of US life. So just plain bad for joe six pack and investors will not be happy either.

On the business front i see high input costs and low profit environment due to restrained consumer spending. The producer price index latest figure coming in at 1% for the month way over the expected 0.4% This will be something to keep an eye on in the following months to see if it is sustained or an aberration.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby mkwin » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 20:34:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussia went from a peasant society and under went FORCED industrialization. Starting with 4% of the capital of the US it built a modern (albeit totalitarian moving toward authoritarian) civilization. The boom in living standard was massive, rail laid, road paved, phones, electricity etc..


The standard of living in the communist era was absolutely terrible. If people were not being forced to work in collective farms they were living in soulless concrete cities. Compare East Germany to West Germany, North Korea to South Korea surely you are not using a failed system as an example for the success of centrally planned economies? China was poor while they maintained their archaic communist economy. As soon as they began to loosen their central control of property rights it has blown up, 400 million people lifted out of extreme poverty. Capitalism > communism. If you want more examples please ask. :)

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think Peak Oil is here


Other than the plateau since 2005, which is one of many plateau in the history of oil production, there is no evidence for this yet. Lots of new capacity is planned and recent months have seen preliminary increases in production. Given what is coming through the pipeline, I do not see how production will begin its final decline before 2011-2012 at the earliest.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby mos6507 » Thu 28 Feb 2008, 21:09:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', '
')A totally different system http://www.ied.info/ where the billions can participate and not just at the indentured servant factory/farm slave level.


What an unfortunate acronym they chose.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby LoneSnark » Fri 29 Feb 2008, 03:28:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A') totally different system http://www.ied.info/ where the billions can participate and not just at the indentured servant factory/farm slave level.

To be as productive as we want to be we need those in charge to have the incentive to be productive, which usually means property must be owned. And once it is owned, we will be unequal. We have six thousand years of historical evidence defending systems of private property, what does the IED have?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussia went from a peasant society and under went FORCED industrialization. Starting with 4% of the capital of the US it built a modern (albeit totalitarian moving toward authoritarian) civilization. The boom in living standard was massive, rail laid, road paved, phones, electricity etc..

Centrally planned economies came into fashion when they did for a reason and they died when they did for a reason. At the start of the 20th century it became quite possible to centrally plan the commanding heights of the economy, in effect having everything owned and operated by one corporation. Agriculture proved too difficult for managers, but the rest was possible.

As such, while a centrally planned economy with 1920's technology would never be as productive as a free economy with the same technology, the difference would not be substantial.

To see how well an activity can be centrally planned, all we need to do is look how it is done in a free economy. Steel, railroads, textiles, armaments, telephones, mining, oil, etc, tended to be made by ever fewer numbers of consolidating companies in the west. As such, we can assume a centrally planned economy can be operated similarly well, since it is nothing more than consolidating everything into a single company.

However, as the 20th century progressed new technologies failed to fall into the same model. Computer makers, which originally consisted of just IBM, quickly broke up and have not regrouped: motherboards alone have a hundred manufacturers. Each component part tends to be made by a separate company. But the real killer was precision machine tools, which are used by big manufacturers, but are often made by small companies which make just a few of the high tech parts which are then assembled to make complete machines. Gone are the days when Henry Ford himself personally designed every machine in his assembly plant.

As this is how things are done in a free market, we can see why a centrally planned economy would fail. As Intel cannot efficiently make an entire desktop computer all by itself, we can assume the Soviet Union could not efficiently make an entire desktop computer. Similarly, as American Steel did efficiently produce steel railroad track while owning all the steps of production from coal mines to rolling miles, we can assume the Soviet Union was capable of doing so as well. Regretfully, in today's world far more economic growth comes from the former rather than the latter, which is why the people gave up on communism when they did.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby MrBill » Fri 29 Feb 2008, 07:08:28

Thanks for the graphs, Tyler, very interesting. 'The Lost Decade' is a tagline just like 'Dutch Disease', The Washington Consensus' or 'das deutsche Wirtschaftswunder'. They tend to obscure as much as they illimuninate. Sometimes they can be downright misleading or evolve to mean something completely different.

Since the busting of their property bubble Japan has suffered through almost twenty years of low, slow, no growth, and three going on four official recessions. As you point out the Nikkei is about one-third of its prior level, and property prices declined by over 50% leaving residents with 50-year mortgages. In comparison what is happening in America at the moment is recession-lite. Wait till the real pain begins.

What little growth Japan has had has been mainly export-lead, and exports do not generate the same level of GDP growth as domestic consumption, so living standards in Japan have stagnated. You can argue whether they stagnated at a very high level compared to other nations or not, but they have not been going up. Meanwhile, government spending has left Japan with the highest debt per GDP of any developed country.

Image

Low unemployment is a poor measure of productivity when used alone. If I hire everyone to sweep the streets using straw brooms they are not unemployed, but they are also not productive. Countries like Germany have both very high unemployment, but also very high levels of labor productivity per worker.

Japan's old employment for life policies meant many unproductive workers were simply kept on, but they stopped producing anything of value. Even if in nominal terms productivity goes up in aggregate that still means that those unproductive workers are mainly putting in face time versus creating anything of value. While firms that kept on older, less productive workers were also not able to absorb newer, younger workers entering the workforce either. So youth unemployment and critically under-employment means that generation never got a chance to grow and develop either.

Why Japan keeps failing

America is having its own Japan Moment. Basically, it has been accruing current account deficits for the past thirty some years. That is a net wealth transfer from the domestic US economy to the rest of the world year in and year out. It would easily take at least fifteen years and a lot of pain before that deficit could be brought down to more managable levels much less eliminated. But America is no Turkey with an average age of 15-years old where the government can count on those teenagers entering the workforce in the next 15-years and contributing to economic growth. Instead America faces the prospect of 75-million Baby Boomers leaving the workforce (full-time) and entering retirement. That will be a further drain on public resources to pay those pensions and healthcare benefits.

Image

I do not doubt that America has a dynamic economy. It is not as structurally rigid as Japan's was/is. The third largest country in the world with a social democracy, market economy and 300 million consumers is bound to create wealth, and lots of it. But no matter how much wealth they created already they have not been living within their means either. That simply means that they need an equivalent amount of future growth just to pay for past consumption. That's just treading water not moving forward! ; - )
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby Concerned » Fri 29 Feb 2008, 08:26:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ussia went from a peasant society and under went FORCED industrialization. Starting with 4% of the capital of the US it built a modern (albeit totalitarian moving toward authoritarian) civilization. The boom in living standard was massive, rail laid, road paved, phones, electricity etc..


The standard of living in the communist era was absolutely terrible.

In Russia the standard of living actually allowed more people to live than the current capitalist mess, thanks in large part to "shock therapy"
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') If people were not being forced to work in collective farms they were living in soulless concrete cities.

Hence my mention of FORCED industrialization.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') Compare East Germany to West Germany, North Korea to South Korea surely you are not using a failed system as an example for the success of centrally planned economies?

What I was pointing out was that centrally planned economies can produce growth and massive increase in measurable standards of living e.g. rail, housing, electricity, phones, education, medical, other durable goods.

If at first you don't succeed try again. Perhaps the US can show us how it's done. Marx always said that communism would be a democratic option and would rise from the wealthiest nation. Perhaps after the latest boom bust or we might have to wait for an even bigger cycle?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')China was poor while they maintained their archaic communist economy. As soon as they began to loosen their central control of property rights it has blown up, 400 million people lifted out of extreme poverty. Capitalism > communism. If you want more examples please ask. :)


400 million people lifted out of extreme poverty? Thats an interesting statement. I guess if you can grow your own crops, live a low energy lifestyle, have clothing and shelter it must be "extreme" poverty. I guess working for a few dollars a day so you can watch MTV or buy an iPod (if you're very lucky), while laying your farmland to waste, polluting your rivers and aquifers and putting so much pollution in the air you can't see the sun and it no longer rains porperly is getting out of extreme poverty. (Price of everything value of nothing) What the heck they have a huge GDP and some of them even shop Prada and BMW

I happen to tentatively agree with some of your examples, I could compare many a capitalist south American economy against say communist Cuba or Russia and declare failure of capitalism in that instance, it's not that simple. I believe you have to try and see what worked why? and take the best elements of both systems. Even Ronald Regan an arch anti-communist said that Russia did alot of good things for it's people under communism.

Too bad you are doing nothing more than cheer leading for a particular "ism". Sadly this is what the world is coming to including presidential elections sliding into irrelevant superficial sloganeering. I guess really thinking is actually painful and people regress to the security and comfort of their own myths and superstitions. Including the untrammeled greatness of so called "free" markets and capitalism.

And although capitalism may have many positive traits far greater than communism it is also deeply flawed. Look at how the US and China are evolving for some of it's best and worst excesses.

Take care hope you're not burdened with too much debt.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby Concerned » Fri 29 Feb 2008, 08:35:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mos6507', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', '
')A totally different system http://www.ied.info/ where the billions can participate and not just at the indentured servant factory/farm slave level.


What an unfortunate acronym they chose.


To be fair they were around before the 2nd Iraq war.

The acronym stands for Institute of or for Economic Democracy.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby Concerned » Fri 29 Feb 2008, 08:43:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'T')he Japanese Lost Decade is mostly a myth.

It was terrible for investors in Japan but for the average Japanese person, it wasn't the end of the world. They certainly didn't experience a decline in their standards of living that compared to the decline in stock market valuation.


Hmmmm.... I don't recall any posters saying it was the end of the world for the average Japanese person?
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby MrBill » Fri 29 Feb 2008, 10:00:37

Concerned, I want to defend a social-democracy with a free, open and transparent market economy as being the best of all solutions in terms of wealth creation, raising living standards and giving people a free choice.

I do not want to defend the short-comings of such a system or in fact defend abuses of it. As we have seen in history every system has its faults and abuses can occur anywhere. Just coincidently more often in totalitarian regimes where there is less choice and less freedom.

My feeling is that centrally planned economies are simply not very creative. So they can nationalize an industry. They can carry on industrial espionage to steal the latest technology from their rivals. But they are just really crap at thinking up anything on their own. They can exploit today's technology, but they are not very good at inventing tomorrow's.

This is natural as in a market economy you have thousands and millions of minds addressing problems whereas in a centrally planned economy you may have very few thinkers in a position of authority that can implement their ideas. And for ideological reasons sensible solutions may be ignored.

That is not to say that this cannot also happen when for instance a government stubbornly refuses to build public transportation also out of ideological reasons. That does happen. It is called short-sightedness and it is a human trait. The difference I suppose being that usually those leaders are turfed eventually by a dissatisfied electorate, while in a communist country those leaders are usually insulated from the results of their decisions.

No system is perfect, but I would sooner make my own decisions rather than have someone make them for me in their best interest, not mine.
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Re: US faces lost decade

Postby LoneSnark » Fri 29 Feb 2008, 12:06:07

MrBill, Tyler got it right, not you. You posted a graph of "nominal GDP" which is a bad measurement, as it is not inflation adjusted, or in this case deflation adjusted. This is why Productivity, which is what the average person really cares about, showed admirable growth in Japan compared to other nations. Yes, the system experienced deflation every year, but wages are falling slower than prices. Judging from Tyler's graph, prices fell 2.5% faster than wages, compared to America where wages grew 1.8% faster than prices. Draw your conclusion as to which scenario you prefer, but there is no doubt that the average person in 2000 was better off than in 1990.
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