March 12, 2008
Republicans and “Free Market” Zealots Bring Death To America
By Paul Craig Roberts
March 12. Crude oil
for April delivery hit $110 per barrel. The US dollar
fell to a new low against the Euro. It now takes $1.55
to purchase one Euro.
These new highs
against the dollar are the
ongoing story of the collapse of the US dollar as
world reserve currency and corresponding collapse of
American power.
Each new decision
from the insane Bush Regime pushes the dollar a little
further along to oblivion. The same Fed announcement
that boosted the stock market on March 11 sent the
dollar reeling and the price of oil up. The Fed’s
announcement that it and other central banks are going
to deal with the derivative crisis by monetizing $200
billion of the troubled instruments signaled more dollar
inflation.
Of course, something
needed to be done to forestall an implosion of the
financial system, but a less costly alternative was at
hand. The mark-to-market rule could have been suspended
in order to halt the forced sale and write down of
assets and to provide time in which to sort out
derivative values, which are higher than the fire sale
prices.
More pressure on the
dollar resulted from the
decision to award the European company, Airbus, a
$40
billion contract that could reach $100 billion to
build US Air Force tankers. In simple terms, that means
another $40 to $100 billion added to the US trade
deficit, and a loss of $40 to $100 billion in US Gross
Domestic Product and associated jobs.
Of course, the Bush
Regime had to award the contract to Europe as a payoff
for Europe’s support of the Bush Regime’s wars of
aggression in the Middle East. Europe is not going to
provide Bush with diplomatic cover for his wars and NATO
troops for his war in Afghanistan without a payoff.
Here is the picture:
The US economy, which has been kept alive by enormous
debt expansion that has over-reached its limit, is
falling into recession. The traditional way out by
expanding the supply of money and credit is blocked by
the impaired banking system, the levels of consumer
debt, the collapsing value of the US dollar, and rising
inflation.
The Bush Regime is
attempting to bypass the stalled credit expansion by
sending Americans $600 checks, money that will mainly be
used to reduce existing credit card debt and not to fund
new consumption.
The US is dependent
on foreigners not only for energy but also for
manufactured goods and advanced technology products.
The US is dependent on foreigners to finance our
consumption of $800 billion annually more than the US
produces. The US is dependent on foreigners to finance
its red ink wars, and the US government’s budget deficit
is now expanding as tax revenues decline with the
declining economy.
The bottom line: US
power is enfeebled. US power depends on the willingness
of foreigners to finance our wars and on the willingness
of foreigners to continue to accumulate depreciating
dollar assets.
The US cannot close
its trade deficit. Oil prices are rising, and offshore
production of goods and services for US markets results
in a dollar-for-dollar increase in imports, while
reducing the supply of domestic goods available for
export.
The US cannot close
its budget deficit while it is squandering vast sums on
wars that serve no US purpose, handing out $150 billion
in red ink rebates, and falling into recession.
US living standards,
which have been stagnant for years, will plummet once
dollar decline forces China off the dollar peg. So far
prices of the Chinese made goods on Wal-Mart shelves
have not risen, because the Chinese currency, pegged to
the dollar, falls in value with the dollar. In a word,
tottering US living standards are being supported by
China’s willingness to subsidize US consumption by
keeping its currency grossly undervalued.
The US is
overextended economically and militarily, just as was
Great Britain with the fall of France in the opening
days of World War II. The British had the Americans to
bail them out. After the chewing gum and bailing wire
patch-ups are exhausted, who is going to bail us out?
Paul Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s
first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies,
Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow,
Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded
the Legion of Honor by French President Francois
Mitterrand. He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author
with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.