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President Barack Obama greets 103-year-old Milwaukee veteran James Edwards backstage at ZBB Energy Corporation in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin, Aug. 16, 2010.
Dr. Peter Morici: Deflation is coming and
Americans should be alarmed.
Many, though hardly all, prices are falling.
Government regulations, subsidies and sanctioned monopolies make some price
increases inevitable—the world may end before doctors’ visits, prescription
drugs, college tuition, and cable TV rates stop rising. For now, President Obama
has legislated higher car prices and profits by removing large amounts of
capacity at GM and Chrysler, offering subsidies for hybrid and electric
vehicles, and imposing tougher fuel economy standards.Even with those industries
pulling up inflation, prices outside the erratic energy and food sectors—so
called core inflation—have increased less than one% over the last year.
Prices are falling for many discretionary items
like furniture, apparel, personal computers and electronics, recreational and
communications services, and personal care products. Real estate prices and
rents remain in the pail.
Some deflation may not be bad if accompanied by decent growth—4 to 5% a year
until unemployment comes down and 3% over the business cycle. That would
discourage reckless lending better than any regulator. Treasury securities could
still pay 1 to 2% a year, real interest commercial and mortgage rates at 3 or 4%
would be aligned with long term growth, and borrowers hardly would be victims.
However, deflation is spreading, because Americans have been sold a false idea
by Treasury Secretary Geithner: high unemployment and tepid growth are the new
normal and desirable.
For the 24 months prior to the Great Recession, unemployment was less than 5%
and optimism abounded that new technology would carry Americans into an age of
cleaner energy, higher productivity and plenty.
If ineffective regulation caused the financial crisis, President Obama’s reforms
should have fixed the problem, and the economy should be able to grow fast
enough to pull down unemployment to acceptable levels.
Americans are not wandering fools, heirs to a lost civilization. They can still
make goods and services but demand for what they make is inadequate.
Consumers are buying again but not enough, because housing prices are depressed
and many homeowners, crushed by high-interest mortgages, simply cannot refinance
with prices depressed. Credit card companies are becoming the last refuge of the
financial flimflam man.
Baby boomers are trimming spending and postponing retirement, because the stock
market and their retirement accounts have not gained much value in more than a
decade.
President Obama’s health care reforms are pushing up insurance premiums and
co-pays, and local governments are imposing new taxes, leaving consumers with
much less to spend on everything else.
The trade deficit is growing again, and each additional dollar spent on imports
that does not return to purchase U.S. exports reduces demand for what Americans
make.
President Obama wants to double exports in five years, and is banking on
emerging industries such as wind and solar generation and electric vehicle
components. That will be tough because China is the fastest growing market, and
the president refuses to meaningfully challenge its protectionist technology and
procurement policies.
For example, China requires that state run wind farms purchase wind turbines
with at least 70% domestic components and state owned farms are 80% of China’s
market. GE has superior technology and could export turbines and components from
the United States but must produce in China to serve the market.
Doubling exports to China and elsewhere does no good if U.S. imports more than
double.
In many industries, locating in China or India to gain access means exporting
back to the United States with that capacity. And China’s undervalued exchange
rate and other export subsidies in industries ranging from tee-shirts to
telecommunications equipment remain unanswered by President Obama.
A tax or restrictions on CO2 emissions, which the President has pledged to
impose on U.S. industries but Beijing refuses to apply to Chinese competitors,
would make matters worse
The housing and stock markets are not something President Obama can address
directly, but he needs to rethink his health care, environmental and other
regulatory policies, and trade with China.
If not, President Obama’s legacy will be deflation and an America in economic
decline.
A nation that can’t grow enough to take of its elderly, educate its young or
provide a decent future for anyone but Wall Street financiers, Hollywood stars
and Washington’s policy elite.