THIS IS MY TWELFTH POST ON UNDERSTANDING MONEY TOOLS
THE ECONOMY
Recently a good friend wanted me to comment on a site going
around on the internet by an accountant about our economy and the financially
desperate situation we are in.
Bottom line, finances can’t add up in the long run.
Of course, I like to render my opinion on such things. With
personal subjectivity on this topic, I don’t believe it greatly matters now who
is president as we reached the point of financial “no return” to what we knew
as “normalcy” in the US and the world.
When did it appear to go overboard with no return? I would
say 2005-6. Two wars have been
financially disastrous with some reports that total costs from these wars will
add up to as much as $3.75 trillion by 2017, plus the most important loss, and
that is the brave men who lost their lives and the injured. Did our politicians learn nothing from
history? Did they not read books on
wars, the length of wars, and the disastrous effect of long wars, written about
people like Napoleon Bonaparte, Winston Churchill, Adolf Hitler and others?
We have such debt and future obligations of debt that we can
never grow the economy and gross domestic product (GDP) fast enough to pay the
interest on our debt let alone balance a budget and pay down debt.
The Federal Government can cut employment and expenses,
however they will push the burden down the pyramid, and the next layer is to
the states. Then, the states will
plead “no money” and push the burdens down to the counties and from there to
the cities. Already, you have
cities in California and Pennsylvania that have declared bankruptcy. The entire
US system has signed up for debt obligations of around $100 trillion dollars.
As you cut jobs that decreases cash flowing through our economy resulting in
lower GDP.
These are only the public sectors not being able to afford
to operate as they have done in the past.
Look at corporations under-funded pension plans. For many years corporations have taken
money from their pensions for operating capital pledging in place their public
stock. When the stock market
retreats and the stock drops from the stock’s original cost basis the pension
is under-funded.
These corporations have lawyers draft pension plans leaving
out “non-alienation language”.
This clause states that the trust shall not be able to be penetrated by
outside entities except for the US Government. A good example of a corporate pension falling to the wayside
was Pabst Brewery in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The Pabst Brewery was failing, some say stripped of assets.
Then, the pension money was taken, a class action suit followed by employees
and past employees. The employees
lost in court, and their pensions and health care were gone.
As I remember in this situation the pension stated that the
company would provide as long as the company could afford to do so. As the company was folding, the pension
money was taken, and the owners could do so within the framework of the law. A
big question here is the moral and ethical obligations in the business world
between the employer and employees.
Bottom line is that in the future everyone is going to have
to compromise. The rich will need
to pay more in taxes, employees will not be able to get the same retirement
benefits they did years back, cities and counties will not be able to offer
some of the niceties they have in the past….wonderful care of public parks,
golf courses, perhaps not the same degree of fire and police protection,
etc.
With cuts and no alternatives there will be more people
seeking jobs. We need to create
higher paying jobs in the US, and start encouraging new and small business
here, jobs that are not going overseas.
To do this the government needs to get a reality check on bank lending
regulations and ease up, yet not going back to the 2002-4 lack of banking
regulations.
No country has ever survived without major restructuring
after debt to asset ratio exceeds a certain point, and that point has been
exceeded by many countries including the US, Japan, France, Greece, Italy,
Spain and so many more.
Cutting expenses and austere measures is kind of like
medical surgery, when Greece cuts expenses its minor surgery and we don’t feel
it, however when it happens in the US and to us, it is major surgery and
painful even when the procedure is the same.
In the long run we may luck out from our Federal Reserve
Bank buying our US debt obligations.
Perhaps the US will still be the safest place to put money and our US
bonds will go up significantly in value thus making the Quantitative Easings
(QE1, QE2, QE3) a great investment idea!
Thank you for your comments Larry! Personally, I think we all face something no President would ever know we would face. Technology replacing people that did not have their jobs transferred overseas, Our work is cut out for us and we need to figure out how to put the 50+ workforce on the front line of attack real soon. Before they dry out in the pasture we put them in. Those not gainfully employed in this group are quite ready to lend a hand so to speak. The experience and work ethic are second to none with them. Put them in as trainers or consultants ASAP America or suffer what lies ahead.
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