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When it Comes to Economic Health, Nothing Beats a Depression


By Bill Bonner • October 5th, 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

  • How Do You Enjoy a Depression?
  • Contradiction in the Balance of Economic Forces
  • The Greatness of a Depression is Commensurate to the Government’s Efforts to Prevent It
  • Good Luck with Money
  • RIP Robert S. McNamara and California’s Holes in its Budget
Filed Under: Market • The Americas
Tags: central bank • depression • economic health • economy • gdp • Great Depression • IOUs • life expectancy • public debt • recession • reserve currency • Robert B. Zoelick • U.S. dollar • US debt service • US homeowners • world bank • WWII

The God of Abraham may rule the Vatican. But another group of gods rules finance. They are like the Greek gods...playful and mischievous, with a keen sense of humor. They look down from heaven not like a benevolent shepherd watching his flock, but like a cackling gawker betting on mud-wrestlers.

Here at The Daily Reckoning, this is not the first time we've paid homage to these lesser deities. Nor is it the first time we've mentioned their perverse method: Those whom these gods wouldst destroy are first cursed with good luck. Today, we look at the bright side: later, they are blessed by misfortune.

According to a pair of researchers from the University of Michigan, a depression does more for longevity than diet or exercise. Life expectancy during the worst years of the Great Depression increased from 57.1 years in 1929 to 63.3 years in 1933, says the report by Jose A. Tapia Granados and Ana Diez Roux. It didn't matter whether you were a man or a woman, black or white. And it didn't matter if you were in the US during the Great Depression or in Spain, Japan or Sweden during their economic downturns. The results were the same.

By contrast, life expectancy declined during the boom years. For most age groups, "mortality tended to peak during years of strong economic expansion (such as 1923, 1926, 1929 and 1936-1937)," they wrote in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences."

Conventional wisdom holds that recessions are times of stress. People do not eat as well. They skip medical check-ups. They should drop dead earlier. Instead, they live longer. Perhaps it is because the economy slows down, allowing people to live at a more comfortable pace. Maybe the unemployed get more sleep. We don't know. But if you want to live an extra six years, nothing works like a slump. When it comes to economic health too, nothing beats a depression.

Last week, World Bank president, Robert B. Zoelick, explained to Washington how the dollar made Americans wealthy:

"The United States is incredibly fortunate that the dollar enjoys this special status [as the world's reserve currency.]" It made it possible for Americans could buy things abroad with dollars and then, rather than come back to the United States as a claim against US assets, the dollars stayed in foreign central bank vaults. It was as if the Untied States, and the United States alone, could issue IOUs and never have to pay up. An "exorbitant privilege," Valery Giscard d'Estaing called it.

Since the end of WWII, the world had no real alternative. It had to use the dollar in its international transactions, just as it once used gold. This had a marvelous effect on world trade and roughly the same effect on America as a winning lottery ticket. And like a lottery winner, she was ruined by it.

With no effective limit on the number of IOUs they could issue, Americans issued far too many. From a low of around 2% of disposable income in 1945, US debt service rose to nearly 15% in 2007. In terms of total debt/GDP, the ratio was only about 150% in 1945, but that was with public debt from the war years at 120% of GDP. By 1950, the war debt had been cut down to about 70% of GDP, with private debt still at about 35%. At the height of the bubble years - 2005 to 2007 - total debt in America hit 360% of GDP, only 60% of it owed by the federal government.

Of course, most economists saw nothing to worry about. Instead, they set to work proving that such a 'dynamic' and 'flexible' economy would never fail.

They even won Nobel Prizes for elegant formulae that showed investors how to beat the market, year in and year out.

Then, the bottom fell out of asset prices in '07-'09. In March of this year, Americans found that their stocks had fallen back to real values not seen since 1968. Their houses were sinking fast too. By May 2009, one out of every four US homeowners was 'underwater' - with a mortgage greater than the value of his house. Incomes and profits were falling, along with the net worth of the typical American household. Everything was falling - except debt. How the gods must have roared when they saw the looks on their faces! In the biggest, longest boom of all time - even with a monopoly on the world's reserve currency - Americans had lost ground.

But while Americans were once damned by good fortune, they are now blessed by bad luck. "Looking forward, there will increasingly be other options to the dollar," says Mr. Zoelick. Thank the rascal gods. Americans are saving again...rebuilding their balance sheets...and, eventually, their economies. They can even look forward to living longer. And with a little more bad luck, maybe their moron economists will wise up too.

Until next time,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Related Articles:

  • How Do You Enjoy a Depression?
  • Contradiction in the Balance of Economic Forces
  • The Greatness of a Depression is Commensurate to the Government’s Efforts to Prevent It
  • Good Luck with Money
  • RIP Robert S. McNamara and California’s Holes in its Budget

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

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