Nick Gillespie | April 29, 2005
The Wash Post's Howard Kurtz has a good wrap-up about reaction to the prez's press conference last night and ruminations on why Bush's poll numbers are sinking. A snippet:
Political prognosticators sometimes forget that average folks don't follow every twist and turn of Beltway infighting. So keep in mind: Gas prices have been rising. The stock market has been in a swoon. The economy is not exactly inspiring confidence. All that has got to be hurting Bush. When people feel economic anxiety-- and see that their leaders appear more obsessed with one brain-damaged woman, parliamentary procedures and fiddling with their retirement money--that's when you suffer in the polls.
Whole thing here.
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I feel sorry for Bush.
He's "fiddling with their retirement money" when he should be
playing the drum. To wit:
IT OUGHT TO BE YOUR MONEY!
IT OUGHT TO BE YOUR MONEY!
IT OUGHT TO BE YOUR MONEY!
BOOM!
BOOM!
EVEN FDR SAID THAT!
EVEN FDR SAID THAT!
BOOM!
Finally, a commentator who puts his finger on what will really
torpedo the Republicans in the long run - the impending collapse of
the credit/mortgage finance bubble. For 10 - 15 years I've watched
the US pursue one of the most irresponsible fiscal policies in
financial history, and at long last the bills may be coming
due.
This country now produces virtually nothing, consumes everything,
soaks up the world's savings pools to finance its ballooning public
and private debt, and believes that this behavior is somehow its
inherent right. A huge factor in ballooning oil prices has been the
steady decline in US dollar value over the last 2 years, a
phenomenon masked by enormous inflation in housing and fixed asset
values. Since houses are generally non-income-generating, the only
way for most people to realize this "wealth" is to either sell the
asset or leverage the hell out of it via refi or home equity loans.
We've done that sensationally well, as we now carry some $2.6
trillion in real estate debt (~30% of GDP). For some other
eye-popping numbers, check out the summary
here.
This country simply can't keep running up enormous trade and
current-account deficits, pile mortgage-baked derivatives on top of
each other and expect our central banking pals in China and Japan
to keep buying our decreasingly attractive Treasury securities.
There's no way to predict exactly when the pyramid will start
crumbling, but crumble it must.
Bush: "There's a hole in that promise."
joe: "Is the hole full of Iraqi Weapons of Mass Destruction?"
The fact that deficit spending on boondoggles such as the Iraq war have exacerbated Federal fiscal problems does not imply that the fundamental structural problems with SS do not exist.
Did anyone else notice that he didn't say, "...without raising
taxes," but instead, "...without raising the payroll tax
rate?"
That's a pretty big difference.
Did anyone else notice that he didn't say, "...without
raising taxes," but instead, "...without raising the payroll tax
rate?"
I
did.
I'm unconvinced that the "housing bubble" is an impending
crisis. Yes, a lot of people bought houses at inflated prices on
adjustable rate loans. When those rates go up, some of them won't
be able to service their debts.
...If banks have problems selling reposessed assets, that could be
a problem; but that's a question of magnitude, isn't it?
Inflection points are always scary.
As far as Chinese and Japanese Central Banks go, I don't think
that's a big worry. I think we should be more concerned about what
the little old ladies in Japanese post offices are going to do with
their American bonds when they roll over. ...and that means
worrying more about the budget deficit than the current account and
trade deficits.
...and joe's right, spending all that money on Iraq hasn't helped
us one bit.
P.S. I blame higher oil prices on higher energy demands in China
and elsewhere in Asia--among other things.
Ken is right-
Asia is coming online and sucking resources up and are willing to
pay more for it. China with billions of people coming out of the
"third world" status are putting their bikes aside and buying cars,
more manufactoring and higher standard of living.
Gas/oil isnt the only thing either. Dont forget metals (steel) and
corragated paper. The list will grow to many more things
So I guess this means Dubya's chances of being re-elected again are practically nil, huh?
"Inflection points are always scary."
I posted that while on the phone--lame excuse, I know.
Anyway, if I had that comment to post again, I'd have cited
Shultz's Second Law of Social Dynamics which states explicitly
that, "Trends tend to reinforce themselves until they're
overwhelmed by a greater, countervailing trend."
...Worldwide deflation, Asian currency crisis, Newt's balanced
budget, etc. put us on the trend to low interest rates; worldwide
growth, Asian currency appreciation and Bush's bloated budget
surely represents a greater, countervailing trend. ...or so I would
think.
Terrorism set in motion the trend that's driving politics today. If
the old saws on terrorism aren't reinforcing the trend anymore,
according to Shultz's Second Law, there should be a greater,
countervailing trend somewhere. ...So where is it? I see no such
thing.
No countervailing trend, no inflection point. Despite the recent
approval ratings dip, the Bush Administration will probably stop
trying to roll the Social Security ball up the hill, and their
numbers will probably stop dropping.
...If there are any changes in the next congressional election,
chances are that newly elected Democrats will exploit the same
prevailing trend in the same way.
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