Thoughts from the Frontline

Muddle Through, or Crisis?

May 7, 2011

Choose your language

This week I finish the two-part letter on the Endgame and give you my thoughts on the economy and how it all plays out over the next five years. This is the second part of a speech I gave last week at the Strategic Investment Conference in La Jolla. It is a rather bold forecast, and fraught with peril and likely errors, but that is my job here. Damn the torpedoes, etc. I must offer one large caveat! If the facts change so will my forecast, but this is the view into my very cloudy crystal ball as I see it today. As always, remember that those of us in the forecasting world are often wrong but seldom in doubt. Read accordingly.

But before we get there, two quick things. I want to really show my strong appreciation for the work done by my co-hosts, Altegris Investments, at the 8th annual Strategic Investment Conference. We had a packed house with almost 500 people come to see what I think was the best line-up at an investment conference this year. Each year we say there is no way to get any better, and each year we somehow manage to do so. And that is due in no small part to the considerable effort of the team at Altegris. I am proud to be associated with them. This year we did video many of the speakers and panels, and over time we will figure out how to make some of this available. I will keep you posted.

Enemy of Spain

Second, Endgame continues to do well, so thanks to those who have purchased it, and if you haven’t already got your copy you should go to www.amazon.com/endgame and do so! And quick kudos to my co-author, Jonathan Tepper, brilliant young Rhodes scholar and head analyst at Variant Perception. Apparently, he’s on a small but prestigious list of enemies of Spain, according to El Mundo, one of the biggest Spanish newspapers, for the sin of pointing out that Spain is in a crisis (we have a whole chapter on Spain on the book). Their article appeared in print in the weekly finance edition, but is not online. Other papers have been called by government officials and asked not to quote him. Oddly, the people who helped inflate the enormous construction bubble and the incompetent government officials who denied for years there were any problems are not enemies of Spain. Go figure. I guess if you have to be on an enemies list, you could do worse than Spain (where, oddly enough, Jonathan spent most of his childhood growing up in a drug-rehab facility). Congratulations, young man! (Oh, and a publisher in Korea picked up the Endgame Korean-language rights, so we will soon be in bookstores in Seoul.)

And now to the second part of the Endgame. And for those who want to review the first part, you can read it at http://www.johnmauldin.com/frontlinethoughts/the-endgame-headwinds/.

The Endgame, Part 2

There is an argument that the US should pursue a strong growth and jobs policy as its #1 goal and that growth, along with spending cuts and/or tax increases (depending on your views), will bring us out of the current doldrums and help us solve the budget deficit. I set the table in both the book and last week’s letter that the US is going to be growth challenged…

Discuss This

21 comments

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Comments

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Lawrence Applebaum

May 8, 2011, 2:13 p.m.

John,

I have been a faithful reader of yours for many years.  I am still a student of economics even though I am a 71-year old retiree.  Your analysis of the current debt crisis is very accurate and the “strong medicine” you suggest is the only solution.  I would like to believe that some of the members of Congress and the Executive Department read your weekly e-letter.  It would provide them with insight and a good perspective

The deficit reduction proposals, that I have heard to date from the Obama Administration and the Republican leadership in Congress, do nothing more than slow the rate of growth of the total debt.  No matter who is talking or proposing cuts in the deficit, the bottom line is that the total debt will grow by $1 trillion each year.

The politicians’ objective for the most part is to get re-elected and their approach to the solution of the debt crisis is less than courageous.  As a retired Soldier, I know that the American military personnel are ready to put their life on the line for the good of the Republic.  They are courageous.  If the Republic is to survive, the politicians need to be courageous and tell the Americans the truth.  It starts with President Obama and caries on down to the Congressional leaders and the rank and file in Congress.

The American people need to be told that unless we alter the monetary and fiscal courses, the Republic is truly doomed.  The people need to be told that without sacrifice, the economic problems will not be solved.  Not much can be done in 2011; however, realistic progress can be made starting with the budget for 2012 provided we have courageous leadership.

I am a conservative independent and I will only vote for a courageous person who will work for the good of the Republic and not for his or her own personal gain.

Thanks for all that you do to make your readers aware of the very real dangers and risks that we face in todayâ??s economic environment.

George Coffey

May 8, 2011, 1:02 p.m.

“But the goal is to get rid of the cancer of the deficit. It could truly destroy our economic body. Sometimes, if you have cancer, you take very ugly chemicals into your body, which have very serious side effects.”

Running with John’s cancer metaphor, my opinion is that the deficit isn’t cancer it is poor health.  Right now we have the choice to start eating healthy, taking supplements, exercising and just living a better life style in order to avoid the coming crisis which is the actual cancer.  But does anyone really think we’re going to adopt that healthy lifestyle?

We like to blame the politicians for our plight.  Didn’t we elect them?  Who out there will vote for the guy that tells you “Things are bad, we need to raise taxes and cut benefits on everyone”?  It’s not going to happen.

Another quote from the article, “Whatâ??s my basis for this? History. This movie has played over and over again in various countries in modern history.”  Why would anyone think the USA movie will have a different ending?  This country is populated by the same human animal that inhabits Greece and Spain and the rest of the world.  We all want our piece of the pie (and then some) and are unwilling to give up anything for the good of the whole unless it’s basically ripped from our grip.

“Insanity is doing the same thing, over and over again, but expecting different results.”
â?? Albert Einstein

Expecting the current situation in this country to get better before we actually get to the crisis stage is a little bit insane.

Peter LePort

May 8, 2011, 12:03 p.m.

True deregulation, i.e., getting rid of all regulations that interfere with individual rights by the imposition of force by the government to do what it shouldn’t be doing, would resolve the issues in the most expeditious way. Deregulation seems to be left out of any discussion, whether by politicians or economists. Yet it is the most obvious way to increase productivity and so jobs, standard of living, ability to cut spending and then taxes, etc. Why is that?

scott grider

May 8, 2011, 7:29 a.m.

john i read every word, every newsletter….i appreciate the time you spend doing this.

your tendonitis is not from doing too many lunges…...having successfully been thru this a few times, this is a stress disorder (ya think-listening to your schedule?) acupuncture will resolve it, reading the aft-mentioned book usually does also-which is what i would do first…... or you can wait for the pain to move somewhere else….that boot is not helping much.

while he wrongly pooh-poohs acupuncture, the mechainism of your situation is outlined in the paperback “healing back pain” by a dr. sarno, head of orthopedics at NY univ…...just ‘realizing the mechainism’ stops the pain for a majority of stress disorder sufferers…..if not, then the acupuncture….plan on 6-15 treatments….a ‘five element’ acupuncturist being the better choice.

i promise.

at least save all this for when u give up on western medicine on this, they are not very successful in this area.

or contact me at any point…...i owe you big for your newsletters.

Lloyd Jones 22865

May 8, 2011, 12:48 a.m.

The US can reduce the deficit via two avenues:
1. Call in the $trillions sitting fraudulently in foreign banks, US taxes not having been paid.
2. Close the loopholes that US corporations enjoy by selling goods manufactured overseas to a tax free offshore subsidiary prior to entry, and then importing the goods at a stepped up cost.

John, perhaps you could dedicate an edition of Thoughts From The Frontline to these subjects. Thanks

jon engelberth

May 7, 2011, 11:20 p.m.

I cannot read the Dependency Ratio chart

carl campbell

May 7, 2011, 9:40 p.m.

Most economists, yourself included, pay too little attention to the effects of government regulation on job creation.  I think this is because there is so little relevant data that would make the effects measurable.  We can only make guesses, based mostly on anecdotes.  From all that I hear it seems that the burden is heavy, really heavy, and gets heavier year after year.  It needs not only to be stopped, but reversed, and the only way to do that is by deregulating, but no one seems seriously interested.  Tell us whether you think this will happen, and when, so we can share your optimism.

mart shu

May 7, 2011, 8:37 p.m.

Your optimistic tone would be justifiable if it weren’t for one little detail. This is really the fundamental catalyst if perhaps not ultimate reason, at least in my opinion, for the economic turmoil we have experienced in the past few years. This is higher energy costs.

We are now at if not past peak oil and the world is headed into much rougher times. The era of cheap energy is over and all our lifestyles will change forever as we enter a new one of painful and inevitable oil price spikes and ever diminishing oil supply.

Gold, silver and all natural resources will be up not only because of our fed’s policies and other central banks but because of ever increasing costs in mining these metals - perhaps silver stands to benefit much more.

David Seymour

May 7, 2011, 8:19 p.m.

John,
I always enjoy your writing and find you to have been as accurate as anyone I’ve seen. I do question, however, these frequently quoted ratios of tax cuts/increases and spending cuts/increases on the economy. Does a change in tax rates have the same impact when the top rate is 35% as it did when it was 70% when Reagan took office? Even the Laffer curve said that tax receits would be maximized somewhere between 0 and 100% but didn’t know where.
And, do you believe that all tax changes will have the same economic impact no matter what type of tax is changed and whom it effects?
It would seem that taxes are only one, although an important one, of countess things that affect the economy and to think that these ratios are static and reliable would mean they operate in a vaccume.
Thanks,
Dave Seymour

Robert Kenagy

May 7, 2011, 5:09 p.m.

John,
Like the majority of Americans today, I am an independent.  Bush/Cheney ended 48 Republican years.  I question why thinking people like you remain Republicans or Democrats.  The obvious answer to your article is for the US to adopt the recommendations of the Bi-Partisan Debt Commission.  But, as David Stockman points out, neither Obama nor Ryan are interested.  Had your boy Ryan been serious, he would have voted for the commission’s recommendations.  As David Walker points out, their recommendations would go to work immediately on the deficit problem.  But no, you Republicans back Mr. Ryan who, as Stockman CLEARLY showed, has no plan at all.  No deficit reduction until 2014, no balanced budget for 30 years - but an almost immediate meat axe to the poor in our country.  Well, they don’t vote anyway.

You Republicans - and the Democrats mystify me.  It’s really all about getting re-elected, isn’t it?

Robert C. Kenagy
Litchfield, CT

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