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Paul Volcker: U.S. Economic 'Crisis Likely' |
Paul Volcker: U.S.
Economic 'Crisis Likely' Former Fed Chairman Paul
Volcker said he doesn't see how the U.S. can keep
borrowing and consuming while letting foreign
countries do all the producing.
It's a recipe for American economic disaster.
On Thursday the Wall Street Journal reported bluntly
that "Mr. Volcker thinks a crisis is likely."
Volcker believes that investor confidence could fade
"at some point," he said, with "damaging volatility
in both exchange markets and interest rates."
He believes a serious economic crisis is likely
unavoidable as the U.S. economy is struggling with
what Volcker sees as a hopelessly unsustainable
relationship with the rest of the world.
"If I were a biologist I'd call this a perfect
example of symbiosis," Volcker said during a
February speech at Stanford University.
"Contented American consumers matched against
delighted foreign producers. Happy borrowers matched
against willing lenders. The difficulty is, the
seemingly comfortable pattern
can't go on indefinitely."
Experts seem to agree that the current situation
can't last.
But will there be a smooth and manageable
rebalancing of the global economy - created by a
slow drop in the dollar combined with a spike in
foreign demand - or will the U.S. currency
suddenly collapse, with skyrocketing interest rates
that lead us into a global recession?
Volcker believes a crisis is unavoidable, and he
claims that investors will lose their confidence "at
some point," creating serious dilemma for "both
exchange markets and interest rates."
As the United States faces the threats of a
potential housing bubble, a massive trade deficit
and the lowest level of American savings in history,
the jury is out on the Federal Reserve's actions
over the past five years.
The Wall Street Journal reports that while the Fed
acknowledges that its response to the 2000 Dot-Com
crisis is partly to blame for current economic
conditions, it claims it had no other viable course
of action.
The Fed slashed interest rates, and Congress
provided extreme tax cuts giving American households
unprecedented buying power. While the government's
response did help the U.S.
economy grow, it also created immense debt.
To alleviate this problem, at some point, U.S.
consumers will have to curb spending and concentrate
on saving - plus the economy will be forced to
forego foreign investment.
Experts agree that the reaction to the economic
problems after 9/11 took the country into uncharted
territory. While many say the Fed's rate cuts and
President Bush's tax initiatives were
the right answer for recovery, no one can be sure.
"We have done what no other economy has done before,
faced with an asset bubble," says Lawrence Lindsey,
a one-time Fed governor and Bush adviser.
"This is the first time in history the textbook
economic policy... was used, and worked. The problem
is, once you finish that chapter of the economic
texts, you turn the page and the page
is blank - because no one has gone through the
process before."
Some economists warn that the Fed has simply
replaced the Dot-Com bubble with a housing bubble
that is ready to burst, draining consumer spending,
driving foreign investors away from
U.S. markets and nurturing numerous other conditions
that could lead to a serious recession.
Says Volcker: "I think we are skating on
increasingly thin ice. On the present trajectory,
the deficits and imbalances will increase.
"At some point, the sense of confidence in capital
markets that today so benignly supports the flow of
funds to the United States and the growing world
economy could fade. Then some
event, or combination of events, could come along to
disturb markets..."
By contrast, Volcker's successor is perhaps a bit
less circumspect.
He said, "The number of forecasts of crises...is far
in excess of the number of crises that actually
occur. There is something equivalent to an invisible
hand which continuously is
readdressing market imbalances to reach
equilibrium."
Volcker, however, doesn't have as much faith in
market forces, which oddly enough brings him to the
conclusion that Greenspan and the Fed are doing the
right thing by raising interest rates
to hold down inflation.
The former Fed chairman thinks we need to make sure
foreign investors hold their confidence in the U.S.
because they're the ones doing all the investing.
They need to know "those trillions
of dollars they are piling up are going to be
protected against inflation."
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