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What’s a Consumer Economy Need in Order to Keep Growing?


By Bill Bonner • September 23rd, 2009 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Articles by This Author

  • Consumer Economy Not Going to Return to Robust Growth Anytime Soon
  • The Percentage of the U.S. Economy Devoted to Consumer Spending Went Up and Up
  • Two Ways to Deleverage an Economy
  • America’s Consumer Economy Needs to Consume Less
  • The Interest Only Mortgage Option
Filed Under: Market • The Americas
Tags: bond portfolios • capitalism • cash reserves • consumer economy • David Rosenberg • deflationary • Economist • homeowners • millionaires • mortgage • Pepsico • recession • thrift • U.S. consumers

You wanna know what is going on? David Rosenberg explains...

"US consumers are cutting back, and where they are not cutting back, they are scaling down. This new cycle is all about 'getting small' and it is deflationary. For yet another in the litany of signs pointing in the direction of social change towards thrift, have a look at what is transpiring at the upper echelons of the income strata - Now Even Millionaires See the Benefits of Budgeting on page B5 of the Saturday NYT is a must read.

"Not only are the rich trading down, but the article quotes a high net worth financial advisor who said 'many of our clients are very happy to be sitting on bond portfolios and cash reserves.' And see the article on page 2 of the Sunday NYT - Beauty Products Lose Some Appeal During Recession. According to the NPD Research Group, total sales of department store beauty products are down 7% from year-ago levels. Women are apparently opting for the 'natural look' - "some people are selectively replacing higher-priced items with cheaper products from drug stores and discount stores."

Right on, David!

And here's the CEO of Pepsico:

"The age of thrift is here."

Even in Japan, after 20 years of coughing and sneezing, people have caught "the thrift bug," says The New York Times.

What's a consumer economy need in order to keep growing?

Uh...it's needs consumer spending.

What do consumers need in order to boost spending?

Uh...they need more money!

Oh, there's where it all starts to come apart, doesn't it? Where do they get more money? They either earn it...or they borrow it. And right now, they can't earn it - not with 12% unemployment in California! Workers have no bargaining power. And they can't borrow it either. The banks won't lend - not with the value of their collateral still falling.

Word comes this morning that mortgage delinquencies have hit a new record. And here's a headline warning of worse to come:

"$30 billion home loan time bomb set for 2010."

Even solvent homeowners who aren't forced into foreclosure still find it beneficial to walk away from their houses. "Strategic defaults,' says The Los Angeles Times, are becoming a problem for mortgage lenders.

We didn't read the article. Instead, we began to think. What if we owned a house worth $200,000 with a $300,000 mortgage? What would be the smart thing to do? Easy...walk away from it. Then, buy it back at auction!

Desperate consumers do what they have to do. Canny consumers do what's smart. And now it's smart to walk away from any debt that you don't actually have to pay.

As for adding more debt, you can gage yourself from the comments above, consumers are not eager to borrow. They've seen what happens when they go too far into debt. They're older and wiser than they were in the bubble years. It's been 10 years since the tech bubble exploded. Since then, stock market investors have made nothing - zero. And now houses are falling too.

So, if a fellow needs money for his retirement, where is he going to get it? Not from his house. Not from a pay raise. And not from his stocks either. He needs savings. He needs real money.

Americans aren't so stupid after all. When they need to stop spending, they stop spending. When they need to save, they save. Too bad about the economy.

Yes, what is good for individuals seems to be bad for the economy. When people save instead of spend, the consumer economy stalls. And then economists think there is something wrong. They think an economy needs to expand constantly. And so, they try to find 'solutions' to the 'problem.'

Actually, there is no problem at all. It's just the way capitalism works. There are booms. And there are busts. Periods of growth...and periods when the mistakes made during the boom are corrected. There's a time for every purpose under heaven. That's the way it works. The economy breathes in and it breathes out.

And there's always some dumb economist trying to smother it with a pillow!

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • Consumer Economy Not Going to Return to Robust Growth Anytime Soon
  • The Percentage of the U.S. Economy Devoted to Consumer Spending Went Up and Up
  • Two Ways to Deleverage an Economy
  • America’s Consumer Economy Needs to Consume Less
  • The Interest Only Mortgage Option

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Posts by This Author

There Is 1 Response So Far. »

  1. Comment by Ger on 24 September 2009:

    Economists really need to start thinking about how to deal with shrinking economies on a permanent basis. Current economic thinking is all about keeping what is basically a ponzi scheme running that is based on ever expanding consumption and population.

    The only practical suggestions I have heard on this is the Japanese proposal to get rid of physical money so that interest rates could drift easily into negative territory if required.

    Does anyone else know of practical solutions being thought up to deal with the future other then proposals to kickstart the past??

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