Few others are better equipped to comprehend both the insider's and
outsider's perspective on what the government, the Fed, and the banks are doing
in this so-called 'recovery' we are experiencing than David Stockman. Nowhere
does he detail this better than Chapter
31 of his new book 'The Great Deformation'. In this first part (of a
four-part series), he explains just what happened after the US economy
liquidated excess inventory and labor and hit its natural bottom in June 2009.
Embarking upon a halting but wholly unnatural "recovery," doing nothing
but igniting yet another round of rampant speculation in the risk asset classes.
The precarious foundation of the Bernanke Bubble is starkly evident
in the internal composition of the jobs numbers.
Via David
Stockman's book The Great Deformation,
After the US economy liquidated excess inventory and labor and hit
its natural bottom in June 2009, it embarked upon a halting but wholly unnatural
“recovery.” The artificial prolongation of the Bush tax cuts, the 2
percent payroll tax abatement and the spend-out of the Obama stimulus pilfered
several trillions from future taxpayers in order to gift America’s present day
“consumption units” with the wherewithal to buy more shoes and soda pop.
But there has been no recovery of the Main Street economy where it counts;
that is, no revival of breadwinner jobs and earned incomes on the free
market. What we have once again is faux prosperity. In fact, the
current Bernanke Bubble is an even sketchier version of the last one and
consists essentially of the deliberate and relentless reflation of financial
asset prices.
In practice, this amounts to a monetary version of “trickle down”
economics. By September 2012, personal consumption expenditure (PCE)
was up by $1.2 trillion from the prior peak, representing a modest 2.2 percent
per year (0.6 percent after inflation) gain from the level of late 2007. Yet
half of this gain—more than $600 billion—reflected the massive growth of
government transfer payments, and much of the rebound which did occur in private
consumption spending was concentrated in the top 10–20 percent of households. In
short, the Fed’s financial repression policies enabled Uncle Sam to fund
transfer payments for the bottom rungs of society at virtually no carry cost on
the debt, while they juiced the top rungs with a wealth effects tonic that
boosted spending at Nordstrom’s and Coach.
The Fed’s post-Lehman money printing spree has thus failed to revive
Main Street, but it has ignited yet another round of rampant speculation in the
risk asset classes. Accordingly, the net worth of the 1 percent is
temporarily back to the pre-crisis status quo ante. Needless to say, successful
speculation in the fast money complex is not a sign of honest economic recovery:
it merely marks the prelude to another spectacular meltdown in the canyons of
Wall Street next time the music stops.
DEFORMATION OF THE JOBS
MARKET: THE ECLIPSE OF BREADWINNERS
The precarious foundation of the Bernanke Bubble is starkly evident
in the internal composition of the jobs numbers. At the time the US
economy peaked in December 2007, there were 71.8 million “breadwinner” jobs in
construction, manufacturing, white-collar professions, government, and full-time
private services. These jobs accounted for more than half of the nation’s 138
million total payroll and on average paid about $50,000 per year—just enough to
support a family.
Breadwinner jobs also generated more than 65 percent of earned wage
and salary income and are thus the foundation of the Main Street
economy. Yet after a brutal 5.6 million loss of breadwinner jobs during
the Great Recession, a startling fact stands out: less than 4 percent of that
loss had been recovered after 40 months of so-called recovery.
The 3 million jobs recovered since the recession ended in June 2009,
in fact, have been entirely concentrated in the two far more marginal
categories that comprise the balance of the national payroll. More than
half of the recovery (1.6 million jobs) occurred in what is essentially the
“part-time economy.” It presently includes 36.4 million jobs in retail, hotels,
restaurants, shoe-shine stands, and temporary help agencies where average
annualized compensation was only $19,000. This vast swath of the jobs economy—27
percent of the total—is thus comprised of entry level, second earner, and
episodic jobs that enable their holders to barely scrape by.
The balance of the pick-up (1.1 million jobs) was in the HES Complex,
which consists of 30.7 million jobs in health, education, and social
services. Average compensation is slightly better at about $35,000
annually and this category has grown steadily for years. Its increasingly
salient disability, however, is that it is almost entirely dependent on
government spending and tax subsidies, and thus faces the headwind of the
nation’s growing fiscal insolvency.
When viewed in this three category framework, the nation’s job
picture reveals a lopsided aspect that thoroughly belies the headline claims of
recovery. A healthy Main Street economy self-evidently depends upon
growth in breadwinner jobs, but there has been none, even during the bubble
years before the financial crisis. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported
71.8 million breadwinner jobs in January 2000, yet seven years later in December
2007—after the huge boom in housing, real estate, household consumption, and the
stock market—the number was still exactly 71.8 million.
The faux prosperity of the
Fed’s bubble finance is thus starkly evident. This is the single
most important metric of Main Street economic health, and not only had there
been zero new breadwinner jobs on a peak-to-peak basis, but that alarming fact
had been completely ignored by the smugly confident monetary politburo.
Alas, the latter was blithely tracking a feedback loop of its own
making. Flooding Wall Street with easy money, it saw the stock averages
soar and pronounced itself pleased with the resulting “wealth effects.” Turning
the nation’s homes into debt-dispensing ATMs, it witnessed a household
consumption spree and marveled that the “incoming” macroeconomic data was better
than expected. That these deformations were mistaken for prosperity and
sustainable economic growth gives witness to the everlasting folly of the
monetary doctrines now in vogue in the Eccles Building.
To be sure, nominal GDP did grow by 40 percent, or about $4 trillion,
between 2000 and 2007. Yet there should be no mystery as to how it
happened. As has been noted, total debt outstanding grew by $20
trillion during that same period. The American economy was thus being pushed
forward by a bow wave of debt, not pulled higher by rising productivity and
earned income.
Indeed, the modest gain of 7.5 million jobs during those seven years
reflected exactly this debt-driven dynamic and explains why none of these job
gains were in the breadwinner categories. Instead, about 2.5 million
were accounted for by the part-time economy jobs described above. On an
income-equivalent basis these were actually “40 percent jobs” because they
represented an average of twenty-five hours per week and paid $14 per hour,
compared to a standard forty-hour work week and a national average wage rate of
$22 per hour. Thus, spending their trillions of MEW windfalls at malls, bars,
restaurants, vacation spots, and athletic clubs, homeowners and the prosperous
classes, in effect, temporarily hired the renters and the increasing legions of
marginal workers left behind.
Likewise, another 5 million jobs were generated in the HES (health,
education, and social services) complex. Here the job count grew by 20 percent,
but it was mainly due to the fact that the sector’s paymasters -
government budgets and tax-preferred employer health plans -
were temporarily flush.
As discussed in part 2 of this series, however, these, too, were
“debt-push” jobs that paid modest wages. While the steady 2.6
percent annual growth of HES jobs during the second Greenspan Bubble did flatter
the monthly employment “print,” it was possible only so long as
government and health plans could keep spending at rates far higher than the
growth rate of the national economy.
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