The Elite are flush with cash, but they refuse
to spend it until consumers start spending — like a game of Chicken. |
Indeed, this approach may have been effective during the
industrial revolution when entrepreneurs used the capital to open American
factories. And surely this method can also work if fair trade agreements
existed that would motivate job growth at home, but that is just not the world
we live in anymore.
These days it seems ludicrous to give the international
robber barons even more when they have exited the U.S. manufacturing stage and have
no intention of returning. They also seem to have no intention of investing
in America until public consumption resumes — admitting that middle-class
consumption drives domestic job growth, not them with even more money in their
already fat pocketbooks.
The Washington
Post reported Friday in a revealing article titled, “With consumers
slow to spend, businesses are slow to hire.”
Corporate profits are soaring. Companies are sitting on
billions of dollars of cash. And still, they’ve yet to amp up hiring or make
major investments — the missing ingredients for a strong economic recovery.
Many Democrats say the economy needs more stimulus. Business
lobbyists and their Republican allies say it needs less regulation and lower
taxes.
But here in the heartland of America , senior executives say
neither side’s assessment fits.
They blame their profound caution on their view that U.S. consumers
are destined to disappoint for many years. As a result, they say, the
economy is unlikely to see the kind of almost unbroken prosperity of the
quarter-century that preceded the financial crisis.
In other words, if we could only get more money to the consumer-class
so they can spend it, then maybe then we can create more jobs. The article
stated that David Speer, CEO of Illinois Tool
Works which employs 60,000 people worldwide, “As long as U.S. consumers
remain deeply strained, he is unlikely to undertake aggressive expansion.”
Siemens Industries’ CEO, Daryl Dulaney, was also quoted as saying ”It’s a different era. Our hiring and investment decisions have to be prudent and reflect that.”
Siemens Industries’ CEO, Daryl Dulaney, was also quoted as saying ”It’s a different era. Our hiring and investment decisions have to be prudent and reflect that.”
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, former Assistant Secretary of
Treasury in a scathing
article this week, describes this “different era” and how Globalism
and transnational corporations have mutated ” the New Economy:”
Wall Street and shareholders and executives of transnational
corporations have made billions by moving 39% of US manufacturing offshore to
boost the GDP and employment of foreign countries, such as China , while impoverishing their
former American work force. Congress and the economics profession have cheered
this on as “the New Economy.”
Bought-and-paid-for-economists told us that “the new
economy” would make us all rich, and so did the financial press. We were well
rid, they claimed, of the “old” industries and manufactures, the
departure of which destroyed the tax base of so many American cities and states
and the livelihood of millions of Americans.
The bought-and-paid-for-economists got all the media forums
for a decade. While they lied, the US economy died.
And in Robert’s another article this week he
describes how the tax and cut debate is flawed in this New Economy:
Perhaps economists lack imagination, or perhaps they don’t
want to be cut off from Wall Street and corporate subsidies, but Social
Security and Medicare are insufficient at their present levels, especially
considering the erosion of private pensions by the dot-com, derivative and real
estate bubbles. Cuts in Social Security and Medicare, for which people
have paid 15 per cent of their earnings all their lives, would result in
starvation and deaths from curable diseases.
Tax increases make even less sense. It is widely
acknowledged that the majority of households cannot survive on one job. Both
husband and wife work and often one of the partners has two jobs in order to
make ends meet. Raising taxes makes it harder to make ends meet — thus more
foreclosures, more food stamps, more homelessness. What kind of economist or
humane person thinks this is a solution?
Ah, but we will tax the rich. The rich have enough
money. They will simply stop earning.
In July I
wrote, “The deficit panic mode is ramping up the rerun political show as
fiscal conservatives echo the age-old mantra ‘cut taxes and spending,’ while
the progressives pretend to be for the little guy and demand more public
spending. However, every economist (and central banker) worth their salt
knows that when the money supply contracts, the economy goes into a depression
— while expanding the money supply to the consumer class stimulates economic
growth.”
Although the monetary base has spiked off the charts, mostly
to absorb toxic financial products by bailing out the banks, the supply of
money has not yet trickled into the real economy. The Elite are flush
with cash, as the Post article states, but they refuse to spend
it until consumers start spending — like a game of Chicken. And as
Dr. Roberts wrote, the rich “already have enough money” and are unlikely to
invest it domestically in this “New Economy.”
Since we have bailed out the top (banksters) with flawed
hopes that they will begin lending again, it seems the money would have been
better spent going directly to the consumer class without the Elite filter.
This would have directly added money supply into the real economy instead
of being hijacked by the criminal financial system that caused the collapse.
Unfortunately, because of the engineered deficits to feed
the military-industrial complex, off-shore multinationals, and the banksters,
we no longer have enough resources should the states or average Americans need
help — but the wars are likely to continue and Social Security is likely to be
cut. God Bless America
— the shining city on the hill.
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