Other writers with less prestigious
platforms than the Post have been talking
about an approaching financial bust for a
couple of years. Among them has been
economist Michael Hudson, author of an
article on the housing bubble titled, “The
New Road to Serfdom” in the May 2006 issue
of Harper’s. Hudson has been speaking in
interviews of a “break in the chain” of debt
payments leading to a “long, slow economic
crash,” with “asset deflation,” “mass
defaults on mortgages,” and a “huge asset
grab” by the rich who are able to protect
their cash through money laundering and
hedging with foreign currency bonds.
Among those poised to profit from the crash
is the Carlyle Group, the equity fund that
includes the Bush family and other
high-profile investors with insider
government connections. A January 2007
memorandum to company managers from founding
partner William E. Conway, Jr., recently
appeared which stated that, when the current
“liquidity environment”—i.e., cheap
credit—ends, “the buying opportunity will be
a once in a lifetime chance.”
The fact that the crash is now being
announced by the Post shows that it is a
done deal. The Bilderbergers, or whomever it
is that the Post reports to, have decided.
It lets everyone know loud and clear that
it’s time to batten down the hatches, run
for cover, lay in two years of canned food,
shield your assets, whatever.
Those left holding the bag will be the
ordinary people whose assets are loaded with
debt, such as tens of millions of
mortgagees, millions of young people with
student loans that can never be written off
due to the “reformed” 2005 bankruptcy law,
or vast numbers of workers with 401(k)s or
other pension plans that are locked into the
stock market.
In other words, it sounds eerily like
2000-2002 except maybe on a much larger
scale. Then it was “only” the tenth worse
bear market in history, but over a trillion
dollars in wealth simply vanished. What
makes today’s instance seem particularly
unfair is that the preceding recovery that
is now ending—the “jobless” one—was so
anemic.
Neither Perlstein nor Samuelson gets to the
bottom of the crisis, though they, like
Conway of the Carlyle Group, point to the
end of cheap credit. But interest rates are
set by people who run central banks and
financial institutions. They may be
influenced by “the market,” but the market
is controlled by people with money who want
to maximize their profits.
Key to what is going on is that the Federal
Reserve is refusing to follow the pattern
set during the long reign of Fed Chairman
Alan Greenspan in responding to shaky
economic trends with lengthy infusions of
credit as he did during the dot.com bubble
of the 1990s and the housing bubble of
2001-2005.
This time around, Greenspan’s successor, Ben
Bernanke, is sitting tight. With the economy
teetering on the brink, the Fed is allowing
rates to remain steady. The Fed claims their
policy is due to the danger of rising “core
inflation.” But this cannot be true. The
biggest consumer item, houses and real
estate, is tanking. Officially, unemployment
is low, but mainly due to low-paying service
jobs. Commodities have edged up, including
food and gasoline, but that’s no reason to
allow the entire national economy to be
submerged.