The Fed Is About To Throw Its Hail Mary
Pass
I think Peter Schiff has one of the best economic
opinions out there.
,
he seems to get it right more than most.
Peter Schiff
October 8, 2010
Since the US economy has failed to recover as widely predicted, pressure on the
Federal Reserve to conjure a solution has increased. In fact, the Fed now faces
the hardest choices in its history. It can either redouble its past efforts to
re-inflate America’s bubble economy (risking the destruction of the US dollar)
or it can stop pumping and let the economy deflate to a self-sustaining
level. Unfortunately, both choices guarantee severe economic pain – but only one
offers the possibility of ultimate success.
Today’s news that the economy lost 95,000 jobs in September confirms that record
doses of stimulus have failed to create a real recovery. The loss of 159,000
government jobs in the month could have been a positive if those lost positions
had been replaced by wealth-generating private sector jobs. But the 65,000 jobs
generated by businesses didn’t come close. Worse still, most of these jobs came
from the goods-consuming service sector rather than the goods-producing
manufacturing sector (which lost another 6,000 jobs). The unemployment rate has
now been above 9.5% for 14 consecutive months, the longest such streak since
monthly records began in 1948. More importantly, the real unemployment rate,
which factors in discouraged and under-employed workers, rose from 16.7% to
17.1%.
Armed with this weak jobs report, the Fed seems poised to make good on
its plan for other round of quantitative easing (in English: printing
money). Recent statement from top Fed governors have made that sentiment clear.
Apparently they feel that they must do something, even though Fed inaction would
be far better for the economy. At a time when we should be trusting the markets
to grind out three yards in a cloud of dust, we have put our faith in the Fed’s
ability to fling a Hail Mary pass, even though all previous attempts have
failed.
Most people assume that the “crash” I referred to in my 2007 book “Crash Proof:
How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse” occurred in 2008. Those who
actually read the book know otherwise. The financial crisis that resulted from
the bursting of the housing bubble, accurately foretold in my book, was not the
crash itself, but merely the overture to a much more tragic economic opera for
which the curtain is just now rising.
More…
Peter Schiff is president and chief global strategist of Euro Pacific Capital
Inc., a broker-dealer based in Westport, Connecticut. Schiff
frequently appears as a guest on CNBC, Fox News, and Bloomberg Television and is
often quoted in major financial publications. His latest books are
How an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes
and
Crash Proof 2.0: How to Profit From the Economic Collapse