http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com
http://albertpeia.com/unsustainable.htm
‘When it comes to explaining the problems
with our economy, one of the hardest things to do is to get people to
understand that we are living in an economic fantasy world that is completely
and totally unsustainable. As a nation we consume far more than we
produce, we spend far more than we bring in, our debt is growing much faster
than our GDP is, our entitlement programs are growing at an exponential rate,
our retirement system is a Ponzi scheme and the Federal Reserve is printing
money as if there is no tomorrow in a desperate attempt to paper over all of
our problems. But we have all grown so accustomed to the debt-fueled
prosperity that we have been enjoying for so many decades that it actually
feels "real" to most of us. Unfortunately, history has shown us
that it is simply not possible to grow your debt faster than your economy
indefinitely. At some point your consumption will drop back to a level
more equal to your production. Sometimes that adjustment can be
gradual, but other times it can be extremely painful. In our case, we
have been living way above our means for so long that it would take a major
economic miracle just to keep our adjustment to an "exceedingly
painful" level. We are living in the largest debt-fueled prosperity
bubble in the history of the world, and our unsustainable economy is going to
crash and burn at some point. Hopefully it will be later rather than
sooner, but a crash is most definitely coming.
The
following are some of the reasons why the bubble economy that we are living in
right now is unsustainable....
The Trade Deficit
Most
Americans do not really understand what a "trade deficit" is, but it
is at the very core of our economic problems.
Basically,
we buy far more stuff from the rest of the world than they buy from us.
We send them huge piles of our money, and they send us oil that we burn in our
cars and cheap plastic products that we end up throwing away. We keep
doing this month after month after month, and this is systematically making us
poorer as a nation.
In
2012, it is being projected that our trade deficit will fall somewhere between
500 billion and 600 billion dollars.
At
this point, the United States has a trade imbalance that is more than 7 times larger
than any other nation on earth has.
Overall,
the United States has run a trade deficit of more than 8 trillion dollars with the
rest of the world since 1975.
Instead
of going out of the country, those 8 trillion dollars could have gone to U.S.
businesses and U.S. workers. In turn, taxes would have been paid on those
8 trillion dollars and our debt problems would not be nearly as dramatic today.
But
we didn't do that.
We
chose to allow tens of thousands of businesses, millions of jobs and trillions
of dollars of our national wealth to leave the country.
Stupid
move, eh?
But
both political parties have been endlessly pushing the "free trade"
agenda. They have both promised that it would bring us tremendous
prosperity.
Well,
just take a look at our formerly great manufacturing cities today. Do they
look prosperous to you?
It
turns out that Ross Perot was right when he warned about the "giant
sucking sound" that would happen if NAFTA was implemented.
When
NAFTA was pushed through Congress in 1993, the United States had a trade surplus
with Mexico of 1.6 billion dollars. By 2010, we had a trade deficit
with Mexico of 61.6 billion dollars.
That
didn't work out so well, did it?
What
about opening up trade with China?
Back
in 1985, our trade deficit with China was approximately 6 million
dollars (million with a little "m") for the entire
year.
In
2011, our trade deficit with China was 295.4 billion
dollars. That was the largest trade deficit that one nation has had
with another nation in the history of the world.
Our
trade with China is tremendously unbalanced. Today, U.S. consumers spend approximately 4 dollars on
goods and services from China for every one dollar that Chinese consumers spend
on goods and services from the United States.
This
is a huge reason why shiny new factories are going up all over China, and our
blue collar cities are turning into rotting war zones filled with unemployed
people.
If
you can believe it, the United States has actually lost more than 56,000 manufacturing
facilities since 2001.
Until
we fix the trade deficit we are going to continue bleeding factories, jobs and
national wealth at an astounding pace.
The National Debt
It
is being projected that U.S. GDP will grow at a rate of about 2.2 percent this
year.
The
problem is that our federal budget deficit will be somewhere around 7 percent
of GDP this year.
With
each passing day we are losing ground. No other nation on earth has been
able to run up debt like this indefinitely, and neither will we.
Does
this chart look like a healthy situation to you?....
Sadly,
all of this government debt is just about the only thing holding up our economy
at this point. Since Barack Obama has been in the White House, the U.S.
national debt has increased by about 5.5 trillion dollars. Of course the
Obama administration has spent a lot of that money on incredibly stupid stuff,
but it still gets into the pockets of average Americans that in turn spend it
on food, gas, mortgage payments, etc.
If
we could go back in time and suck that 5.5 trillion dollars of extra spending
out of the economy we would be in a horrible economic depression right now.
But
that does not mean that borrowing and spending all of that money was the right
thing to do. We have stolen it from our children and our grandchildren
and we are going to stick them with the bill.
That
is highly immoral and it is a national disgrace.
Yet
we continue to do it because we can't help ourselves. We are ruining the
future of this nation in order to make the present more pleasant for ourselves.
As
I noted yesterday, the U.S. national debt jumped more on the very first day of fiscal
year 2013 than it did from 1776 to 1941 combined.
We
are completely addicted to debt and we can't stop. We know that we are
destroying the future of the United States but we have absolutely no
self-discipline.
By
the end of Barack Obama's first term, the U.S. government will have accumulated
more debt during those four years than it did from the time that George
Washington took office to the time that George W. Bush took office.
But
most Americans seem fine with that.
Most
Americans don't even really know why this is happening, and most don't really
seem too concerned about finding out. They just want the good times to continue
to roll.
Sadly,
the truth is that our financial system is designed to create government debt. It is one
of the primary purposes of the Federal Reserve system.
At
this point, the U.S. national debt is more than 5000 times larger than it was
when the Federal Reserve was first created.
So
I guess you could say that the Federal Reserve is doing a good job of what it
was designed to do.
And
until we change the system things are going to continue to get worse until the
entire system collapses.
Boston
University economist Laurence Kotlikoff is warning that we are basically facing
financial armageddon if something is not done. Kotlikoff speaks of a
"fiscal gap" which he defines as "the present value difference
between projected future spending and revenue". His calculations
have led him to the conclusion that the United States is facing a fiscal gap of
222 trillion dollars in the
years ahead.
Where
in the world are we going to get an extra 222 trillion dollars?
Entitlements
Every
society needs a safety net, but we are rapidly getting to the point where there
are going to be more Americans on the safety net than there are Americans
supporting it.
Back
in 1983, less than 30 percent of all Americans lived in a home where at least
one person received financial assistance from the federal government.
Today,
that number is up to an all-time record of 49 percent.
Many
people don't believe me when I tell them that more than 100 million
Americans are enrolled in at least one welfare program run by the federal
government right now, and that does not even count Social Security or Medicare.
But
it is actually true.
Overall,
there are nearly 80 different "means-tested
welfare programs" that the federal government is currently running.
But
of course the biggest financial burdens are Medicaid, Medicare and Social
Security. All three are on course to become completely and totally
unsustainable.
For
example, the number of Americans on Medicaid soared from 34 million in 2000 to 54 million in 2011, and it is being
projected that Obamacare will add 16 million more Americans
to the Medicaid rolls.
Ouch.
Well,
what about Medicare?
Sadly,
Medicare is even more frightening.
As
I wrote recently, it is being projected that
the number of Americans on Medicare will grow from 50.7 million in 2012 to 73.2 million in 2025.
How
in the world can we afford that?
At
this point, Medicare is facing unfunded liabilities of more than 38 trillion
dollars over the next 75 years. That comes to approximately $328,404 for each and every household in
the United States.
Are
you ready to contribute your share?
Social
Security is in really bad shape as well.
At
the moment, approximately 56 million Americans are collecting Social Security
benefits.
By
2035, that number is projected to soar to a whopping 91 million.
Overall,
the Social Security system is facing a 134 trillion dollar shortfall over the next
75 years.
Where
are we going to get that money?
Total Debt
Of
course the national debt is not out only debt problem. All over the
country there are state and local governments that are on the verge of
insolvency. Corporations and financial institutions are leveraged like
crazy. And of course consumers have absolutely gorged on debt over the
past several decades.
As
a result, we are drowning in debt from sea to shining sea.
The
good news is that our GDP is more than 12 times larger than it
was 40 years ago.
The
bad news is that the total amount of debt in our country is more than 30
times larger than it was 40 years ago....
Obviously
this is something that cannot go on forever.
We
simply cannot keep accumulating debt much faster than our economy is growing.
Nobody
knows exactly when the "adjustment" is coming, but it most definitely
will arrive at some point.
Money Printing
The
Federal Reserve has attempted to monetize many of our economic problems by printing gigantic mountains of
money in recent years.
The
Federal Reserve is at the very heart of our economic problems, but most
Americans don't realize this. It was the Federal Reserve that created the
conditions for the housing bubble, and it was the Federal Reserve that badly
mismanaged the response when that bubble burst. The Federal Reserve
decides how much money will be printed and what our interest rates will
be. The Federal Reserve lends out trillions of dollars to the banks that they
like, and other banks they let die. The Federal Reserve picks winners and
losers in our economy, and most of the time that means good things for the big
Wall Street banks and bad things for the rest of us.
In
a desperate attempt to keep our unsustainable financial system from collapsing,
the Federal Reserve has decided to start printing unprecedented amounts of
money. Just look at what this has done to the monetary base....
And
QE3
really hasn't even started to kick in yet.
So
how bad will that chart look after QE3 has been adding another 40 billion
dollars a month to the financial system for a while?
You
know, the Weimar Republic was absolutely convinced that they were doing the
right thing by printing lots of money too.
But
in the end that didn't work out very well for them at all....
So
should we really be celebrating the fact that the Federal Reserve is going down
the same path that the Weimar Republic did?
Demonocracy
has released a great new graphic that does a wonderful job of illustrating just
how huge the amounts of money involved in QE3 are going to be. If you
have not seen it yet, you can view the graphic right here.
The
rest of the world is watching the games that we are playing with our
currency. Right now we think that we are getting away with it, but what
we are doing is not sustainable. At some point the rest of the world will
totally lose confidence in the U.S. dollar, and when that happens the U.S.
dollar could easily lose its status as the primary
reserve currency of the world.
If
that were to happen the coming shift in our standard of living would happen
much more rapidly.
Please
share this article with as many people as you can. We need to wake people
up and get them to understand how incredibly vulnerable our financial system
really is. We are on a path that is unsustainable any way that you want
to look at it, and if something dramatic is not done our economy is going to
experience an unprecedented collapse.
So
what happens if nothing is done and everything crashes all around us?
Well,
I hope that you are prepared because it isn't going to be pretty.’